[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 125 (Tuesday, August 4, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6253-S6254]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SCHEDULES THAT WORK ACT
Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, I come to the Senate floor today to talk
about something that has been bothering me. Who is this Senate supposed
to be working for? For years now, this economy has been great for those
at the top, but for everyone else, it is getting harder and harder to
make it from paycheck to paycheck, harder and harder to build any real
security. The world is changing, and Congress can make decisions that
help working people stay in the game and help level the playing field
or we can just turn our backs.
What have the Republicans done over the past 6 months to try to make
families a little more secure, to give people a fighting chance? What
have they done? They have turned their backs. In the past 6 months,
they have burned huge amounts of time as they tried to shut down
Homeland Security, tried to build a pipeline to help a Canadian oil
company, tried to turn a human trafficking bill into a referendum on
abortion, and now tried to defund Planned Parenthood--all this instead
of working on the kinds of issues that would help level the playing
field for hard-working people.
You know, there is a lot we could do. For example, Democrats have
been fighting to raise the minimum wage. And I strongly agree that no
one--no one--should work full time and still live in poverty. I think a
$7.25-an-hour minimum wage is disgraceful. I support the Federal bill
to raise the minimum wage to $12 by 2020, and I applaud the fight for
$15 that is springing up across this country.
When I am asked about whether we should raise the minimum wage, I
have three answers: Yes. Yes. Yes. But raising the minimum wage is only
the beginning. Half of low-wage workers have little or no say over when
they work, and an estimated 20 to 30 percent are in jobs where they can
be called in to work at the last minute.
I want us to think about what this means for someone who is busting
her fanny trying to build some economic security. Imagine trying to
plan for anything--for childcare, for going back to school, for getting
a second job--without knowing when you will be working next week.
Imagine trying to plan a monthly budget when your work hours and
paycheck can fluctuate 70 percent in a single month. Imagine trying to
schedule a doctor's visit or parent-teacher conference if you could get
fired just for asking for a few hours off. This is the real world of
millions of workers who struggle to make ends meet.
This is something we can fix. A few weeks ago, I introduced the
Schedules That Work Act, with 17 Democrats in the Senate and more than
60 Democrats in the House of Representatives. The bill is just common
sense and basic fairness: A single mom should know if her hours are
being canceled before she arranges for daycare and drives halfway
across town to show up at work, a young man trying to put himself
through school should be able to request a more predictable schedule
without getting fired just for asking, and a worker who is told to wait
around on call for hours with no guarantee of work should get something
for her time.
The Schedules That Work Act does two simple things: First, it gives
all workers the right to request a change in their schedule without
getting fired just for asking, and, second, it gives workers who face
the worst scheduling practices--workers in retail, food service, and
cleaning workers--2 weeks' notice of their work schedules and some
additional pay if they are required to wait on call but don't get any
work.
Now, look, this bill recognizes that there are emergencies, and when
employers have unexpected needs they can reschedule their workers, but
we are asking for a little basic fairness so that in ordinary times--
day-by-day, week-by-week--workers will have a stable schedule and a
chance to build some real economic security.
Democrats want to get to work on changes in the law that would give
working people a fighting chance. We want Republicans to let us take up
these proposals and let us vote on them. Instead, Republicans are
pushing a different agenda, focusing on defunding women's health care
and protecting those at the top.
People say Washington doesn't work, but that is wrong. Washington
works great--for the right people. When the corporate lobbyists want a
carve-out or giveaway, when a giant oil company wants the Keystone
Pipeline or when Citibank wants to blast a hole in Dodd-Frank,
Republicans fall all over themselves to make it happen. When the
rightwing wants to cut off access to health care, Republicans are ready
to go, but when it comes to the things that will help families, they
turn their backs. This has to stop. We are not here to work for the
lobbyists. We are not here to make life easier for big oil companies or
for big banks. We are
[[Page S6254]]
here to make this country work for hard-working Americans. That is our
job, and it is time for this Republican Senate to start doing that job.
Let's take up and pass the Schedules That Work Act. Let's give
working families a fighting chance to build a future.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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