Legal updates, new research, interesting ideas for students-- past and present-- of LER Prof. Michael H. LeRoy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Welcome, also, to friends who are curious about employment and labor law.
Monday, November 30, 2015
Donald Trump in Germany
In Defense of Limits on Speech
The repeated portrayal of Planned Parenthood as a killer and
purveyor of fetal parts may have pushed a sick man to murder people in
Colorado Springs. The LaQuan McDonald protests were peaceful, symbolic and an
excellent example of voicing collective anger. Now comes word that a University
of Illinois-Chicago student posted an online threat to shoot and kill 16 white
students at the University of Chicago. He said: “"This is my only warning.
At 10AM Monday morning, I'm going to the campus quad of the University of
Chicago. I will be armed with an M-4 carbine and two desert eagles, all fully
loaded. I will execute approximately 16 white male students and or staff, which
is the same number of time McDonald was killed." His online post was specific and indicative of intent to kill-- though he might say, later, it was meant as symbolic expression. The heated rhetoric on campuses today (and politics, more generally) show some tendency for inciting forms of speech to have dangerous consequences. My Notre Dame Law Review
article (see here) concluded: “My research shows that when a university makes a reasonable
prediction that students or faculty would feel intimidated by personally
abusive or demeaning speech, courts support actions that promote a campus
climate of tolerance."
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Ruling on “Fried Chicken and Watermelon”: Do Picketers Have a Right to Express Racist Views?
When workers strike, the law affords their speech a high
degree of protection. Often, picket lines— invariably in public spaces, such as
sidewalks and roadsides— become raucous, with taunts directed at replacement
workers. When taunts become physically intimidating, a striker loses protection
of the law. But what if a striker calls replacements “niggers”? In a 2006
decision, Airo Die Casting, the NLRB said that the speech was protected. In
2011, a different case arose. Cooper Tire locked out employees, and hired
replacements. The company fired a picketing white worker for making references
to "fried chicken and watermelon" as a group of mostly black
replacement workers crossed the picket line. Cooper said it must provide
replacement workers with an atmosphere that is free of racial harassment. The case is now heading to the NLRB in Washington D.C. The
United Steel Workers points out that a ruling against the picketer here could
mean that future pickets who shout "fuck" (and equivalent expressions) could be fired for sexual harassment.
Lost in the discussion… the divisive effect of a bargaining lockout. The
company did this because the union failed to agree to a contract—and the company contributed
to a racial divide by locking out a mostly white workforce and replacing them
with a mostly black workforce.
Monday, November 23, 2015
What Is “Anger Security”? How Ideologues “Think” Today
Last week, I was interviewed by the UIUC Media Bureau, and
shared my professional views on Syrian immigration (see here). Today, I received a harsh and personal e-mail
from someone on the political right. Earlier this year, I received even harsher emails
from people on the opposite end of the political spectrum from today’s
correspondent. These people were upset with my view that the First Amendment
does not protect faculty speech that directs personal intimidation to a
group of students (e.g., in that instance, Twitter attacks that framed Jewish college
students as future killers). Well, here is today’s note. I have emphasized the
author’s Freudian slip. Below it, I share an example of anger from the political left:
Michael, Your article on the governor's powers to allow our
disallow Syrian refugees to take up residence in their respective states was
informative. However, your closing
statement on the "wall of fear" was unnecessary and uncalled
for. It is this exact level of liberal
lunacy that public schools and universities try to indoctrinate our children
with that is the real reason this country is going to lose its strength anger
security. My guess is that you are
tenured and are not concerned about consequences by regurgitating garbage
liberal agendas to our youth. Which
brings up another atrocity in the university setting which is that of
tenure. You should be allowed to
instruct our children based on your performance and ability and not on your
amount of time held at an institution spent indoctrinating. We are in an education crisis with the likes
of instructors like you. We don't pay
for you to educate our children with your opinion. We pay you to educate our children with the
facts. Extremely fed up.
What a
miserable shyster you are. You, Wise, Chris Kennedy, and Cary Nelson are
utterly depraved.
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Native American Casinos and Union Avoidance
Native Americans are among the nation’s most disadvantaged
and oppressed groups; so, it makes little sense that they are allied with House Republicans. But they are united in a bill to remove Indian
casinos from the jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board. Earlier this
week, the House passed a bill on a 249-177 to prevent the NLRB from hearing
petitions for union elections or claims of unfair anti-union conduct filed by
workers at tribal businesses on Indian land. By the way, Indian casinos
pocketed $28.5 billion in gaming revenue in 2014, according to the National
Indian Gaming Commission…. Not enough to share, however, with their mostly
Native American workforce.
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Is Your Work Schedule More Important Than … Everything Else?
The Wall Street Journal has a techie article that celebrates
the “uberization” of more traditional types of jobs. Author Christopher Mims
reports on Gigwalk, “which started out as more or less the Uber of people who
check on the work of merchandisers like Mr. Gainer.” Mims gushes: “The result
inside Crossmark, which employs tens of thousands of associates, is something
unexpected but surprisingly effective. It is a labor marketplace rapidly taking
over tasks that used to be accomplished by traditional management. Just like
Uber, the result is a flexible pool of employees who have some say over when
they work—and who are tasked—according to their location, skills and
availability.” Certainly, the freedom to control one’s schedule is important. But
what is lost in the transaction? 1. Co-workers. 2. Training and development. 3.
Employer sponsored health insurance. 4. Minimum wage. 5. Overtime pay. 6. Paid
vacation. 7. Sick leave. 8. Social Security, unless you, the “contractor," pay all of
the work-related contribution. 9. Employer retirement plan. 10. Employer
profit-sharing plan. 11. Access to a union. 12. Worker’s compensation,
when you’re injured on the job. Likely, I forgot other important elements of a traditional job. The uberization phenomenon has particular
appeal to younger workers, who sometimes cannot see that, down the road, their
bodies will falter or fail, their income will be inadequate, their bargaining power
will shrink to nil—and their cell phones will not provide the companionship and support of a
work culture and colleagues.
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Don’t Like Unions? You Might Like This
You probably have contracts for credit cards, cable TV, cell
phone, mortgage—and employment— where you are required to waive access to
courts and agree to arbitration. The company with superior bargaining power
gets to dictate terms. Worse, its competitors have the same contracts.
Compounding this, these mandatory agreements often require you to waive a class
action case. So, suppose you’re getting dinged for $100 in one of the
relationships, and you’re unhappy about it. Answer: take it to arbitration.
Right … you’ll hired a lawyer for several thousand dollars to win your $100
case. That’s where class actions can be useful. Most courts uphold waivers of
class actions. Little guy loses here. Now, the NLRB has ruled (again) that American
Express Co violated the concerted activity provisions of the National Labor
Relations Act by requiring requiring workers to waive access to class actions
in mandatory arbitration cases. It’s a win for employees at American Express,
who were contesting the company’s failure to pay for overtime and meal breaks.
The ruling has potential to be a win for everyone who is forced to waive a
class action in arbitration. American Express will appeal; and they will
likely win because of the caselaw in this area, which has lost sight of the
fact that arbitration is supposed to a substitute for a judicial forum— and not
a kangaroo court.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Remember Rashidi Wheeler
Rashidi Wheeler died while playing football for Northwestern
University. During a “voluntary” practice that may have violated NCAA rules, he
was running rigorous sprints with a fellow player on a Northwestern practice
field. A videotape caught the moment he collapsed. At the time, a Northwestern
coach was seen on the tape timing other players. According to Linda Will,
Wheeler’s mother, her son died because Northwestern did not having qualified
trainers and medical staff on hand to treat his fatal asthma attack. Wheeler
had a lifelong problem with asthma, a condition that Northwestern knew or
should have known.
Wheeler’s mother sued the school for her son’s wrongful death. Northwestern stonewalled her attempts to find answers to her questions. Who scheduled the “voluntary” practice? Why was no medical help present if players were expected to practice? Why were Rashidi’s medical records destroyed? Years later, Northwestern offered Will $16 million to settle her lawsuit. She refused it. In an L.A. Times article, she said: “Everyone’s entitled to their day in court. Northwestern doesn’t want to go to court, because it doesn’t want all of the atrocities and pain and suffering it inflicted upon my Rashidi to be revealed. I’m not willing to devalue and diminish Rashidi by shutting up and taking the $16 million.”
Linda Will lost her case when, in an extraordinary ruling, a
Cook County judge appointed a guardian for her other children and the guardian
accepted the cash settlement. Will left the courthouse embittered: “I will
fight until I obtain justice, and then I'll go away and shut up.” Ten years
have passed since the court imposed the settlement. Northwestern has not
answered any questions nor been held accountable. Soon, Illinois will play
Northwestern in Chicago. As it should be, Illinois’ failure to shield football
players from abusive coaching and medical practices will likely be part of the
story-line for the game. Pat Fitzgerald was a defensive backs coach in 2001 for
Northwestern, the year that Rashidi Wheeler, a strong safety, died. Was he the
coach timing wind sprints on that videotape? Is the tape available? Hopefully,
a brave reporter will ask Coach Fitzgerald, “What really happened to Rashidi
Wheeler, and what can you do to provide answers?”
Sunday, November 8, 2015
Fear at Work: The Impact of One Harassing Incident
Recently,
ProfLERoy posted a story of a federal court ruling that dismissed an employment
discrimination lawsuit from a woman who was “flashed” by a male co-worker. Due
to privacy laws, I am redacting and revising a student’s account of sexual
harassment, except for the student's core reactions. The contrast to the court’s opinion in
the flasher case speaks for itself. “I was working in retail. One day, I was putting away merchandise when a
man walked past me and said something. I didn’t quite hear him, so I turned to
see if he needed help. He repeated what he said but it was not a question about
the merchandise, it was a sexual comment. I was in shock. I felt so violated. I
quickly walked to receiving, the only place in the store that customers were
not allowed, sunk to the floor and cried. . . . At the time, I accepted that.
After that incident, I felt anxious at work for weeks. I felt like every time I
was alone, someone was going to sexually harass me. That was when I realized
that I didn’t want anyone else to feel that way. I wanted to help people in my
workplace feel safe.” How I wish this student was the judge in the Mississippi
flasher case.
Friday, November 6, 2015
“Hawk” Hazards: Will You Be Injured? Or Run Someone Over with Your Car?
The UIUC campus has more and more students with IO Hawks running
around. These are akin to electric-powered skateboards. Here’s the problem: Students
are using them in congested areas, such as hallways that are mostly filled with
others who are walking with 20-30 pounds of books on their backs. These walkers cannot adjust quickly-- nor can disabled or older people. Doors open suddenly. Real possibilities for injuries here. I have not encountered a reckless Hawk rider; but the whole point is
to move faster than the crowd. So far, I have not encountered multiple Hawkers
in the same hallway or crowded sidewalk … but that is my real concern. We
already have bike-car-pedestrian conflicts on campus-- on rare occasion, with tragic
outcomes. Now this? I sent campus safety a simple message expressing these concerns
and received a thoughtful reply.
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Breaking Illinois' Impasse: Listen to Downstate Republican Lawmakers
The best article on the Illinois impasse is written by Tom
Kacich, here.. He explains that downstate Republican lawmakers are bracing their
supporters for a tax hike, and for unavoidable assistance to Chicago Public
Schools. And they note that although it might feel good to make Chicago the 51st
state, the reality is that we all need Chicago to avoid a disaster. These
pragmatic lawmakers go on to say that a compromise won’t have any take-aways from public sector unions. So far, it sounds like it’s all-Democratic. Not so.
They believe that workers comp will be seriously overhauled. Ditto tort
reforms. They suggest that term limits and/or legislative redrawing of
districts is on the table. Judge for yourself. This looks like a compromise; it
entails structural reform; it addresses the near-death spiral of the State’s
finances; it doesn’t blame one group for all the problems; and it is painful
for everyone, including lawmakers. I vote yes.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Menorah Vandal Case Closed … Questions Open
As of 11:00 a.m. this morning, the TV monitor in the Champaign
County Court showed an 11:00 a.m. hearing for Max Kristy, charged with a Class
3 felony for vandalizing an 8-foot tall menorah at a local Jewish Center. The
case was never called. That’s because it was quietly settled at the last
minute. Apparently, Kristy pleaded down to a misdemeanor, with 25 hours of
community service. The case is closed, but these questions are now open. 1. Was
Kristy overcharged with a felony? He was known to be a first-time
offender, and 20 years-old. 2. If he was charged properly, why did the case
settle so much in Kristy’s favor? Why not more service? Why not a short,
suspended sentence, with no time served but a stronger record? Why not an
apology to the Jewish Center? 3. Why were members of the
Jewish Center not consulted for their view, as is often the case where there
are victims in non-violent offenses? 4. Why is the truth suppressed in this
case? Kristy said he was drunk at 6:00 a.m. and was simply giving a Jewish
friend an 8-foot tall menorah for a gift. Why
wasn’t his version of the facts put to a cross examination, just for the sake
of exposing this implausible story? 5. Why is vandalism of a religious symbol
treated like it's vandalism to a street corner stop sign? Was this a crime
against an 8-foot tall piece of metal, or did it have symbolic significance? We’ll
never know. The menorah in this picture sheds light. The settlement in this case casts a shadow.
Monday, November 2, 2015
The End of the Employment Relationship? Research Update
Want a ride from the airport? There’s an app for that.
Someone to visit with your elderly parent? There’s an app. And so on. I am
collecting more than 1,000 court cases since 2000 involving claims by workers
that they were misclassified as independent contractors—drivers, cable
installers, security officers, exotic dancers, janitors … and others. Early
results show that workers win most of these lawsuits—meaning they must be paid
for overtime, minimum wages, out-of-pocket expenses (e.g., gas money for
drivers). But these outcomes don’t seem to be changing the inexorable drift
away from the employment relationship to app-driven “project” work. Downsides?
1. These workers are on their own for Social Security taxes—no employer
contribution. Expect even more under-funded retirements. 2. No workers comp if an individual is hurt while doing her job.
3. No employer-sponsored health insurance. 4. No possibility to form a union. And then there are less visible
effects. We will have fewer lawyers, accountants, doctors, nurses, carpenters, plumbers, electricians and other craftspeople and professionals who are selected, trained, weeded-out, promoted, and socialized by
an organization. Instead, various crafts, professions, and occupations will be
reduced to one-off exchanges, conducted on our cell phones. The employment relationship
is not part of the law of nature. My hunch is that employment will recede along the lines of unions. The question is: Will we, as a society, recognize the
long-term damage that results from a casual form of assigning work?
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Crain’s Chicago Business: Rauner “Union” Plan Would Save 0.74%-- “Not Much More Than a Rounding Error”
When
Bruce Rauner promised to “shake things up,” he really meant to “destroy unions
in Illinois.” One key idea in the turnaround plan is to eliminate prevailing
wage. This term means that public construction contracts must pay the
equivalent of union wages. In theory, the governor’s argument makes sense:
Illinois seems to be overpaying. But Crain’s Chicago Business says: “just for
the sake of argument, let's take the proponents at their word on this
particular topic. A June, 2014 study conducted by the Anderson Economic Group
for the far-right Illinois Policy Institute, the Illinois Association of School
Boards, the Illinois Chamber and the Illinois Black Chamber found that
eliminating the prevailing wage would've saved local school districts $126.4
million in 2011 (that's in 2013 dollars, by the way). According to the state's
Commission on Governmental Forecasting and Accountability, local school
districts extended (billed) $16.4 billion in property taxes in 2011. Adjust
that 2011 amount to 2013 dollars to even it out with the Anderson study and we
get $16.98 billion. So, even if every single local school district throughout
Illinois immediately stopped paying prevailing wage rates on construction
projects (not gonna happen) and even if eliminating the prevailing wage does
indeed save as much as the Anderson study projected (doubtful), school
districts could've saved a grand total of 0.74 percent of their property tax budgets,
which is not much more than a rounding error. Now figure, in reality, savings
of at most half that amount and we're looking at about a third of a percentage
point. That's not even a rounding error.” Again, this analysis is from a major
business paper—not a shill for labor. The article is here.
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