Tell me again about how the gender wage gap is because women leave the workforce to stay home with the kids, or whatever the excuse du jour is:
Right out of college, young men are paid more than their women peers—which is surprising given that these recent graduates have the same amount of education and a limited amount of time to gain differential experience. While young men (age 21–24) with a college degree are paid an average hourly wage of $20.87 early in their careers, their female counterparts are paid an average hourly wage of just $17.88, or $2.99 less than men. This gap of $2.99 per hour is particularly striking as young women have higher rates of bachelor’s degree attainment (20.4 percent) than young men (14.9 percent). This difference would translate to an annual wage gap of more than $6,000 for full-time workers.
And the gap has widened since 2000.
● A Michigan charter school closed suddenly with weeks to go in the school year, leaving kids without a place to go and teachers without salaries.
● Veteran organizer gives inside look at first $15 minimum wage campaign.
● It was like being in a real-life horror movie.
● A tale of two populisms.
● The dream hoarders: How America's top 20 percent perpetuates inequality. (It is probably wrong that this piece made me think “Hmm, need to get a 529 account for the baby.”)
● Some on-the-road fun for Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker: Being in town when Missouri’s governor signs an anti-union law.
● Teachers at DC school launch campaign to unionize.
● That is one appalling safety record at Tesla.
● Vigorous campaign revives transit union in Virginia despite anti-union laws.
● Betsy DeVos will give one company a monopoly on all federal student loans. No opportunities for abuse there!
● Sue the sweatshops.
● Nursing home workers win big after threatening to strike: "We have the power now."
● Workers Independent News: