Written by John Lopez
Creative artwork of AB5 from Lisa Rothstein, San Diego, CA
This article continues addressing a ballot measure that Illinois voters must vote on this election cycle.
We urge voters to reject Amendment 1, a constitutional amendment that
would elevate collective bargaining rights in the Illinois Constitution,
allowing government union contracts to override state law.
Thursday afternoon, the Daily Herald hosted a virtual debate including Shaw Media to discuss Amendment 1 and answer questions. … Continue Reading
Tags: AB5, Amendment 1, California, civil rights, Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., Edwin A Lombard III, Illinois Policy Institute, Lisa Rothstein, Lorena S. Gonzalez-Fletcher, Mailee Smith, Proposition 22, Worker Classification
Exclude From Homepage, Illinois Politics | Admin | September 30, 2022 7:06 AM | Comments Off on Amendment 1 and Worker Classification, “Other states should become aware and alarmed by these non-progressive and regressive regulations”
Written by John Lopez
Prologue: On February 13, 2022, John Lopez called-in to the national radio talk show Beyond the Beltway with Bruce DuMont and asked a question to Dan Ronan, associate news editor for Transport Topics, concerning worker classification in the context of independent trucking. The relevant 2 1/2 minutes clip is cued from the YouTube livestream with the context of the question being California’s Assembly Bill 5 and unintended consequence of legislation targeting Uber and other app-based companies, and the direct impact to inflation and the supply chain challenges within the trucking industry.… Continue Reading
Tags: AB5, ABC Test, Amendment One, Beyond the Beltway, Bruce DuMont, COVID–19, Cristina Castro, Dan Ronan, Employee Rights Act of 2022, Freedom Convoy, Labor Union, Lisa Rothstein, People's Convoy, PRO Act, Protecting the Right to Organize, Tim Scott
Federal Elections, Federal Issues, Illinois Politics, Political, PRO Act | Admin | March 22, 2022 7:00 AM | Comments Off on Workers’ Freedoms Including Classification, Right-to-Work, Illinois Law and the PRO Act Come to Forefront for 2022 Elections