Workers Rights: Difference between revisions
edit "how are corporations attacking worker's rights in these bills" |
add consumer rights, etc summaries |
||
Line 104: | Line 104: | ||
-------------------------What the Bills Do------------------------> | -------------------------What the Bills Do------------------------> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">How are corporations attacking worker | ! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">How are corporations attacking worker and consumer rights in these bills? </h2> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|style="color:#000;"| | |style="color:#000;"| | ||
[[Image:Scales.png|left|140px]] | [[Image:Scales.png|left|140px]] | ||
<big>These bills aim to erode the rights of workers in favor of Big Business, Banksters, and other corporate interests by: </big><br> | <big>'''These bills aim to erode the rights of workers in favor of Big Business, Banksters, and other corporate interests by''': </big><br> | ||
* '''Pushing union-busting 'right to work' legislation''' (1R10) | * '''Pushing union-busting 'right to work' legislation''' (1R10) | ||
* '''Giving employers access to | * '''Giving employers access to employees' medical records''' on worker’s compensation claims (1Q5) | ||
* '''Weakening the political power of unions''' by, for example: | * '''Weakening the political power of unions''' by, for example: | ||
** '''limiting dues deduction''' from paychecks (1R6), | ** '''limiting dues deduction''' from paychecks (1R6), | ||
Line 126: | Line 126: | ||
** '''giving employers standing''' to challenge worker's comp claims (1Q1, 1M22). | ** '''giving employers standing''' to challenge worker's comp claims (1Q1, 1M22). | ||
* '''Opposing release time for public employee union activities''' (1P6) | * '''Opposing release time for public employee union activities''' (1P6) | ||
* '''Privatizing government services''' through: | |||
** the “Council on Efficient Government Act” that outsources public services and weakens public employee unions. (1C3) | |||
** Similar bills require agencies to consider whether services can be provided by private entities at lower cost, with consideration driven by economic concerns rather than what is in the public interest. (1C2, 1C8) | |||
---- | |||
<big>'''These bills aim to erode the rights of consumers in favor of Big Business, Banksters, and other corporate interests by''': </big><br> | |||
* '''Supporting astronomical credit card rates,''' and opposing efforts to limit Americans’ credit card debt (1H1) | |||
* '''Supporting unfair ATM fees''', and opposing restrictions on those charges (1H0) | |||
* '''Opposing the Consumer Financial Protection Agency''', a vitally important agency whose necessity became obvious after banksters crashed the U.S. economy (1C10) | |||
* '''Opposing “Socially Conscious Investments”''' (seriously!) (1J0) | |||
* '''Supporting the “right” of insurance companies to participate in discriminatory and unconstitutional “redlining”''' (the practice of charging people of color significantly higher insurance rates because they are “riskier”) by rebranding the practice as “territorial rating” (1L6) | |||
* '''Promoting predatory lending''' by: | |||
** '''Authorizing short-term, high-interest loans backed by the borrower’s car title''', placing working persons in the position of losing their vehicle (an asset necessary to work and make a living) (1G8) | |||
**''' Prohibiting local governments from regulating unfair lending practices''' in favor of more centralized state control (a common theme in ALEC bills: local control is desirable when it applies to state’s rights against the federal government, but not when it applies to a community’s rights against the state) (1G7) | |||
* Attacking housing rights by: | |||
** '''Eliminating building and maintenance codes for affordable housing''' under the guise of “increasing the construction of low-income housing,” but likely paving the way for a regulation-free housing market (1A0) | |||
** '''Privatizing public housing''' by contracting with private-sector tenant management organizations (1A9) and enacting “right to buy” laws (1A8) | |||
** '''At the height of the housing bubble, encouraging greater housing deregulation''' in order to promote even more construction, and blaming high housing prices on regulation (rather than speculation) (1B1) | |||
** '''Encouraging pension fund investment in real estate''' before the housing bubble developed (1B0) | |||
* '''Limiting the ability to develop smart transportation policy''' through a state Constitutional Amendment requiring that revenues from gas taxes and vehicle-related fees be used for highways, rather than investment in less fossil-fuel dependent rail transit or bike lanes. (1M4). The proposed ALEC Amendment has been adopted in 29 states (eight of which copied the ALEC language verbatim). | |||
<!-- | <!-- |
Revision as of 00:56, 16 June 2011
|
|
|
|