domestic workers
Fri Jul 22, 2011 at 13:38:51 PM EDT
|
|
On July 12th, PJA & JFSJ joined a coalition of more than 70 organizations to launch Caring Across Generations, a campaign to transform long-term care in the United States for our loved ones who count on the support of caregivers to meet their basic daily needs, the workers who provide the support, and the families who struggle to find and afford quality care for their family members. 
Taking Care (above): PJA & JFSJ President Simon Greer introduces Valerie Jarrett (Senior Advisor to President Barack Obama, Chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls) at the D.C. launch of Caring Across Generations, a movement to protect and expand our nation’s support system for the aging and people with disabilities at a time when the need for care in America is skyrocketing. The launch – at the first of 15 “Care Congresses” slated for cities around the nation in the next year -- drew more than 700 supporters. PJA & JFSJ helped organize an interfaith breakfast to kick off the campaign.
Pics! Pics! Check out the pictures from the Care Congress and interfaith breakfast on Facebook.
|
|
Discuss
:: (1
Comments)
|
|
Fri Apr 15, 2011 at 13:40:12 PM EDT
|
|
JFSJ partner Domestic Workers United (DWU) has taken the lead in making sure that New York State’s historic bill – signed into law last August – is understood and implemented. After years of organizing, passage of the law, which spells out legal rights and labor protections for domestic workers, was a huge legislative victory. Now DWU is partnering with the Labor Department to make sure it actually helps the workers it was intended to protect. Worker-employee workshops are planned, and DWU organizers are pounding the pavement and seeking out child care providers to educate them about the law, the first in the nation to set time and hour requirements for in-home care-givers and housekeepers, including mandated overtime pay, vacation pay and a 40 hour standard workweek. The law also provides for temporary disability benefits and spells out protections for domestic workers facing discrimination or harassment. How well and how quickly the domestic workers law is understood and implemented in New York will provide a model for other states and organizing efforts, as similar bills move to the forefront nationwide. On Wednesday, while hundreds of domestic workers and their supporters packed a Sacramento hearing room, a bill modeled on New York’s law passed out of the California Assembly’s Labor Committee by a 5 to 1 vote. Here’s more on DWU’s implementation campaign from today’s New York Times.
|
|
Discuss
:: (2
Comments)
|
|
Tue Nov 30, 2010 at 15:19:52 PM EST
|
|
NY's new domestic workers bill of rights, about which we've said much over the past several months, takes effect today. Among other provisions, this new law gives domestic workers: • The right to overtime pay at time-and-a-half after 40 hours of work in a week, or 44 hours for workers who live in their employer’s home; • A day of rest (24 hours) every seven days, or overtime pay if they agree to work on that day; • Three paid days of rest each year after one year of work for the same employer; • Protection under New York State Human Rights Law, and the creation of a special cause of action for domestic workers who suffer sexual or racial harassment; and • Workers’ Compensation insurance coverage for domestic workers who work more than 40 hours per week. Congratulations to our long time partner & grantee Domestic Workers United, to their allies including JFREJ, and to the people of New York!
|
|
Discuss
:: (1
Comments)
|
|
Fri Nov 12, 2010 at 12:21:29 PM EST
|
|
On October 28th over sixty people gathered to hear Domestic Workers United present research regarding the need for and feasibility of collective bargaining for the domestic worker industry. In addition to a large contingent of DWU members, attendees came from JFSJ, the National Domestic Worker Alliance, the Urban Justice Center, and Jews for Racial and Economic Justice. The briefing also marked the major victory of the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, signed by Governor Paterson in September. While the Bill of Rights is a historic first step, it does not include several important benefits, including sick and vacation days and notice of termination. Instead the legislature commissioned the Department of Labor to study the feasibility of collective bargaining to achieve these benefits. DWU conducted parallel research. Partnering with the NDWA and the UJC, DWU surveyed domestic workers, and employers of domestic workers. The research confirmed that domestic workers are particularly vulnerable because they work in isolation for non-traditional employers. They are often at the whim of employers, and without the job security to advocate on their own behalf. Access to collective bargaining would increase stability in the domestic worker industry, facilitate enforcement of existing rights, and create clear standards for employers to follow. The research also identified models of collective bargaining that address the challenges of domestic workers, including: Neighborhood Based Community Standards, Model Contracts, and Multi-Employer Bargaining. However, domestic workers are currently excluded from the State Labor Relations Act, the law which permits groups of workers to pursue collective bargaining. This exclusion, a segregation era holdover, prohibits domestic workers from pursuing collective bargaining. To include domestic workers, the legislature would have to amend one paragraph of the SLRA. DWU has a four part strategy for the future: Working towards the inclusion of domestic workers in the SLRA to enable collective bargaining Pursuit of legislative and regulatory reform as needed Community education and enforcement of existing rights through community partnerships Continuing to organize domestic workers For more information, check out domesticworkersunited.org! We’re so excited to see what happens next with this great organization!
|
|
Discuss
:: (0
Comments)
|
|
|
|
Tue Jul 13, 2010 at 14:23:32 PM EDT
|
|
On the heels of the amazing and much-needed Domestic Workers victory, which we've covered a bunch on JSpot, I saw this project: a "photographic leveling" of employers and the women who work in their homes. Dressed and posed alike, it is up to the viewer to speculate on who is the employer and who the employee. Looking at the photos, I thought about all of the Jewish families that employ domestic workers. I wonder how many Jewish families were already giving overtime and sick days, etc and how many will have to be pushed by this law or even persecuted prosecuted if they don't follow it.
|
|
Discuss
:: (4
Comments)
|
|
Fri Jul 02, 2010 at 15:33:02 PM EDT
|
|
Even as the New York state legislature offends those it represents by heading off into the holiday weekend without passing a budget -- now three months overdue -- they've done something fairly amazing this week, as noted yesterday on Jspot, something that sets just the kind of precedent that makes us happy. Here's how New York's Governor Patterson descirbed it in a statement issued last night: Today, both houses of the Legislature passed legislation that truly deserves to be called historic. It would make New York the first State in the nation to enshrine in law the basic rights of a class of workers that has historically and wrongfully been excluded from such protections: the domestic workers who care for our children, clean our homes, and provide the elderly with companionship. Their work is of incalculable value, yet our laws have failed to recognize it. This bill would change that, and serve as a model for such change on a national scale.... Most of all, I must express my gratitude to the thousands of individual domestic workers who organized and fought for this legislation. They provide all of us with an example of how individuals can, through struggle and dedication, bring about positive change in the face of skepticism and doubt. This achievement belongs to them, and I will be pleased to sign it into law on their behalf.
And while we're sad to see that a few of the bill's original provisions didn't make it into the final law, we're thrilled that 200,000 domestic workers will enjoy more rights, along with more of the same benefits and protections enjoyed by other workers, like worker compensation, anti-discrimination law, and access to unemployment insurance.
A huge congratulations to Domestic Workers United, a JFSJ grantee without which this victory might not be New York's to celebrate.
|
|
Discuss
:: (0
Comments)
|
|
Thu Jul 01, 2010 at 16:44:02 PM EDT
|
|
New York State took another critical step for domestic workers today! The State Legistlature passed the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights to give labor protections to nannies, eldercare workers, and housekeepers in New York. There are over 200,000 domestic workers in New York City alone. For the first time, domestic workers will have a set 40 hour work week that will also include one day of rest. Domestic Workers United, a JFSJ grantee, has been spearheading this fight and shepherding the bill through the Legistlature. Governer Paterson is expected to sign the bill into law. Read the New York Times briefing here.
|
|
Discuss
:: (1
Comments)
|
|
Wed Jun 02, 2010 at 15:30:12 PM EDT
|
|
Long time JFSJ grantee, Domestic Workers United, has been organizing to build the power of domestic workers since 2000. Yesterday, the New York State Senate passed the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights that will bring basic protections -- like paid overtime, sick days and health care--under the law. This is a significant moment for nanny's, housekeepers and home aids and their employers across the state.Since the bill already passed the Assembly, the next step is to reconcile the two bills and get it signed into law!
|
|
Discuss
:: (1
Comments)
|
|
Tue Apr 20, 2010 at 16:55:23 PM EDT
|
A federal jury recently convicted Mabelle de La Rosa Dann, a Walnut Creek, CA real estate agent to over three years in prison for enslaving a domestic worker in her home. Zoraida Pena-Canal performed nearly two years of unpaid domestic labor in a Bay Area home. The lengths her employer went to are described below:
Evidence at the October 2009 trial uncovered the lengths to which Dann and her family went in obtaining Peña-Canal’s services for free. Dann traveled to Peru to recruit Peña-Canal in 2002 and promised the prospective nanny fair wages and a decent living situation. Once in the United States, Dann took control of Pena-Canal’s passport and identification papers. Dann kept the documents in her possession and had Peña-Canal labor for Dann and her family, cooking and cleaning in Dann’s home in Walnut Creek and caring for Dann’s three children, without receiving pay, privacy or time away from the family.
|
|
There's More...
:: (0
Comments, 229 words in story)
|
|
|
|
|
| User Blox 1 |
|
- Put stuff here
|
Barack Obama  |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| RSS Feed Links |
Subscribe to JSpot in a feed reader!
Subscribe to JSPOT by Email!
|
| User Blox 4 |
|
- Put stuff here
|
|