Contact
National Employment Law Project
90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004
Many incarcerated people are working during their sentences, but their labor doesn’t qualify them for unemployment benefits.
“For a worker who suddenly loses their job, unemployment can be a catastrophe.”
Temporary workers win new labor protections in Illinois.
If signed into law, the Raise the Wage Act would mean increased earnings for over 60% of workers living in(…)
Black workers are often impacted first and worst when job growth slows, forecasting the dangers that other workers will confront.
This conservative Court refuses to see that racial segregation is alive and well in our schools, workplaces, and institutions.
California should provide economic support to workers who become unemployed, regardless of their immigration status.
The bill gives people who lose work because of a natural disaster more time to apply for Disaster Unemployment Assistance.
Dr. William E. Spriggs, Photo Credit: AFL-CIO The entire staff and board of the National Employment Law Project (NELP)(…)