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Charlotte, North Carolina reels as 81 people arrested in immigration raids; Court rules label exemption for ultra-processed food unlawful; E-cigarette dangers to pregnancies seen in NC study; Judge scolds Justice Department for 'profound investigative missteps' in Comey case; Shutdown fallout pushes more Ohio families to food banks.

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Donald Trump urges Republicans to vote for Epstein documents to be released. Finger-pointing over the government shutdown continues and federal cuts impact the youth mental health crisis.

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A voting shift by Virginia's rural Republicans helped Democrats win the November governor's race; Louisiana is adopting new projects to help rural residents adapt to climate change and as Thanksgiving approaches, Indiana is responding to more bird flu.

Polls show voter support for unions, labor laws in NC

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Friday, November 1, 2024   

As Election Day approaches, voters in North Carolina and beyond are voicing strong support for maintaining labor protections, especially in sectors such as education and public services.

The latest poll, from the bipartisan firm Red America Blue America Research, reveals voters are concerned about things that directly impact their community.

Pollster John Davis, a partner with the research firm, said the survey reflects voters' values and priorities on these issues.

"Folks aren't particularly interested in having their kids in a classroom with more children," he said. "Folks don't seem that interested in not honoring overtime pay rules as they currently exist. And folks don't seem particularly interested in losing the benefits, the public services that they're used to being provided."

Some 62% of voters polled said they would not support reducing wages or safety protections for public-sector workers - although 38% said they would. Davis said he believes these views could shape legislative priorities next year.

North Carolina AFL-CIO president MaryBe McMillian highlighted a key issue in the poll: Many North Carolinians don't realize that public-sector workers, such as firefighters and health-care providers, lack the same bargaining rights as private-sector employees, resulting in a significant wage gap.

"States like ours, where there's no collective bargaining rights, you find that public-sector workers tend to earn, on average, about 20% less than their private-sector counterparts," she said.

She said she hopes increasing public awareness will urge lawmakers to reconsider North Carolina's ban on collective bargaining for public employees since fair pay and safe orking conditions are essential for those who deliver public services.

For farm laborers, the stakes are just as high. Farm Labor Organizing Committee president Baldemar Velasquez pointed out that agricultural workers are excluded from the National Labor Relations Act. His union has worked to secure supply chain-wide agreements to protect farmworkers, but he said economic pressures such as inflation have made sustaining these agreements a struggle.

"We've lost over 1,000 jobs in the last three years, because of post-COVID consequences and inflation," he said. "And all of this is tied to these supply chains, prices that are imposed on these small family farmers where we're employed. And so, we're stuck in the situation where we have to help save the family farms to save our jobs."

He said state lawmakers should take note of voters' strong support for labor protections and act to uphold them.


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