Contact
National Employment Law Project
90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004
Birmingham’s minimum wage will increase to $8.50 in July 2016 and to $10.10 in July 2017.
Let’s celebrate this vital social insurance program while striving to improve it for today’s changing workforce.
Labeling employees as “independent contractors” is an age-old way to skirt labor and tax laws, writes Rebecca Smith.
Stagnant wages and high levels of long-term unemployment reveal a still-vulnerable economy.
Nearly 3 in 4 bank tellers in the U.S. earn less than $15 an hour, NELP’s study finds.
This “in-your-face” evidence that vigorous hiring isn’t lifting our paychecks also reflects a sharp dropoff in bonus and incentive pay(…)
Could higher wages for bank tellers be the next battle in the fight for $15?
State unemployment programs have not caught up with the realities faced by workers today.
We are asking the federal government to give all workers a fair chance at a job.