Unemployment Benefits Aren’t Creating a Labor Shortage, They’re Building Worker Power
A McDonald s restaurant on Penn Ave in Sinking Spring, PA. (Photo by Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images)
As businesses have begun opening back up, we have been subjected to increasing hand-wringing from business owners, particularly restaurants and similar service-based workplaces, who insist they are facing a labor shortage. The argument, according to some, is that unemployment benefits are too generous and are discouraging work, leaving employers unable to hire workers. Thankfully, these stories are being rebutted by workers, journalists, and analysts armed with a combination of personal experience and hard data. As expert after expert picks apart the flaws in employers’ arguments, though, it has become clear that what employers are worried about isn’t a labor shortage at all: It’s a power shift.
May 11, 2021 | 10:09 PM
At Tuesday’s (May 11th) meeting of the Mobridge City Council, Brent Kemnitz, Curtis Reichert, and Jade Mound were all sworn in as council members, and Mayor Gene Cox thanked Tony Yellow Boy for his years of service on the council.
Randy Carlson was elected Council President and Jeff Laundreaux as Council Vice President.
For the Water Department a quote to replace eleven actuators at the water treatment plant was approved.
Council also approved: all of the 2021 Mayor appointments; the transfer of fifty thousand dollars from the general fund to the pool loan fund for 2020; and the renewal of malt beverage licenses.
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