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National Employment Law Project
90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004
The D.C. Council chose instead to listen to big money donors over its constituents, taking a dangerous track at a(…)
The D.C. Council’s repeal of Initiative 77 is a historic low point for democracy in the District of Columbia.
Amazon’s move shows how outdated the $7.25 federal minimum wage is—and how workers in all 50 states need $15 an hour.
Michigan, which has helped build America’s middle-class with its factories and farms, should be proud today of what it has(…)
The National Employment Law Project (“NELP”) expresses solidarity with the incarcerated individuals and organizers striking across the country who are now entering(…)
Raising Missouri’s minimum wage to $12 an hour would benefit both small businesses and workers.
New Yorkers secured a huge victory today in the fight to reclaim our democracy from the outsized influence of corporations.
Workers, communities of color, advocates, and our courts will not allow preemption to deny local communities the very basic right(…)
We cannot uphold our most basic workplace protections, such as the minimum wage, overtime premium pay, and child labor protections,(…)