Thursday, September  2 2010
 
This week, just in time for Labor Day weekend, New York Gov. David Paterson
 signed into law the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights.  The new law, which takes effect in November, is a massive and  unprecedented win for the new labor movement—and it is a model for the  way organizers and lawmakers alike must begin to think about workers’  rights in the 21st century economy. 
The New York law requires overtime pay for nannies, housekeepers and  companions to the elderly*, guarantees them weekly time off and subjects  employers to state law for minimum-wage violations and sexual  harassment. These are all basic rights that traditional, full-time  employees have long enjoyed, but that a broad swath of workers who are  not protected by labor laws have never seen. Last week, the California  State Assembly passed a resolution recognizing similar labor standards  for domestic workers, rights that lawmakers will likely codify as state  law next year. Organizers in other states are working to generate more  such victories.
The amazing New York win, spearheaded by Domestic Workers United  (DWU) and the New York Domestic Workers Justice Coalition, has received  its fair share of congratulations. But this is more than a moving story  of downtrodden women confronting the system. Over the longterm, DWU’s  approach to labor rights should shape the larger, national project of  designing a new economy that doesn’t slowly kill off its workers.  
DWU is not a union, but rather what’s  called a “workers’ center.” These small and scrappy but rapidly maturing  collectives have formed the last line of defense for primarily workers  of color who are excluded, either deliberately or by default, from U.S. labor protections. DWU’s  ability to raise public consciousness about such exclusions, its  innovative organizing of thousands of dispersed workers who have  thousands of disparate employers, and the issues it will confront in  implementing the new law raise critical questions for all economic  justice activists. 
Gov. Paterson’s press secretary drew a bold analogy on signing day,  calling the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights the governor’s own version  of the Emancipation Proclamation. That boast sounds exaggerated, but the  current work life of domestic workers is in fact deeply rooted in  post-Civil War racial politics. 
The Roosevelt administration passed many enduring economic reforms in  the 1930’s, including the Social Security Act and the National Labor  Relations Act. The latter made it easier for workers to form unions and  bargain collectively with their employers. Domestic and farmworkers,  however, were explicitly excluded from both laws, a deal that allowed  Roosevelt to gather the votes of Southern, white congress members, among  others. At the time, 95 percent of domestic workers were black women in  the South. Most agricultural workers were Black, Filipino or Mexican. 
While Roosevelt’s labor protections have expanded over time  (farmworkers were included in 1966), the combination of formal exclusion  and practical non-enforcement still leaves millions of workers on their  own. Most Americans don’t likely know the broad swath of workers who  aren’t protected by labor laws. 
They include, for instance, workers who  are considered independent contractors (such as taxi drivers and home  daycare providers) and people working for tips (restaurant servers and  runners haven’t seen their federal minimum wage rise in 20 years).  Workers who receive public benefits through workfare programs, immigrant  workers (day laborers, guest workers) and workers in right-to-work  states are all excluded from varying sets of rights, either deliberately  or by the lack of enforcement. Formerly incarcerated workers are  subject to background checks when they apply for jobs, regardless of the  severity of their conviction or the amount of time that has lapsed.*
Moreover, these workers have long been abandoned by unions that lack  either the interest or the capacity to organize them. But for some  years, workers’ centers like Domestic Workers United and their sister  organizations have been stepping into that void—and often winning  substantial changes. The Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York, which I wrote about in The Accidental American,  has improved labor conditions in some of the city’s biggest restaurant  chains, replicating many elements of union contracts, even though they  are not a union. 
DWU started organizing 10 years ago. Having  won the landmark New York law, they will now focus on making sure it is  enforceable, by changing regulations such as those that govern how  workers file complaints, so that their employers can’t retaliate. DWU will  also advise the state Department of Labor on educating workers and  employers about the new law, and will do its own outreach through  workers and through an alliance with Jews for Racial and Economic  Justice. 
While workers’ centers like DWU can play a  critical role in fixing the labor economy, they have been hamstrung by  the fact that they cannot collectively bargain and cannot collect union  dues from an organized workplace. “The traditional collective bargaining  framework poses a challenge because of how the industry is set up,”  says DWU organizer Priscillia Gonzalez.  “There’s no central work site, and no common employer. Also, there is  this dynamic that because the work takes place in someone’s home, the  people who are hiring don’t see themselves as employers.” 
DWU is investigating ways to get the  government to hold employers accountable even in the informal economy.  Can that be done by legislation or regulation, if not by collective  bargaining? It’s a critical question for all workers’ centers, and for  all lawmakers.
 
It’s also becoming a more broadly relevant question every day. As our  economy continues shifting toward service and information industries,  more and more formerly middle-class and white workers have seen their  jobs similarly “contingentized” as domestic workers and day laborers. As  employers load up on temporary, subcontracted and part-time workers  rather than full-time employees, they avoid paying into Social Security  and providing unemployment insurance, health coverage, and workers’  compensation. The can even avoid providing vacation or sick days. 
“Labor laws aren’t sufficient anymore to protect the rights of workers, whether in the minimum standards or the rules of the NLRA,” said Ai-jen Poo, a co-founder of DWU who  is now directing the National Domestic Workers Alliance. “There were  flaws and holes because so many people were excluded. But even for those  workers [labor laws] were meant to protect, they’re failing because the  economy has changed so much.”  
People of color and women certainly remain over-represented in this  category. Those employed by temp agencies, for example, are more likely  than traditional workers to be black or Latino. But the job sectors that  have been heavily contingentized in the past 20 years range from  professors, editors and writers to tugboat operators and museum guards. 
The question of how to adjust to these economic arrangements has to  concern traditional labor unions as well as workers’ centers. A number  of unions helped DWU win in New York. The  doorman’s union was particularly active, in large part because doormen  in luxury apartment buildings have plenty of opportunities to witness  first hand the abuse of domestic workers. Nonetheless, unions have an  outdated organizing model, even when they are progressive on racial and  gender matters. They go into a large workplace with a single employer,  organize it, win an election and bargain for a new contract. As such  workplaces disintegrate, however, unions have been slow to adjust and  quick to lose members. Unlike workers in other countries, for instance,  when American workers lose their jobs, they also lose their union  memberships. 
Nor is there any real trans-nationalism in American unions, although the U.S. workforce is increasingly foreign-born with strong global ties, including dependent family members. By contrast, DWU and  the national alliance have worked with the International Labor  Organization to produce a convention on the rights of the domestic  worker and build, for the first time, global standards governing the  industry. 
“The experience of domestic workers challenges the framework we’re  used to for labor law,” said Poo. “Maybe instead of talking about  minimum wage, we need a floor wage. Or instead of inclusion in  [existing] labor law, we need new laws.” If we’re going to develop a  vision for protecting workers in the 21st century, it is far more likely  to emerge from the people on the margins of the American labor movement  than from those at its traditional center. This week’s New York victory  is a welcome, hopeful start.
*A previous version of this post  incorrectly reported that the New York law addresses overtime pay for  home health aides. We also reported that formerly incarcerated  applicants are the only ones subject to background checks; they are the  only workers who are checked regardless of the the type of job they are  seeking.