http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Aug00/Compa.human.rights.html

Cornell News Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 31, 2000

Contact: Linda Myers
Office: 607-255-9735
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Contact: Lance Compa
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Study shows U.S. labor law is poorly enforced, has loopholes
and fails to meet human rights standards

ITHACA, N.Y. -- Workers' basic rights are routinely violated
in the United States, asserts a comprehensive study by a
Cornell University expert on labor law.

U.S. labor law is feebly enforced, riddled with loopholes,
and fails to meet the basic human rights standards that the
United States demands of other countries, says Lance Compa,
a senior lecturer at Cornell's School of Industrial and
Labor Relations (ILR). Compa, who teaches courses in U.S.
labor law and international labor rights, conducted the
study for Human Rights Watch with support from that
organization and the Ford Foundation.

The report is being released by Human Rights Watch on the
eve of the annual Labor Day holiday in the United States.

Compa's 217-page report, "Unfair Advantage: Workers' 
Freedom of Association in the United States under Inter-
national Human Rights Standards," was based on field research 
he directed in California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois,
Louisiana, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Washington
and other states. Compa and a small staff of researchers
examined workers' rights to organize, to bargain collectively 
and to strike under international norms. It found widespread
labor rights violations across regions, industries, jobs and
job levels.

"The significance of the report," says Compa, "is it's the
first time that workers' rights in the U.S. have been looked
at through the lens of international human rights law. The
report shows the United States comes up short in many areas.
Unless we correct those shortcomings, it will be difficult
for us to pressure other countries to upgrade their labor
standards."

Compa points out that the U.S. government has called 
for "core labor standards," including workers' freedom of
association, to be included in the rules of the World Trade
Organization and the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas.

He identifies two key areas where the United States fails to
meet core labor standards:

1) employers commonly fire workers who try to form unions; and

2) millions of workers are excluded from the laws protecting
   the right to organize.

The report shows that each year thousands of workers in 
the United States are fired from their jobs or suffer other
reprisals for trying to organize unions, says Compa. And
millions -- from farmers to domestic workers to supervisors
and managers -- are excluded by law from organizing and
bargaining, and the numbers are growing.

Some employers resist union organizing by dragging out legal
proceedings for years, the report reveals. In fact, Compa
and his researchers found U.S. labor laws have become so
weak that companies often treat their minor penalties as 
a routine cost of doing business, not a deterrent against
violations. Despite those hazards, however, some workers
have succeeded in organizing new unions in recent years, 
the report said, but only after surmounting major obstacles.

Compa is co-editor of the book Human Rights, Labor Rights,
and International Trade (University of Pennsylvania Press,
1996). He was the first director of Labor Law and Economic
Research at the trinational Secretariat of the Commission
for Labor Cooperation in Dallas, Texas, where he oversaw
labor law and policy studies under the North American
Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), NAFTA's labor-
side agreement.

The report is available on the Human Rights Watch web site:

http://www.hrw.org/reports/2000/uslabor/

-30-


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