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National Employment Law Project
90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004
Manufacturing jobs built America’s middle class, after all. So providing generous government supports to companies that promise to build or(…)
1 in 4 manufacturing workers now paid less than $11.91 per hour as wage cuts, temporary jobs redefine the industry(…)
Statement of Christine Owens, Executive Director, National Employment Law Project “Five million immigrants who live and work as members of(…)
Twenty years ago, criminal record background checks for employment were rare. Today, the easy accessibility of criminal records on the(…)
Sure, Democrats – who have championed increasing the minimum wage – might have lost the Senate. But across both red(…)
Proposition 47, which California voters overwhelmingly approved Tuesday, could change the course of the state’s criminal justice system. By changing(…)
Seattle made history in June when it became the first major city in America to pass a livable minimum wage(…)
Seattle, WA—Seattle made history by becoming first city in the nation to adopt a $15 minimum wage, but it will(…)
Washington, DC—Time is running out for two-dozen states to tap into federal money for expanding a widely praised employer program(…)