Labor News & Commentary October 1, 2024 Amazon loses fight to keep lawsuit against NLRB in Texas & more
https://onlabor.org/october-1-2024/
By Sunah Chang
Sunah Chang is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary: port workers begin their strike, Amazon loses fight to keep lawsuit against NLRB in Texas, the Teamsters reach a tentative agreement with Hertz, and the New York City construction industry advocates for mental health safety training.
Today, port workers across the East and Gulf Coasts launched their strike after their contracts expired at midnight, marking the first time that the port workers have gone on strike since 1977. The strike, which includes 45,000 dockworkers from Maine to Texas, is anticipated to pose major disruptions to the nations economy. The strike has shut down operations at 36 different ports and is likely to result in shortages of consumer and industrial goods.
On Sunday, a federal judge in Texas ruled to transfer Amazons lawsuit against the NLRB to Washington, DC. Earlier this month, Amazon sued the NLRB after the board upheld a union election of workers at Amazons JFK8 warehouse in New York. Amazons lawsuit alleges that the NLRB illegally interfered in the union election and that the boards structure violates the Constitution. Amazon filed the lawsuit in Texas, where three other federal judges have recently ruled that the NLRBs structure likely violates the Constitution. However, the judge overseeing Amazons case rejected the companys claim that the matter had sufficient ties to Texas and ruled that the case should be transferred to D.C., where the NLRB is headquartered. The judge also declined Amazons request to block the NLRB from deciding whether Amazon must bargain with the unionized warehouse workers. In response, Amazon is poised to appeal the ruling to the Fifth Circuit, which recently held that the SECs structure violates the Constitution.
FULL story at link above.