November 19, 2020
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As President, Joe Biden Can Protect Workers

In a new blog post at the Institute for New Economic Thinking, professors David Michaels and Gregory Wagner lay out an 11-point overview of a longer policy paper that they believe president-elect Joe Biden can enact on day one in office to protect workers. Unsurprisingly, much of it revolves around the president directing OSHA to do what it is meant to do, protect American workers. As we’ve noted before, OSHA has largely vacated its responsibilities to oversee workplace safety, and failed to develop a comprehensive plan to address the specific issues of workplace safety during the pandemic. OSHA is currently being sued by a coalition of unions representing essential workers, including nurses and teachers.

As professors Michaels and Wagner point out, the pandemic has had a disproportionate impact on poorer people, especially minority workers, who are overrepresented in “essential” jobs, such as those in agriculture, public transportation, retail, warehousing, and health care. They are experiencing an increased burden from having to be in close contact with people on a daily basis often with insufficient health and safety regulations, such as a steady supply of PPE and social distancing measures. They are also unable to care for family, such as children who are in virtual school.

Many of these issues are ones that OSHA is supposed to address, but has not done so, despite skyrocketing complaints from workers all over the country. Therefore, one of the most obvious solutions for President Biden would be to instruct OSHA to increase its claims investigations and develop a robust policy for workplace safety as the coronavirus rages. Some of the more salient features of the professors’ proposal include:

  • Requiring all employers to develop and institute infection control protocols;
  • Increasing production and distribution of PPE for workers, potentially by invoking the Defense Production Act;
  • Upping the consequences for employer non-compliance;
  • Protecting whistleblowers who raise questions about workplace safety.

As a review of the proposal suggests, the president has wide latitude when it comes to interpreting, directing OSHA and similar departments toward specific policies, and enforcing those policies.


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Navigating Workers’ Compensation Concerns & Questions in the Age of COVID-19

April 21, 2020
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Understanding workers’ compensation relating to COVID-19.

Domestic Worker Rights in the Pandemic

April 20, 2020
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The hardest hit demographic during the coronavirus pandemic has been the world’s elderly population, but what can be missing from the reporting is the precarious employment of many domestic workers and senior caregivers whose work has been affected by the lockdowns. Domestic care workers are eligible for unemployment insurance in New York, and we encourage those who have been laid off to apply.

COVID-19: Know Your Rights Training for Law Students

April 17, 2020
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Watch this recorded presentation delivered by Associate Alex Berke to the Fordham Workers’ Rights Advocates on April 16, 2020. Alex discussed frequently asked COVID-19 legal questions.

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