State solutions to the U.S. worker rights crisis
Federal worker protections are under attack
Longstanding U.S. worker rights and protections are under acute threat. These include attempts to roll back standards that set a national floor for minimum wages, health and safety, nondiscrimination, unemployment insurance, and other rights and protections long taken for granted in most U.S. workplaces.
The solutions
Under the second Trump administration, intense attacks have proliferated by the day and taken many forms. Cuts to federal agency funding and mass firings of federal civil servantstargeting agencies like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the CDCs National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, the National Labor Relations Board, and U.S. Department of Labor units like the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Wage and Hour Divisionhave quickly imperiled the federal governments capacity to ensure U.S. workers get paid what theyre owed, stay safe at work, have the freedom to form a union, and work in environments free from discrimination. Simultaneously, executive actions have directly targeted rights of workers for elimination. Examples include decisions to lower wages of federal contractors; strip union rights of federal employees; revoke work authorization for hundreds of thousands of migrant workers; and block the implementation of new standards to safeguard workers overtime wages, freedom to change jobs, and right to organize. Most recently, the administration has taken initial steps to roll back scores of wage and hour and health and safety standards via proposed regulatory changes.
At the same time, Trumps escalating and often lawless attacks on migrant workers are fostering a climate of fear that will worsen workplace conditions across the country and make it harder for workers to report labor abuses. The administration has also cancelled programs that protected workers from immigration-related retaliation when speaking up about labor violations or that helped prevent exploitative, illegal forms of child labor by allowing migrant youth fleeing neglect or abuse to petition for legal work authorization and a pathway to citizenship.
Trumps attacks on workers run parallel to industry-backed attempts to ratchet down state labor standards while building pressure to erode federal standards for the whole country. For example, lawmakers in Ohio have repeatedly paired legislation to extend hours children can be scheduled to work on school nights (contradicting current federal guidelines) with concurrent resolutions calling on Congress to change [the] Fair Labor Standards Act to bring federal standards in line with weaker state rules. Project 2025, the policy roadmap closely followed so far by the second Trump administration, proposes allowing states to opt out of federal minimum wage, overtime, and child labor standards. If pursued, this drastic step would put workers at risk of extreme forms of exploitation.
https://www.epi.org/holding-the-line-state-solutions-to-the-u-s-worker-rights-crisis/