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Workday Magazine (https://workdaymagazine.org/category/investigative/)

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Investigative

Investigative

The Conservative Astroturf Organization Rolling Back Child Labor Protections

By Sarah Lazare | October 11, 2022

The National Federation of Independent Businesses has been active in passing new laws allowing teenagers to work long and late hours in three states.

Illustration Call Workers

The Women on the Other End of the Phone

silhouette of a man in front of a blue sky and meatpacking facility towers with smoke pouring out
Homepage Featured

Some incarcerated meatpacking workers spent ‘100 percent’ of their time in high-risk settings during pandemic

black and white print of factory line workers
Immigration

Inside the Lives of Immigrant Teens Working Dangerous Night Shifts in Suburban Factories

Aviation Cleaner
Government

The Trump Administration Allowed Aviation Companies to Take Bailout Funds and Lay Off Workers, Says House Report

COVID-19
USPS Graphic

Poorly Protected Postal Workers Are Catching COVID-19 by the Thousands. It’s One More Threat to Voting by Mail.

By Maryam Jameel (Pro Publica) and Ryan McCarthy (Pro Publica) | September 18, 2020

More than 50,000 workers have taken time off for virus-related reasons, slowing mail delivery. The Postal Service doesn’t test employees or check their temperatures, and its contact tracing is erratic.

Government

“Cover Up”: House Democrats Subpoena Documents That NLRB Refused to Share in Ethics Investigation

By Ian MacDougall (Pro Publica) | September 15, 2020

A committee chair is ratcheting up a fight over an investigation into potential conflicts of interests in the NLRB’s repeated efforts to undo an Obama-era rule that expanded liability for corporations like McDonald’s.

Investigative
Sexual Harassment Protest

Temp Workers Fight Back Against Alleged Sexual Harassment and Say They Face Retaliation for Doing So

By Melissa Sanchez (ProPublica) | August 28, 2020

The Illinois attorney general announced that he reached a settlement with the company that calls for an independent monitor to protect the workers.

COVID-19

Meatpacking Companies Dismissed Years of Warnings but Now Say Nobody Could Have Prepared for COVID-19

By Michael Grabell (Pro Publica) and Bernice Yeung (ProPublica) | August 20, 2020

In documents dating to 2006, government officials predicted that a pandemic would threaten critical businesses and warned them to prepare. Meatpacking companies largely ignored them, and now nearly every one of the predictions has come true.

Investigative
Happy Hollow Farm

While Covid-19 Upends Supply Chains, Farms That Sell Locally Thrive

By Marissa Plescia | August 10, 2020

“That is the gift of the local system, that it’s so much more resilient than the big industrial system,” said Margot McMillen, a small-scale organic vegetable and beef farmer in Missouri.

COVID-19
Nurse with mask

Nobody Accurately Tracks Health Care Workers Lost to COVID-19. So She Stays Up At Night Cataloging the Dead

By Nina Martin (ProPublica) | August 3, 2020

Anesthesiologist Claire Rezba started tracking lost health workers almost instinctively. Researchers and industry professionals say the lack of good official data on these deaths is “scandalous” and is putting lives in danger.

Investigative
Family of Laid Off Airport Employee

How the Trump Administration Allowed Aviation Companies to Keep Relief Money That Was Supposed to Go to Workers

By Jeff Ernsthausen and Justin Elliott | July 30, 2020

One of the most generous programs of the bailout was meant to help airline industry companies keep their workers on the payroll. Some laid workers off first and then got the money anyway.

COVID-19
Gate Gourmet Loading

The Airline Bailout Loophole: Companies Laid Off Workers, Then Got Money Meant to Prevent Layoffs

By Jeff Ernsthausen and Justin Elliott | July 8, 2020

Three companies including Gate Gourmet, a global provider of airline meals, received $338 million in relief money for workers — and laid workers off anyway.

COVID-19
Nike Facility

Nike Turned Away a Public Health Official From Its Warehouse Days After a Worker With COVID-19 Died

By Wendi C. Thomas (MLK50: Justice Through Journalism) | May 26, 2020

The Health Department received a complaint that a Nike warehouse wasn’t being cleaned thoroughly or allowing for social distancing. Its inspector wasn’t allowed inside. Twenty-one workers have tested positive for COVID-19 at Nike’s Memphis locations.

Investigative
Sears Imagery

Nearing Bankruptcy, Sears Claimed Fast-Food Workers and Baristas as Employees to Keep Tax Breaks

By David Bernstein (The Daily Herald) | May 19, 2020

Politicians who helped draft Sears’ tax deals said they were designed to retain thousands of corporate jobs. Contractors, landscapers and temporary employees who worked in Sears’ buildings were never meant to help the company qualify for tax breaks.

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