Workers are rising up everywhere
What is it about October that has employers spooked? This Halloween, we’re going as worker solidarity because there’s nothing scarier to them than that.
What is it about October that has employers spooked? This Halloween, we’re going as worker solidarity because there’s nothing scarier to them than that.
Join us on Tuesday, October 19, at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT) for EWOC’s event “Help Wanted: What Does the ‘Labor Shortage’ Mean For Working People?”
Meet the moment with us. Become a sustaining donor and help us reach more workers. A better world is possible if we organize for it.
We need to grow this base to sustain the project throughout 2021 and into 2022. Sustaining donors can help us plan the funds we’ll have available.
From healthcare to Hollywood, labor unrest is on the rise in America. Thousands of workers are on strike, and tens of thousands more could join them.
After skyrocketing living costs, stagnant wages, the erosion of benefits, and a lack of rest periods, workers are taking matters into their own hands.
I first started organizing with the Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee in the summer of 2020.
On August 10, about 200 Nabisco factory workers in Oregon went on strike. They were quickly joined by workers in Colorado, Virginia, Illinois, and Georgia.
Afghans on the ground who went to work for the US military throughout the 20-year occupation are being left behind without the promised relocation assistance.
Earlier this week, the IPCC released their a report concluding that global warming is currently on track to exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius.