American
society is steeped in narratives about economic
prosperity shaped by capitalist ideas of
individualism and a corporate culture of
exploitation. Children are exposed to such ideas
in schools and via pop culture and are required
to put them into practice at a young age by
proving their worth in ever-competitive
environments to win college entry or employment.
But rarely are young people taught about their
rights as workers and about the naturally
adversarial role between employers and
employees. In California, thanks to labor
organizers, that’s about to change.
Assemblymember Liz
Ortega,
who has been a respected labor leader in the
state as Statewide Political Director for AFSCME
Local 3299, and whose daughter is a
public-school student, authored a labor
education bill, AB
800,
which just passed the California legislature in
September. The bill, which Governor Gavin Newsom
signed into law, requires all public and charter
schools to mark “Workplace Readiness Week” at
the end of each April. But such a benign
description obscures (perhaps intentionally?)
the fact that it is a labor education bill.
Many
colleges and universities have departments that
study labor, such as the UCLA
Labor Center or
the CUNY
School of Labor and Urban Studies.
But, generally speaking, the starkest exposure
to labor education that K-12 students currently
get is if and when their unionized teachers go
on strike. For example, when Seattle-area
teachers went on strike in 2015, the Seattle
Times published a handy
guide on
how parents could explain to their kids why
teachers were skipping the classroom. The kids
might have been primed to understand what was
happening had they already been getting some
labor education in the classroom.
California
has led the nation in introducing K-12 students
to ideas about organized labor. In 2012,
then-Governor Jerry Brown signed a bill into law
that declared the month of May as Labor
History Month.
Teaching students about the rich history of
labor organizing in the U.S. can offer a solid
foundation upon which to inform them about their
own rights in the workplace. AB 800 does
precisely that: teaching younger generations
about labor in a way that doesn’t reinforce
capitalist values and corporate ethos.
Unsurprisingly,
conservative forces have denounced such
education. The anti-union think tank Public
Service Research Foundation,
which routinely churns out treatises critical of
labor organizing, in 2016 published a lengthy
screed denouncing
Labor History Month as a form of “propaganda.”
“One can only imagine the howling from union
lobbyists if a California State legislator
introduced a bill establishing ‘Capitalism is
Cool Week’ in public schools,” wrote author
Kevin Dayton.
But
our nation is so steeped in ideas that reinforce
the “coolness” of capitalism that there is no
need for explicit pro-capitalist education. Take
“National
Manufacturing Day,”
marked every year on October 6. The day is
touted as “manufacturing’s biggest annual
opportunity to inspire the next generation,
positively shift perceptions about our industry,
and build the foundation for the manufacturing
workforce of the future.”
In Ohio this
year, hundreds of students are marking National
Manufacturing Day by touring factories to try to
imagine what it’s like to be an industrial
worker. A local Chamber of Commerce
representative stated that the tour was a way
for corporations to tell their “story to the
next generation workforce.” It is highly
unlikely the tours will educate children about
the predatory nature of profit-seeking corporate
employers who may refuse to pay overtime,
counteract union drives, cut corners on safety
and workplace regulations, or even engage in
wage theft.
High
school students are routinely trained in “job
readiness” and career preparation. For example,
the federal Department of Education launched
a program in
2022 to boost what’s called “career-connected
learning.” Such training is intended to ensure
children shape themselves to meet the needs of
existing jobs but not how young people can
protect themselves from exploitation.
In
contrast to how we currently train kids to think
about work, AB 800 is intended to
help young people “enter the workforce with a
strong understanding of their rights as workers,
as well as their explicit rights as employed
minors.” Further, the bill hopes, “to equip
pupils with this knowledge to protect them from
retaliation and discrimination, to ensure that
these young workers receive all wages and
benefits to which they are entitled, to empower
them to refuse unsafe work when necessary, and
to prepare them to assert their labor rights
whenever these rights are threatened.”
Such
education is crucial at a time when increasing
numbers of minors are
entering the workforce, thanks in large part to
a Republican-led
loosening of
child labor laws. Vulnerable children make ideal
low-wage workers from a corporate,
profit-maximizing perspective and are often
the victims
of labor violations.
Therefore, according
to Ortega,
“[t]eaching our youth about their rights at work
is essential education―and it could save their
lives.”
Learning
about workers’ rights is a good start, but it’s
not enough. Even when workers are well-informed
about what they deserve from employers, they
don’t have the power to do much more than resign
and look for another job. What gives AB 800
teeth is that it specifically requires K-12
students to be educated, “on their right to join
or organize a union at their workplace.”
The Economic
Policy Institute estimated
that in 2022 the United States’ unionized
workforce increased by 200,000 and tens of
millions of workers wanted to join a union but
couldn’t. Nonunion jobs are being added to the
workforce at a faster rate than union jobs. The
nation requires an army of young union
organizers to compensate for decades of decline
in unionization, and currently most schools do
not educate children on how they can organize
their workplaces when employed.
Lorena
Gonzalez Fletcher, chief officer of the
California Labor Federation, which promoted AB
800, said,
“Requiring that high school students be taught
their rights as employees… empowers young people
with the information and tools they need to
understand their rights as workers and protects
them against workplace abuses.”
Already
younger Americans are enthusiastic about labor
organizing. “Gen Z” is seen as “the
most pro-union generation alive today.”
It’s no wonder, given the stark and
ever-increasing wealth and income inequality
the nation is struggling with. Teaching children
about their rights in the workplace and about
forming labor unions is a necessary antidote to
correcting such disturbing economic trends.
This
commentary was produced by Economy
for All,
a project of the Independent Media Institute.
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BlackCommentator.com
Guest
Commentator, Sonali
Kolhatkar is
the
host
and producer of Uprising,
a popular,
daily, drive-time program on KPFK,
Pacifica
Radio in Los Angeles and co-
director
of the Afghan Women's Mission,
a US-based non-profit organization that
works
with the Revolutionary Association
of
the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA).
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