The Aspen Institute Inc.

22/08/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 22/08/2024 22:58

Resource Roundup Newsletter - Issue 2, August 2024

As summer comes to a close, final vacations are squeezed in, and we prepare for a return to the routines of cooler months to come, we at the Aspen InstituteEconomic Opportunities Programare taking a moment to reflect on one of the most valuable benefits employers can give their employees: time -time for loved ones, time for rest, time for living a full life outside the workplace. Recognizing the importance of time for its workforce, the government of San Juan County, Washington, recently took the pioneering step of instituting a 32-hour workweek. The Seattle Timescaptured what the change has meantfor employees and the challenges that arise when breaking from the 40-hour workweek status quo.

"My whole life, all I ever wanted was to be a mom," says Stephane Stookey, lead public health nurse with San Juan County's Health & Community Services. Her schedule gives her more quality time with her 5-year-old son, Lisho Osorio. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

This edition also features a new publication from the Economic Policy Institute aboutthe importance of robust benefitsthat support flexibility for low-wage workers. In addition, explore U.S. Department of Labor research on the mutual benefits thatworker voice brings for businesses and employees. We conclude with reporting from Labor Notes and OnLabor onthe future of organizing in the industrial Southand onthe role states may play in strengthening workers rights, especially as the Supreme Court reduces the number of federal tools available for protecting workers.

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The Seattle Times |What a 32-hour workweek looks like in San Juan County | The Seattle Times

The 40-hour workweek has governed Americans' lives for nearly a century. However, evidence from abroad has shown that reducing the length of the workweek increases the productivity, job satisfaction, and wellbeing of employees. In 2023, San Juan County, Washington, became one of the first local governments in the US toshorten the workweek to 32 hours for most employees.

County officials have found that workforce retention has increased and vacancies are filling faster since the change. Nearly four in five employees surveyed by the county reported improved mental health. That said, San Juan County's innovative shift has not been without its challenges, especially for resident-facing government operations.

Read the Seattle Times' reportingfor more on the first months of San Juan County's 32-hour workweek rollout.

Economic Policy Institute |Flexible work: What workers, especially low-wage workers, really want and how best to provide it

US labor law too often fails to give workers the flexibility they need for family, health, and other responsibilities in life. This is exemplified by the absence of federally guaranteed paid leave, which puts the US at odds with most industrialized democracies.

A new report from EPI spotlightsthe importance of policies that support flexibility for workers, especially those in the gig economy. Companies that depend on gig labor often tout the flexible scheduling they offer workers. But the reality is different. Algorithmic management practices exert significant pressure on labor, and the frequent misclassification of employees as independent contractors further deprives workers of basic protections, like overtime pay, workers' compensation, and the right to organize.

Explore EPI's full reportto understand the state of flexible work and what can be done to ensure employees' rights are prioritized.

U.S. Department of Labor |Worker Voice

Worker voice is the foundation of healthy, productive, and engaging workplaces. A new report from the U.S. Department of Labor highlights effective forms of worker voice, giving particular attention to industries with nonstandard work arrangements and fewer labor protections. The report provides case studies of strategies from the US and abroad to increase worker voice and power in agriculture and domestic work, featuring, among others, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and the National Domestic Workers Alliance.

Learn more about these organizations' work and about the merits of various forms of effective worker voice, including unions and collective bargaining, in this important research.

Labor Notes |New 'Battery Belt' Opens Organizing Front in the South | Labor Notes

The future of American auto manufacturing may well be the South. Federal economic development policies intended to spur a clean energy economy have led to groundbreakings for billions of dollars' worth of factories in the region, whose production lines span the automotive supply chain.

Labor organizers know that a manufacturing job isn't always a good job, especially in many southern states with weak worker protections and low minimum wages. Despite the South's low union density, organizers believe that an approach focused on building worker power at key junctures in the supply chain might offer a promising strategy for improving job quality across the industry.

Read organizer Ben Carroll's article in Labor Notesfor more on the future of organizing in the South.

OnLabor |Picking up the Slack on Worker Rights: A New State Strategy

Recent rulings by the Supreme Court that limit executive agency powers may affect the federal government's ability to uphold workers' rights, but states can still take action to raise the wage floor and protect workers, write Sharon Block and Rajesh Nayak. More than half the states have raised their minimum wages above the federal rate, and several have responded to the climate crisis by instituting heat protections for workers.

Learn more from Block and Nayak, in OnLabor, about how states are stepping in to support workers.

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