OPINION
With Secure Scheduling statute, Seattle can lead the nation
By KATIE GARROW
As a working class millennial, bad scheduling practices have always been a part of my life. It always felt like I had to pay my dues, and if I worked hard enough, someday I would have a job with a regular, reliable schedule.
What I know now is that it is not just teenagers and students that work in low-wage industries plagued by unfair scheduling. It’s people like my former partner’s mom, well into her 70s, who has a part-time job at Walmart and missed Thanksgiving and Christmas activities with the family last year because they needed her at work. Even if it were only young people, it is not “character building” for a 17-year-old young person to clopen on a school night; it’s a moral failing of our society.
It requires employers to provide:
● Advance notice of our schedules so we can plan our lives.
● Predictability pay for adjusting our lives when things change at work.
● Shift swapping for additional flexibility when life happens.
● Access to hours for those who want them.
● A right to rest which eliminates mandatory clopens.
Many union members know the value of policies like these because there are contractual provisions in our collective bargaining agreements. But part of the job of the labor movement and our allies is to fight for all working people, be they union or not.
Furthermore, as a social justice organization, the MLKCLC understands our role as a champion for equity for people of color and women, the folks who are disproportionately affected by the things that this legislation aims to correct.
The next hearing on Secure Scheduling will be Wednesday, Sept. 7 at noon, and the legislation will be voted upon Tuesday, Sept. 13 at 9:30 a.m. Opposition from the business community is heating up and we will need all hands on deck. We are urging everyone to join us at Seattle City Hall, 600 4th Ave., those days to express support for the proposed legislation, with no substantive amendments.
If we are successful, Seattle’s ordinance language will lead the nation — something we can all take pride in.