The Department of Labor (DOL) is in charge of programs and laws that cover all facets of employment and work affecting 125 million workers and 10 million businesses. DOL administers federal labor laws covering workers’ rights to safe and healthful working conditions, a minimum hourly wage and overtime pay, freedom from employment discrimination, unemployment insurance and other income support. Altogether the department enforces more than 180 federal laws, including such landmark legislation as the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Occupational Safety and Health Act. But the Labor Department has at times lost its way in helping the working man and woman, often during Republican administrations that have favored the interests of big business. The administration of George W. Bush has been no different, thanks to the questionable leadership of Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.
History of the Department of Labor, 1913-1988
The Department of Labor (DOL) is in charge of programs and laws that cover all facets of employment and work. DOL administers federal labor laws covering workers’ rights to safe and healthful working conditions, a minimum hourly wage and overtime pay, freedom from employment discrimination, unemployment insurance and other income support.
Almost $14 billion was spent on private and public contractors this decade by the Department of Labor, according to the federal web site, USAspending.gov. The biggest spenders within DOL were the Employment and Training Administration ($10.1 billion), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management ($1.7 billion), Bureau of Labor Statistics ($464 million), Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation ($439 million) and the Employment Standards Administration ($300 million)
Management and Training Corporation
|
$2,188,077,620
|
Res-Care
|
$1,152,404,629
|
Owl International
|
$767,086,291
|
Minact
|
$593,797,980
|
Adams and Associates
|
$477,511,853
|
Exodyne
|
$428,704,562
|
Northrop Grumman
|
$325,193,081
|
Fluor Corporation
|
$323,394,152
|
Foxmar
|
$205,647,231
|
User Technology Associates
|
$199,329,158
|
MSHA and the Sago Mine Disaster
(by Scott Lilly, Center for American Progress)
Revising the Family and Medical Leave Act
Job Corps: A Consistent Record of Failure (by David B. Muhlhausen, Heritage Foundation)
Every two years the Advisory Committee on Job Corps examines the Job Corps program and releases its findings in a published report. The committee includes representatives from industry, academia, labor, career technical training, workforce development, faith-based and community organizations, law enforcement and other sectors. Its latest report, published in April 2008, made 22 recommendations of varying importance for Job Corps leaders to consider.
Advisory Committee on Job Corps Report 2008 (PDF)
In Alex Acosta, President Donald Trump selected someone to head the Department of Labor who is certainly less controversial than his first candidate, fast-food magnate Andrew Puzder, but whose background suggests his policies will be no less conservative. Rene Alexander “Alex” Acosta was confirmed as the new Secretary of Labor by a 60-38 vote of the U.S. Senate on April 27, 2017.
Acosta was born January 16, 1969, in Miami, the only child of Rene and Delia Acosta, both of whom had come to the United States from Cuba as teenagers. His mother would work as a paralegal and his father in a cellphone store. Acosta went to Gulliver Prep, skipping his senior year after early acceptance to Harvard. At Harvard, he earned a B.A. in economics in 1990.
After graduation, Acosta worked for a short time as an investment banker for Shearson Lehman Brothers, but returned to Harvard for law school and earned his J.D. in 1994. He then worked for a term as a clerk for Samuel Alito, then a judge on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, later a Supreme Court justice.
The following year, Acosta began at the Kirkland and Ellis law firm, giving him his first look at labor relations from management’s point of view. Kirkland and Ellis boasts on its website of its expertise in union avoidance, decertifications and other anti-union activities. He also taught classes at George Mason University on employment law, disability-based discrimination law and civil rights law.
In 1997, Acosta moved to the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative think tank “dedicated to applying the Judeo-Christian moral tradition to critical issues of public policy.”
Acosta was part of the George W. Bush campaign’s Florida recount effort, and joined the administration after the inauguration as principal deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Civil Rights. In 2002, he was appointed to a seat on the National Labor Relations Board.
The following year, Acosta was back at the Office of Civil Rights, this time as its chief. He made it a point to lead campaigns against human trafficking. On the other hand, he was caught up in some controversial actions that would return to haunt him later in his career.
Early in his tenure, an Acosta underling, Bradley Schlozman, was put in charge of hiring in the office. Scholzman was later found by the Justice Department’s Inspector General and Office of Professional Responsibility to have unlawfully used applicants’ political leanings to decide whether they’d be hired for civil service jobs in the division. “My tentative plans are to gerrymander all of those crazy libs rights out of the [voting rights] section,” Scholzman wrote in an email. Acosta wasn’t directly implicated, but, according to the report, he and others had “sufficient information about Schlozman’s conduct to have raised red flags warranting closer supervision of him.”
Then, during the 2004 election, the Ohio Republican Party sent letters to mostly African-American voters in that state to verify that they were living at their registered address in a tactic known as “caging.” If the voters don’t respond, the registrar of voters is asked to purge that person from the rolls. That case went before a judge and Acosta sent the judge an unsolicited letter, just days before the election, asking for a ruling in favor of the Republicans.
In 2005, Acosta was made U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Among cases his office tried under his supervision were one involving lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who pleaded guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy in a casino deal; and Jose Padilla, who was accused of planning a “dirty bomb” attack and was sent to prison.
Acosta also cut a deal with Palm Beach financier Jeffrey Epstein, a social acquaintance of Donald Trump, who was accused of operating an international sex ring involving underage girls. In the deal, Acosta turned prosecution over to the state of Florida, which charged Epstein with a relatively minor offense and he got off with a 13-month sentence.
After Bush left office, Acosta was made dean of the law school at Florida International University (FIU) in Miami. In 2013, he also was made chairman of U.S. Century Bank, a troubled institution that has close ties to FIU.
On March 29, 2011, Acosta presented Senate testimony in support of protecting the rights of U.S. Muslims, concluding, “As a nation, we have not forgotten the events of ten years ago. Emotions remain charged, and the desire to blame remains high. Now is good time to remember
that no community has a monopoly on any particular type of crime.”
In 2014, Acosta was being considered as dean of the law school at the state’s flagship institution, the University of Florida. However, his name was taken off the short list after concerns about his conduct while running Bush’s Office of Civil Rights.
Acosta and his wife, Jan, have two children.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Trump’s Labor Pick Is FIU Law Dean and a Former Miami U.S. Attorney (by Jay Weaver, Patricia Mazzei and Nicholas Nehamas, Miami Herald)
The Scandal That May Haunt the New Nominee for Labor Secretary (by Adam Serwer, The Atlantic)
Does New Labor Secretary Nominee Alex Acosta Have the Perfect Résumé to Sabotage a Federal Agency? (Democracy Now)
School Dean Is New Pick for Trump's Labor Chief (by Alan Rappeport, New York Times)
Alex Acosta Testimony on Protecting the Civil Rights of American Muslims (United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitutio, Civil Rights and Human Rights)
On March 18, 2013, President Barack Obama nominated Thomas E. Perez to be the Secretary of Labor, succeeding Hilda Solis, who was secretary starting in 2009. Perez has served in the Department of Justice as assistant attorney general for Civil Rights, the nation’s top civil rights enforcer, since 2009. Senate Republicans have already indicated that they may filibuster Perez, just as they recently did Obama's nominations of John Brennan to CIA and Chuck Hagel to the Defense Department.
Born in Buffalo, New York, on October 7, 1961, Thomas Edward Perez was the youngest of four children born to Rafael and Grace (née Brache) Perez, who had emigrated from the Dominican Republic. Rafael, a physician who earned U.S. citizenship by joining the U.S. Army during World War II, practiced medicine at a VA hospital and died when Thomas was 12 years old. His maternal grandfather, Rafael Brache, was the Dominican ambassador to the U.S. until his own government declared him persona non grata for criticizing the regime of President Rafael Trujillo, a notorious dictator.
After graduating from Buffalo's Canisius High School in 1979, Perez earned an A.B. in International Relations and Political Science from Brown University in 1983, a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1987, and a Master’s in Public Policy from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1987. At Brown, he worked at the University's dining hall, and at Harvard, he was a law clerk for Attorney General Edwin Meese in 1986. After law school, Perez was a law clerk from 1987 to 1989 for Judge Zita L. Weinshienk in Colorado.
Following his two-year clerkship term, Perez went to work at the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division in Washington, DC. From 1989 to 1995, he prosecuted federal criminal civil rights cases involving police misconduct and hate crimes. He was an instructor at the Attorney General’s Advocacy Institute, and also provided training to law enforcement officers, in the United States and abroad, on how to prevent police misconduct. He was heavily involved in Department efforts to combat racial profiling, including the successful prosecution of a high profile hate crimes case in Lubbock, Texas, where the defendants went on a fatal, racial-motivated crime spree directed at African-Americans.
Leaving the Justice Department in 1995, Perez was special counsel to Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) from 1995 to 1998, serving as his principal adviser on civil rights, criminal justice, and several constitutional issues. Perez was involved in the successful passage of the Church Arson Prevention Act in 1996, and in the development of the Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
Returning to the Justice Department, Perez served as deputy assistant attorney general for Civil Rights from January 1998 to February 1999, where he assisted in policy development and oversight of the litigation at the Civil Rights Division. He played a major role in the establishment of the Worker Exploitation Task Force, an interagency working group designed to combat the unconscionable exploitation of vulnerable immigrants, often in conditions amounting to slavery.
From February 1999 until the conclusion of the Clinton administration in early 2001, Perez served as director of the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at the Department of Health and Human Services, where he oversaw the enforcement of anti-discrimination laws in the health and human services setting and was Secretary Donna Shalala’s principal adviser on civil rights issues. During Perez’s tenure, OCR played a major role in the Department’s efforts to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health, the subject of an article Perez subsequently published, in which he argued that ethnic and racial discrimination played a major role in undermining the health of minority groups.
A Democrat in a politically appointed position, Perez found himself out of work after the election of President George W. Bush. In April 2001, he was appointed assistant professor and director of Clinical Law Programs at the University of Maryland Law School, where he taught clinical law courses and oversaw the Law School’s clinical law programs until 2006.
A resident of Takoma Park, Maryland, Perez was elected to the Montgomery County Council in 2002, serving as council president in 2004 and 2005. In 2006, he ran for the Democratic nomination to be Maryland Attorney General, but his bid was eventually rejected by the Maryland Court of Appeals, which ruled that he had not practiced law in the state for long enough to qualify for the post. In January 2007, he entered Maryland state government, when he was appointed acting secretary of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation, a position that became permanent in March 2007, and which he held until his appointment to the Justice Department in 2009.
Among the private organizations in which Perez has been involved are the Latino-based service and advocacy organization Casa de Maryland, on whose board of directors he sat from 1995 to 2002, and the Sullivan Commission on Diversity in the Health Professions, a bipartisan group addressing the lack of minority representation in the health professions. In late 2008, Perez was appointed a member of the Agency Review Team of the Obama-Biden Transition.
Perez donated $1,250 to Democratic candidates and causes between 2004 and 2008.
Perez and his wife, Anne-Marie Staudenmaier, an attorney with the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, have three children.
To Learn More:
Perez has the Track Record to Lead Labor Department (by William G. Robertson and Ronald R. Peterson, The Hill)
Obama's Labor Nominee Faces GOP Opposition Over His Role In A Supreme Court Case (by Carrie Johnson, NPR)
Thomas E. Perez: Prevailing Wage Lifts Workers, Sets Example for Employers (by Thomas E. Perez)
The Department of Labor (DOL) is in charge of programs and laws that cover all facets of employment and work affecting 125 million workers and 10 million businesses. DOL administers federal labor laws covering workers’ rights to safe and healthful working conditions, a minimum hourly wage and overtime pay, freedom from employment discrimination, unemployment insurance and other income support. Altogether the department enforces more than 180 federal laws, including such landmark legislation as the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Occupational Safety and Health Act. But the Labor Department has at times lost its way in helping the working man and woman, often during Republican administrations that have favored the interests of big business. The administration of George W. Bush has been no different, thanks to the questionable leadership of Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.
History of the Department of Labor, 1913-1988
The Department of Labor (DOL) is in charge of programs and laws that cover all facets of employment and work. DOL administers federal labor laws covering workers’ rights to safe and healthful working conditions, a minimum hourly wage and overtime pay, freedom from employment discrimination, unemployment insurance and other income support.
Almost $14 billion was spent on private and public contractors this decade by the Department of Labor, according to the federal web site, USAspending.gov. The biggest spenders within DOL were the Employment and Training Administration ($10.1 billion), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management ($1.7 billion), Bureau of Labor Statistics ($464 million), Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation ($439 million) and the Employment Standards Administration ($300 million)
Management and Training Corporation
|
$2,188,077,620
|
Res-Care
|
$1,152,404,629
|
Owl International
|
$767,086,291
|
Minact
|
$593,797,980
|
Adams and Associates
|
$477,511,853
|
Exodyne
|
$428,704,562
|
Northrop Grumman
|
$325,193,081
|
Fluor Corporation
|
$323,394,152
|
Foxmar
|
$205,647,231
|
User Technology Associates
|
$199,329,158
|
MSHA and the Sago Mine Disaster
(by Scott Lilly, Center for American Progress)
Revising the Family and Medical Leave Act
Job Corps: A Consistent Record of Failure (by David B. Muhlhausen, Heritage Foundation)
Every two years the Advisory Committee on Job Corps examines the Job Corps program and releases its findings in a published report. The committee includes representatives from industry, academia, labor, career technical training, workforce development, faith-based and community organizations, law enforcement and other sectors. Its latest report, published in April 2008, made 22 recommendations of varying importance for Job Corps leaders to consider.
Advisory Committee on Job Corps Report 2008 (PDF)
In Alex Acosta, President Donald Trump selected someone to head the Department of Labor who is certainly less controversial than his first candidate, fast-food magnate Andrew Puzder, but whose background suggests his policies will be no less conservative. Rene Alexander “Alex” Acosta was confirmed as the new Secretary of Labor by a 60-38 vote of the U.S. Senate on April 27, 2017.
Acosta was born January 16, 1969, in Miami, the only child of Rene and Delia Acosta, both of whom had come to the United States from Cuba as teenagers. His mother would work as a paralegal and his father in a cellphone store. Acosta went to Gulliver Prep, skipping his senior year after early acceptance to Harvard. At Harvard, he earned a B.A. in economics in 1990.
After graduation, Acosta worked for a short time as an investment banker for Shearson Lehman Brothers, but returned to Harvard for law school and earned his J.D. in 1994. He then worked for a term as a clerk for Samuel Alito, then a judge on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, later a Supreme Court justice.
The following year, Acosta began at the Kirkland and Ellis law firm, giving him his first look at labor relations from management’s point of view. Kirkland and Ellis boasts on its website of its expertise in union avoidance, decertifications and other anti-union activities. He also taught classes at George Mason University on employment law, disability-based discrimination law and civil rights law.
In 1997, Acosta moved to the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative think tank “dedicated to applying the Judeo-Christian moral tradition to critical issues of public policy.”
Acosta was part of the George W. Bush campaign’s Florida recount effort, and joined the administration after the inauguration as principal deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Civil Rights. In 2002, he was appointed to a seat on the National Labor Relations Board.
The following year, Acosta was back at the Office of Civil Rights, this time as its chief. He made it a point to lead campaigns against human trafficking. On the other hand, he was caught up in some controversial actions that would return to haunt him later in his career.
Early in his tenure, an Acosta underling, Bradley Schlozman, was put in charge of hiring in the office. Scholzman was later found by the Justice Department’s Inspector General and Office of Professional Responsibility to have unlawfully used applicants’ political leanings to decide whether they’d be hired for civil service jobs in the division. “My tentative plans are to gerrymander all of those crazy libs rights out of the [voting rights] section,” Scholzman wrote in an email. Acosta wasn’t directly implicated, but, according to the report, he and others had “sufficient information about Schlozman’s conduct to have raised red flags warranting closer supervision of him.”
Then, during the 2004 election, the Ohio Republican Party sent letters to mostly African-American voters in that state to verify that they were living at their registered address in a tactic known as “caging.” If the voters don’t respond, the registrar of voters is asked to purge that person from the rolls. That case went before a judge and Acosta sent the judge an unsolicited letter, just days before the election, asking for a ruling in favor of the Republicans.
In 2005, Acosta was made U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Among cases his office tried under his supervision were one involving lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who pleaded guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy in a casino deal; and Jose Padilla, who was accused of planning a “dirty bomb” attack and was sent to prison.
Acosta also cut a deal with Palm Beach financier Jeffrey Epstein, a social acquaintance of Donald Trump, who was accused of operating an international sex ring involving underage girls. In the deal, Acosta turned prosecution over to the state of Florida, which charged Epstein with a relatively minor offense and he got off with a 13-month sentence.
After Bush left office, Acosta was made dean of the law school at Florida International University (FIU) in Miami. In 2013, he also was made chairman of U.S. Century Bank, a troubled institution that has close ties to FIU.
On March 29, 2011, Acosta presented Senate testimony in support of protecting the rights of U.S. Muslims, concluding, “As a nation, we have not forgotten the events of ten years ago. Emotions remain charged, and the desire to blame remains high. Now is good time to remember
that no community has a monopoly on any particular type of crime.”
In 2014, Acosta was being considered as dean of the law school at the state’s flagship institution, the University of Florida. However, his name was taken off the short list after concerns about his conduct while running Bush’s Office of Civil Rights.
Acosta and his wife, Jan, have two children.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Trump’s Labor Pick Is FIU Law Dean and a Former Miami U.S. Attorney (by Jay Weaver, Patricia Mazzei and Nicholas Nehamas, Miami Herald)
The Scandal That May Haunt the New Nominee for Labor Secretary (by Adam Serwer, The Atlantic)
Does New Labor Secretary Nominee Alex Acosta Have the Perfect Résumé to Sabotage a Federal Agency? (Democracy Now)
School Dean Is New Pick for Trump's Labor Chief (by Alan Rappeport, New York Times)
Alex Acosta Testimony on Protecting the Civil Rights of American Muslims (United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitutio, Civil Rights and Human Rights)
On March 18, 2013, President Barack Obama nominated Thomas E. Perez to be the Secretary of Labor, succeeding Hilda Solis, who was secretary starting in 2009. Perez has served in the Department of Justice as assistant attorney general for Civil Rights, the nation’s top civil rights enforcer, since 2009. Senate Republicans have already indicated that they may filibuster Perez, just as they recently did Obama's nominations of John Brennan to CIA and Chuck Hagel to the Defense Department.
Born in Buffalo, New York, on October 7, 1961, Thomas Edward Perez was the youngest of four children born to Rafael and Grace (née Brache) Perez, who had emigrated from the Dominican Republic. Rafael, a physician who earned U.S. citizenship by joining the U.S. Army during World War II, practiced medicine at a VA hospital and died when Thomas was 12 years old. His maternal grandfather, Rafael Brache, was the Dominican ambassador to the U.S. until his own government declared him persona non grata for criticizing the regime of President Rafael Trujillo, a notorious dictator.
After graduating from Buffalo's Canisius High School in 1979, Perez earned an A.B. in International Relations and Political Science from Brown University in 1983, a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1987, and a Master’s in Public Policy from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1987. At Brown, he worked at the University's dining hall, and at Harvard, he was a law clerk for Attorney General Edwin Meese in 1986. After law school, Perez was a law clerk from 1987 to 1989 for Judge Zita L. Weinshienk in Colorado.
Following his two-year clerkship term, Perez went to work at the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division in Washington, DC. From 1989 to 1995, he prosecuted federal criminal civil rights cases involving police misconduct and hate crimes. He was an instructor at the Attorney General’s Advocacy Institute, and also provided training to law enforcement officers, in the United States and abroad, on how to prevent police misconduct. He was heavily involved in Department efforts to combat racial profiling, including the successful prosecution of a high profile hate crimes case in Lubbock, Texas, where the defendants went on a fatal, racial-motivated crime spree directed at African-Americans.
Leaving the Justice Department in 1995, Perez was special counsel to Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) from 1995 to 1998, serving as his principal adviser on civil rights, criminal justice, and several constitutional issues. Perez was involved in the successful passage of the Church Arson Prevention Act in 1996, and in the development of the Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
Returning to the Justice Department, Perez served as deputy assistant attorney general for Civil Rights from January 1998 to February 1999, where he assisted in policy development and oversight of the litigation at the Civil Rights Division. He played a major role in the establishment of the Worker Exploitation Task Force, an interagency working group designed to combat the unconscionable exploitation of vulnerable immigrants, often in conditions amounting to slavery.
From February 1999 until the conclusion of the Clinton administration in early 2001, Perez served as director of the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at the Department of Health and Human Services, where he oversaw the enforcement of anti-discrimination laws in the health and human services setting and was Secretary Donna Shalala’s principal adviser on civil rights issues. During Perez’s tenure, OCR played a major role in the Department’s efforts to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health, the subject of an article Perez subsequently published, in which he argued that ethnic and racial discrimination played a major role in undermining the health of minority groups.
A Democrat in a politically appointed position, Perez found himself out of work after the election of President George W. Bush. In April 2001, he was appointed assistant professor and director of Clinical Law Programs at the University of Maryland Law School, where he taught clinical law courses and oversaw the Law School’s clinical law programs until 2006.
A resident of Takoma Park, Maryland, Perez was elected to the Montgomery County Council in 2002, serving as council president in 2004 and 2005. In 2006, he ran for the Democratic nomination to be Maryland Attorney General, but his bid was eventually rejected by the Maryland Court of Appeals, which ruled that he had not practiced law in the state for long enough to qualify for the post. In January 2007, he entered Maryland state government, when he was appointed acting secretary of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation, a position that became permanent in March 2007, and which he held until his appointment to the Justice Department in 2009.
Among the private organizations in which Perez has been involved are the Latino-based service and advocacy organization Casa de Maryland, on whose board of directors he sat from 1995 to 2002, and the Sullivan Commission on Diversity in the Health Professions, a bipartisan group addressing the lack of minority representation in the health professions. In late 2008, Perez was appointed a member of the Agency Review Team of the Obama-Biden Transition.
Perez donated $1,250 to Democratic candidates and causes between 2004 and 2008.
Perez and his wife, Anne-Marie Staudenmaier, an attorney with the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, have three children.
To Learn More:
Perez has the Track Record to Lead Labor Department (by William G. Robertson and Ronald R. Peterson, The Hill)
Obama's Labor Nominee Faces GOP Opposition Over His Role In A Supreme Court Case (by Carrie Johnson, NPR)
Thomas E. Perez: Prevailing Wage Lifts Workers, Sets Example for Employers (by Thomas E. Perez)
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