âThe story of America is a story of progress and resilience.â U.S. Department of Labor | February 9, 2023 |
State of the Union emphasizes progress, resilience and opportunity for US workers In his State of the Union address, President Joe Biden underscored how his economic plan is bringing back good-paying jobs that donât require a four-year degree. The address covered many topics, including job growth, worker organizing, non-college paths to good jobs, support for mental health, veteran job training and a cancer moonshot. Click the links below to learn more about the Labor Departmentâs work on these issues. Â Read the latest employment report Learn about our Good Jobs Initiative Read about unions and collective bargaining Apprenticeships offer career training that lets you earn as you learn How the Labor Department supports mental health at work Find veteran, transitioning service member and military spouse employment resources Resources for workers impacted by cancer |
Secretary Walsh: "Everybody should be able to take leave when they need it." Before 1993, if your baby got cancer, there was no guarantee youâd still have a job when you got back from the oncologist. Ivonne Limongi was unfortunate enough to need leave for exactly that reason, but like millions of other workers in the past 30 years, she was able to take job-protected leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act. Limongi spoke about her experiences at an event kicking off the departmentâs celebration of the FMLAâs anniversary, where she joined Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff and others in celebrating this landmark legislation and discussing the needs of Americaâs working families. Watch the FMLA anniversary event Learn about the FMLA Read a blog on what the FMLA means to families |
Womenâs Bureau launches paid leave website Job-protected leave has been a lifeline for millions of workers, but paid leave means people can afford to take time to care for themselves and their families. While federal law doesnât guarantee U.S. workers a single day of paid leave, several states have laws that create paid family and medical leave programs for eligible workers. A new site provides information about different types of leave, and the benefits of paid leave for working families. |
Widespread job growth continues with 517,000 new jobs in January The economy added 517,000 jobs in January, with growth in leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, health care and other industries. âWith 12.1 million jobs added since President Biden took office and a monthly average of 356,000 jobs over the past three months, we began 2023 with more strong, steady job growth that benefits workers and their families,â Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh said. |
Blocked emergency exits at Dollar Tree continue a disturbing trend Once again, OSHA investigators found blocked emergency exits at a Dollar Tree store, this time in Alabama. Since 2017, federal and state OSHA programs have identified more than 300 violations in more than 500 inspections at Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores. |
How Black businesses create good jobs and talent pipelines Secretary Walsh met with Black business owners for a panel discussion on the role of Black-owned businesses in building good jobs. The conversation covered paths to success, investing in workers and ways federal policy can support small and Black-owned businesses. Watch the Black-owned business event Learn about the departmentâs Good Jobs Initiative |
| Overtime wages restored A Philadelphia-area home healthcare agency and its owners must pay 398 workers more than $2.3 million in back wages and damages. | |
| Dry ice dangers A Missouri cattle processing plant received its seventh OSHA citation since March 2020, this time for exposing employees to high levels of carbon dioxide. | |
| Trafficking sentence A Florida labor contractor is headed to prison for his part in a conspiracy to subject migrant farmworkers to forced labor, obstruct investigators and intimidate witnesses. | |
Ramping up efforts to protect workers before, during and after the Super Bowl As thousands of football fans prepare for Super Bowl LVII in Arizona, human traffickers and unscrupulous employers seeking to profit from the exploitation of workers are also preparing for the big event. Hereâs how weâre protecting workers before, during and after the game. |
A few toplines from @BLS_gov's January jobs report: âAmerican economy added 517,000 jobs ðUnemployment rate was 3.4% - the lowest since 1969 âï¸12.1 million jobs added since @POTUS took office ï¸800,000 manufacturing jobs created in last two years |
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