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This webinar is open to funders and invited speakers.
Sponsored by GIST, Ford Foundation, Funders for a Just Economy, FCCP, Open Society Foundations and Wyss Foundation
Across the country, working people struggling on the frontlines of America’s service economy are standing up for jobs that deliver stability and respect. Millions of working people scramble with ever-changing workweeks that cause volatile incomes and strain families – making it hard to make ends meet and impossible to get ahead.
While the conservative right stokes America’s popular imagination of a “good middle-class job” by glorifying the manufacturing sector and the hope of infrastructure employment, the truth is that the United States’ economy is driven by the service sector – retail, hospitality, food service and healthcare represent 80 percent of U.S. employment and a significant portion of our electorate. Preliminary analysis shows that the retail workforce alone makes up an estimated 6 percent of America’s voting eligible population.
- Unprecedented policy momentum including this year’s historic state-wide win in Oregon and new standards in six cities;
- Powerful worker-led campaigns that moved the retail sector to end on-call scheduling and are showing us the path to creating good jobs in growing retail and food service industries; and
- Innovative strategies to build the voice of service sector workers in their workplaces, with policymakers, and at the ballot box in important cities and states across the country.
- Greg Noth, Wyss Foundation
- Emma Oppenheim, Open Society Foundations
- Carrie Gleason, Center for Popular Democracy’s Fair Workweek Initiative
- Jeff Anderson, UFCW Local 555 & Working Families
- Gordon Mar, Jobs with Justice
Related Resources
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Fair Workweek Initiative: http://www.fairworkweek.org/
- Huffington Post: Oregon Passes Pioneering Worker-Rights Bill
- Racked: America’s Massive Retail Workforce is Tired of Being Ignored
- The Hill (Op-Ed – Carrie Gleason): What does the working class want? Better schedules.
- San Francisco Chronicle: Emeryville fair workweek ordinance takes effect
- Seattle Times: Seattle’s ‘secure scheduling’ rewrites work rules at stores, restaurants
Disclaimer
As with all FCCP events, the subject matter is strictly limited to non-partisan discussion as outlined in the agenda.