Labor News & Commentary April 28, 2024 new DOL rule bolsters labor protections for farmworkers on temporary visas
https://onlabor.org/april-28-2024/
By Otto Barenberg
Otto Barenberg is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary, the UAW wins big in a last-minute deal with Daimler and a new DOL rule bolsters labor protections for farmworkers on temporary visas.
Late Friday evening, with just hours to spare before a planned strike, the United Automobile Workers (UAW) and Daimler Truck reached a tentative agreement raising wages by 25 percent raise over four years. The deal, which covers 7,300 workers across four factories in North Carolina and two distribution centers in Atlanta and Memphis, would also institute profit-sharing, tie wages to the cost of living, and equalize pay across the German companys U.S. facilities. The victory for Daimler employees comes amid a concerted UAW campaign to build worker power across the South, where union density is less than half the national average. Last week, workers at Volkswagens Chattanooga, TN factory voted 2,628 to 985 to join the UAW. On May 13, workers at a Mercedes-Benz plant in Alabama will head to the polls in another highly anticipated test of the UAWs Southern strength.
On Friday, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) promulgated a final rule expanding labor protections for farmworkers on temporary H-2A visas. The rule bars employers from retaliating against H-2A workers who refuse to attend captive audience meetings, clarifies farmworkers for-cause termination protections, and ensures farmworkers can bring guests to employer-provided housing. Guests include health care service providers, legal aid groups, and labor organizations. The final rule substantially modifies the DOLs initial proposal, walking back a total ban on captive audience meetings and expanding guest access to worker housing. According to the agency, the final rule will help prevent exploitation and abuse of agricultural workers and ensure that unscrupulous employers do not financially gain from their violations. The H-2A program now admits over 300,000 foreign workers per year, up from just 74,000 one decade ago. An aging domestic agricultural labor force and crackdowns on hirings of undocumented workers have led to soaring employer demand for H-2A workers.
FULL story at link above.