LaborUnionNews.com's News Digest for Tuesday, June 11, 2024
Top Stories: ILA cancels port talks; Another Hollywood strike? Ford supplier has UAW problems; UAW's Fain under investigation; The potential impact of Chevron Deference's downfall & more...
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If the workers surrender control over working relations to legislative and administrative agents, they put their industrial liberty at the disposal of state agents. — Samuel Gompers, 1915
Here are today’s Top Stories…
[There are 64 total articles in today’s News Digest and 37,875 articles posted since LaborUnionNews.com was launched in 2022.]
Biggest U.S. ports union suspends labor talks, with East Coast, Gulf Coast strike risk rising
The International Longshoremen’s Association, which represents union workers at East Coast and Gulf Coast ports, said Monday that it has suspended talks scheduled for this week with the United States Maritime Alliance as part of ongoing negotiations over a new labor contract.
Another summer of uncertainty in Hollywood as more crew union contract negotiations get underway
The members of Hollywood’s crew member unions include people who – literally – help keep the lights on around town on film and television show sets, the same ones that will go dark again if the unions’ contract negotiations fail and another strike descends upon an industry still sore from last summer’s historic strikes.
Supplier to Ford's Kentucky Truck Plant in contract dispute with UAW
A key supplier to Ford Motor Co.'s Kentucky Truck Plant is mired in a contract dispute with its rank-and-file workers.
UAW President Under Investigation by Federal Court Monitor
United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain is under investigation by the union’s federal corruption watchdog, posing a serious threat to a union celebrity who has taken on some of the world’s largest corporations and forged a close relationship with the Biden administration.
What the downfall of Chevron deference would mean for economic regulations
The future of the administrative state hangs in the balance. Supreme Court justices will soon decide in a pair of cases whether to reverse a decades-old precedent known as the Chevron deference that would curb federal agencies’ power to regulate everything from Wall Street to the stove in your kitchen.
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