Re: May Day - the Real Labor Day? by wheelslip ..... Politics Debate Forum # 4 [Arc]
Date: 4/30/2003 5:50:11 PM ( 22 y ago)
Hits: 1,505
URL: https://www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=571688
0 of 0 (0%) readers agree with this message. Hide votes What is this?
Posted on Sun, Apr. 27, 2003
Coming soon: united serfs of America
By Molly Ivins
Creators Syndicate
Boy, there is no shortage of creatively terrible ideas from the Republican Party these days. Those folks are just full of
notions about how to make people's lives
worse -- one horrible idea after another bursting out like popcorn -- and all of them with these sickeningly cute names
attached to them.
Consider the Family Time and Workplace Flexibility Act (Senate version) and the Family Time Flexibility Act (House
version). The Bush administration is
leading the charge with proposed new rules that will erode the 40-hour workweek and affect more than 80 million
workers now protected by the Fair Labor
Standards Act.
To hear the Republicans tell it, you'd think these were family-friendly bills, something like Bill Clinton's Family Leave
Act, designed to help you balance the
difficult combined demands of work and family. With such a smarm of butter over their visages do the Republicans go
on about the joys of "flexibility" and
"freedom of choice" that you would have to read the bills for maybe 30 seconds before figuring out they're about
repealing the 40-hour workweek and ending
overtime.
As The American Prospect magazine notes, when Republicans talk about "flexibility," it means letting business do
whatever it wants without standards, mandates
or worker and consumer rights. Ever since FDR's New Deal, working overtime gets you time-and-a-half in money,
which has the happy effect of holding the
workweek down to 40 hours -- or at least preventing it from ballooning grossly.
The proposed Bush rules, which the two Republican bills codify and expand, would:
• Exclude previously protected workers who were entitled to overtime by reclassifying them as managers. Companies
are already using this ploy when they can
get away with it. Say you're frying burgers on the night shift, making overtime, and suddenly -- congratulations --
you're the assistant night manager, with no raise
and no overtime.
• Eliminate certain middle-income workers from overtime protections by adding an income limit, above which workers
no longer qualify for overtime. You like
that? You make too much to earn overtime.
• Remove overtime protection from large numbers of workers in aerospace, defense, health care, high tech and other
industries.
Pay attention -- this one is coming right out of your paycheck.
Big Bidness is lobbying hard on these bills. If you work overtime to pay your bills, look out.
The trick is, employers get to substitute comp time for overtime, and the employers get the right to decide when -- or
even if -- a worker gets to take his or her
comp time. The legislation provides no meaningful protection against employers requiring workers to take time off
instead of cash and no protection against
employers assigning overtime only to workers who agree to take time instead of cash. Everybody gets burned on this
one, except the bosses. Isn't it lovely?
The proposed rules changes and the Republican bills provide a strong financial incentive for employers to lengthen
the workweek, on top of an already staggering
load. By 1999, in one decade, the average work year had expanded by 184 hours, according to Kevin Phillips' book
Wealth and Democracy.
He writes, "The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the typical American works 350 hours more per year than the
typical European, the equivalent of nine
work weeks."
The bills give employers a new right to delay paying any wages for overtime work for as long as 13 months. According
to an analysis by the Economic Policy
Institute, under the new bills an employee who works overtime hours in a given week might not receive any pay or time
off for that work until more than a year
later, at the employer's discretion.
"Without receiving interest or security, the employees in essence lend their overtime pay to the employers in the hope
of getting back some time later as paid
time off," the report states. "Employees' overtime compensation is put at risk of loss in the event of business failure
and closure, bankruptcy or fraud.
Furthermore, employees get no guarantee of time off when they want or need it."
The EPI explains why Big Bidness loves these bills: "A company with 200,000 FLSA-covered employees might get 160
free hours at $7 an hour from each of
them (160 hours is the maximum allowed under the bills). That's the equivalent of $224 million that the company
wouldn't have to pay its workers for up to a
year after the worker has earned it. Considering that, under normal circumstances, the employer might have to pay 6
percent interest for a commercial loan of
this magnitude, it could save $13 million by relying on comp time to 'borrow' from its employees instead."
The slick marketing and smoke on this one are a wonder to behold. We're being told that private-sector workers will
get the same "benefit" of comp time as
public employees. Wow, keen, except the government has no profit motive for pushing comp time instead of overtime.
Boy, does this stink.
<< Return to the standard message view
fetched in 0.02 sec, referred by http://www.curezone.org/forums/fmp.asp?i=571688