Kimberly: "I did not make enough to even pay for my $600 a month room." #PayUpNow

“I’m homeless because of these apps’ race to the bottom. I did not make enough to even pay for my $600 a month room. And so I am now homeless. This is a serious situation. We need you all to really get on this and get us some permanent changes.”

Gig workers are calling on the Seattle City Council to make the gig economy Pay Up Now by passing new laws that raise pay, protect flexibility, and provide transparency.

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Gig workers can't afford to wait: Tell Seattle City Council to take action now & make the gig economy Pay Up

We can't afford to wait another year to take action as booming gig companies makes their executives into billionaires while paying as little as $2 a job to the people doing the actual work. Send a message today to Seattle City Council telling them to act now by passing new laws that raise pay, protect flexibility, and provide transparency for gig workers.

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Big business lobbyists say the darndest things, don’t they?

During the state House Labor committee’s recent hearing on the Worker Protection Act (HB 1076)—a bill that would allow whistleblower enforcement of workers’ rights law—big business lobbyists were there to testify in opposition, just like they do every time there’s a Good Thing for Workers on the docket. Recently, they’ve also opposed higher wages, sick days, and basically every other worker protection currently on the books.

And gosh, these biz lobbyists sure were in extra special business lobbyist form during the hearing…

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Legislators leave unemployed workers behind — without even holding a hearing

Just three weeks into the legislative session, state leaders have scrambled with extraordinary speed and waived standard procedure in order to give out immediate unemployment tax breaks to businesses, while failing to address the needs of hundreds of thousands of unemployed workers who have struggled with devastating delays, unfair denials, and overpayment collections.

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No, the sky won’t fall if Congress passes a $15/hr federal minimum wage—workers in Seattle & SeaTac report the sky is still aloft

Congress is considering legislation to set a $15 federal minimum wage, a long-overdue move that as part of a broader COVID relief effort will be an important way to ensure greater economic security for millions of workers across the country, protect public health during this crisis, and support a just recovery going forward.

Cue the Chicken Little predictions from business lobbyists, who are already trotting out their same-old arguments against being required to pay workers more money for the first time in over a decade. But workers in Seattle and SeaTac know from experience that the sky didn’t fall after they won the first $15 laws in the country in 2013 and 2014—and they know it won’t fall in 2021, either.

So here’s a quick refresher about the history of the fight for $15 and what a higher federal minimum wage will mean for workers across the country during this crisis and beyond…

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Our take on the unemployment reform bill being heard today & how it can be expanded to better support unemployed workers

Working Washington and Fair Work Center support SB 5061, the unemployment reform proposal sponsored by Sens. Keiser and Conway which would raise the minimum weekly benefit, reduce employer unemployment taxes, and make other changes to a state unemployment system which has failed to do its job of paying benefits promptly to those who lose work. We also urge legislators to expand the bill to do more to support workers in need.

However, while the current draft of SB 5061 does take some useful steps to improve the system for workers, the current draft does not address the single most important issue workers have faced: it fails to do what is necessary to give workers confidence they will receive benefits promptly when they lose work.

While the current draft of SB 5061 does take some useful steps to improve the system for workers, the current draft does not address the single most important issue workers have faced: it fails to do what is necessary to give workers confidence they will receive benefits promptly when they lose work. Here’s what needs to change to better support workers in need:

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What Workers Want: Our Reconstruction 2021 Agenda

In 2020, our public health crisis became an economic crisis. Entire industries turned upside down, communities were devastated, and more than a million people filed for unemployment. Black, brown, and immigrant workers are bearing the greatest impacts — more likely than white workers to be essential workers exposed to COVID, more likely than white workers to lose their jobs, and less likely than white workers to collect unemployment benefits.

We cannot emerge from this crisis without addressing the underlying inequities that have made the virus hit so hard and the economy crash so unevenly. As a multi-racial, multi-industry organization uniting working class people across the state, we call on our elected officials to adopt the following reconstruction agenda to ensure we support workers who have lost income, strengthen labor standards & protect public health, and tax the wealthy to fund a just recovery.

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Our statement in response to the State’s latest guidelines for reopening indoor dining

The key consideration in the Governor’s plan is public health — not restaurant revenue or restaurant owners’ political power. That’s good news. And we’re pleased to see that the new roadmap reflects the basic reality every restaurant worker knows: indoor dining is not an essential service, and it is simply not safe right now.

But much much much more must be done to provide workers relief, and we cannot afford to wait for federal action.

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