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Today in Labor History

April 18, 1941
After a four-week boycott led by Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., bus companies in New York City agree to hire 200 Black drivers and mechanics.  ~Labor Tribune

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Updated: Apr. 18 (22:04)

Yellow Corp: Bankruptcy Update
Teamsters Local 776
Contract Negotiations
Duluth Police Local #807
Contract Negotiations
Duluth Police Local #807
Southern Glazer’s Wine & Spirits Teamsters Win $53,000 Grievance Arbitration
Teamsters Local Union No. 142
Yellow Corporation Bankruptcy Update Regarding Member WARN Act Claims
Teamsters Local 492
2024 Paul Priddy Memorial Golf Scramble
Teamsters Local 89
 
     
Grammar Quirk Wins Maine Truckers Overtime-Pay Lawsuit
Updated On: Mar 21, 2017
Mar. 21, 2017 | JUSTICE A comma missing from a Maine state law about overtime tipped a federal appeals-court decision that will give 75 truck drivers up to $10 million in back pay. On Mar. 13, the First Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower-court ruling and held that drivers at the Oakhurst Dairy in Portland, Maine, were eligible for overtime pay. The case turned on the “serial comma,” the comma that is sometimes inserted before the “and” in a list of items, and sometimes isn’t. In this case, Maine law said workers don’t have to be paid time-and-a-half for overtime if they’re employed in the “canning, processing, preserving, freezing, drying, marketing, storing, packing for shipment or distribution of” perishable foods. The drivers’ lawyers argued that meant the exemption applied to workers involved in “packing for shipment or distribution”; if the state had wanted to exempt drivers as well as packers, the law would have read “storing, packing for shipment, or distribution.” “That comma would have sunk our ship…” nytimes.com
 
 
Teamsters Local 992
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