Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

#Sidney's Picks: Trigger Warning--Scott Walker Does Something Right for a Change

The best of the week’s news

  • Senate rejects nominee for top civil rights post because of his propensity to advocate for civil rights.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

Car Wash Kingpin to Pay $3.9 Million to Settle Labor Violations

Car wash workers in New York City will receive compensation for a spate of labor violations at the hands of their boss, John Lage, and his associates, Erica Pearson reports: 

New York City’s carwash kingpin must pay millions to workers he cheated out of wages and clean up his businesses after an investigation uncovered massive labor violations, the Daily News has learned.

State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman will announce Thursday that John Lage and two associates agreed to pay $3.9 million in a settlement to stave off potential prosecution.

“It’s a huge thing for me to know that justice is being done,” said Ernesto Salazar, 39, who has worked for Lage since 2001 and says he started out making just $3.50 an hour plus tips. “We’ve advanced in this industry, thank God.”

Schneiderman’s probe of 21 city carwashes owned and operated by Lage, his son Michael and associate Fernando Magalhaes, found widespread violations, including underpayment of workers and skimping on employees’ compensation and unemployment insurance costs by paying for coverage for only a fraction of the staff. [NYDN]

This settlement sends a message to employers that low-wage workers cannot be exploited with impunity in New York State. 

 

[Photo credit: jlseagull, Creative Commons.]

 

 

March 25: Remember the Triangle Fire

What: Remember the Triangle Fire, a public memorial to mark 103rd anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, an industrial catastrophe that killed 146 workers and launched an international movement to ensure safety and health in the workplace. 

When: Noon-1pm, March 25, 2014.  

Where: Washington Place & Greene Street, Manhattan, NY.

Learn More: RememberTheTriangleFire.org, the website of the Triangle Fire Coalition. 

 

Confused about Ukraine? Raise Your UQ With These Stories

Some essential background reading on the crisis in Ukraine:

  • Tim Synder on the haze of propaganda and the ongoing debate over whether the Ukraine protests constituted a coup d’etat
  • Julia Ioffe on why Putin is occupying Crimea and what the West can do about it (hint: nothing) 

 

[Photo credit: e r j k p r u n c z y k, Creative Commons.]

On the Front Lines of the Abortion Wars: Dispatches from a Clinic Escort

Caitlin Keefe Moran writes about her experiences as an abortion clinic escort for The Toast: 

We see the same protesters week after week. They drive in from a church almost twenty miles away, but always beat us there, until we begin to speculate that they just sleep outside the clinic the night before. The group is led by Pastor Creep (not pictured), a sixty-ish man with wire-rimmed glasses and, in the winter, a graying beard. He loves to riff on the Holocaust: “Just like the Nazis!” he bellows at Ruby, a fellow escort, and I as we walk a woman and her incredulous friend to the door. “Leading the Jews to the gas chamber. ‘Oh, you’re just going to take a shower!’ But they never came out!”

Miriam, another volunteer and the descendent of Holocaust survivors, checks her watch. “Seven thirty-five,” she says, “and we’re already on the Nazis.” [The Toast]

The protesters resort to every conceivable tool of psychological warfare from accusing women of being baby-killers, to belittling the manhood of their male partners, to telling escorts of color that they are race-traitors complicit in black genocide. On Moran’s first day, protesters taunted her for paying attention to a man who apparently committed suicide by leaping from the building across the street. 

#Sidney's Picks: Driving While Black; Border Patrol Shootings; Breathing Radioactive Waste

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Driving while black: Young black men are more than twice as likely to be stopped on suspicion than their white counterparts, regardless of how they drive. Is it time to bring back The Green Book

A Boston Murder Mystery

Susan Zalkind’s boyfriend Erik was brutally murdered in 2011 and his killing was never solved. Erik was a close friend of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, an obscure amateur boxer who would become infamous two years later as one of the Boston Marathon bombers. In her deeply-reported long form story in Boston Magazine, Zalkind argues that the marathon bombing might have been prevented if only the police had taken more interest in Tamerlan as a suspect in 2011. 

Rich Yeselson on Unions After Chattanooga

After the United Auto Workers lost the election to unionize a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, TN, despite the support of management, former union strategist and author Rich Yeselson wrote an influential essay for Jacobin, explaining why the UAW lost. Yeselson continues the discussion with Francis Wilkinson of Bloomberg. 

#Sidney's Picks: Solitary Confinement, Scott Walker's Email Scandal, and More

The Best of the Week’s News

  • A Colorado prison official voluntarily spends the night in solitary confinement, feels like he’s losing his mind.
  • Man framed for murder gets $6.4 million settlement from NYC after 23 years behind bars.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

Sexual Assault at God's Harvard

Patrick Henry College, a tiny evangelical university that prides itself of producing the next generation of intellectual elites for the Religious Right, has a rape problem, Kiera Feldman reports for the The New Republic. 

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