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View Full Version : For Disgruntled Young Workers, Lawsuits May Spark Intern Insurrection



Die Neue Zeit
30th June 2013, 04:56
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michelle-chen/for-disgruntled-young-wor_b_3499643.html



By Michelle Chen

You'd have to be pretty desperate to offer to work for free, right? Or you could be just an enthusiastic young student who believes that toiling for little more than free coffee and a line on your resume may boost your future career. But recent research shows that unpaid internships are not likely to lead a coveted job offer.

Now, some interns are taking legal action against bosses whom they say offered nothing in return for their labor. And the courts are listening. Earlier this month, a federal judge in Manhattan cast a legal shadow over unpaid internships by certifying a class-action lawsuit against Fox Searchlight and Fox Entertainment Group. Two unpaid interns filed suit accusing Fox of denying them proper wages for the weeks they spent performing essentially the same duties as regular employees.

The suit reveals how youthful aspirants can be seduced into a crap job gilded with glamorous IOUs. Eric Glatt and Alexander Footman allege that as Fox Searchlight interns, they "took lunch orders, answered phones, arranged other employees' travel plans, tracked purchase orders, took out the trash and assembled office furniture," according to the New York Times.

The Department of Labor says that unpaid internships are supposed to balance educational experience for the intern and valuable labor for the employer. Paradoxically, under current legal guidelines, unpaid intern labor cannot include tasks that would warrant real pay, since any labor comparable to a regular job must be compensated as such.

Despite Fox's rigorous legal denials, the suit may open avenues of recourse for many other interns and perhaps compel employers to drop unpaid internships in order to stear clear of labor violations.

So far one major payout has been issued to settle such a suit: The Charlie Rose Show recently paid a settlement totaling about $250,000 to provide back wages of roughly $110 per week for a group of as many as 189 unpaid interns.

Other major legal decisions are on the horizon. A similar suit was filed last year by a former intern at Hearst Magazines, claiming that the company violated New York State and federal labor laws by giving unpaid interns tasks with no educational value, such as opening mail for editors, sometimes for a full work week. Though a judge recently ruled that the suit did not qualify as a class action, the claims might still be pursued individually.

The real value of an internship is ambiguous. A National Association of Colleges and Employers survey found that paid internships did boost job prospects, unlike their unpaid counterparts. A majority of paid interns received a job offer afterward. But the unpaid intern experience seems more of a time suck than a springboard; unpaid interns received future paid job offers at about the same rate, just over 35 percent, as those who had not interned.

From class action to class consciousness

How does wage justice for unpaid interns, who fall somewhere between transitory office grunts and elites-in-training, fit into broader movements for workplace justice? On the one hand, the hordes of fresh-faced generalists flocking to unpaid jobs are a measure of the desperate state of today's post-college labor market. At the same time, while unpaid interns may themselves be exploited, they represent the dregs of a tier of privilege that closes professional gateways for countless others. Less-privileged workers may dismiss the disgruntled interns as overachieving corporate climbers. However, the emerging legal conflicts suggest that the young professional precariat has more in common with ordinary struggling wage workers, despite what students are trained to believe about their future prospects.

David Yamada, a labor law specialist at Suffolk University Law School, comments via email, "We'll probably never know how many people from modest backgrounds don't even bother applying for unpaid internships because they know they can't afford it. But there surely is a strong element of economic class bias in this practice."

Juno Turner, an attorney with Outten & Golden, representing the interns in both the Fox and Hearst cases, tells Working In These Times that while the firm's first priority is to resolve the wage dispute, the bigger hope is that the suits will prompt more paid internships. These, she notes, "can be taken advantage of by a broader spectrum of individuals, including those unable to work for free, and in turn will open doors for career paths that might have been foreclosed to those who couldn't previously take internships."

It is unsurprising that the first major intern lawsuits would emerge in sectors built on fame and reputation, where the biggest, brittlest dreams go to die as promises of glamor fail to match up with unglamorous drudge work that drives these industries. The controversy represents deeper disillusionment rippling through an over-educated, underpaid workforce who are anxious, financially insecure and increasingly outraged.

The aggrieved interns have been savvy enough to take advantage of media and entertainment companies' image-consciousness by leveraging the power of publicity. Yamada says that since it was filed in 2011, the Fox lawsuit has "led to the creation of informal networks of former interns and lawyers weighing the possibility of bringing lawsuits to challenge unpaid internships," and has since developed intern networks that "are coalescing via social media and face-to-face gatherings. This is becoming a genuine social and legal movement."

White-collar indenture

Against the imbalanced opportunity structure built on pre-professional indenture, culture industry interns seed a new kind of youthful labor agitation. There's precedent: In the 1930s and 1940s, a fresh crop of rebellious designers and artists helped forge what historian Michael Denning described as the "Cultural Front." The movement provided cultural workers a platform to spread leftist and radical ideas through mass media ranging from jazz at the Cafe Society to the populist romance of Steinbeck. The 1941 animators' strike at Disney studios helped project labor struggles into popular entertainment, highlighting the convergence of mass media and a new precariat of creative workers (many of them who grew up in the immigrant industrial working-class), and also elucidated how mass-cultural production shaped working-class leisure as well as labor. Today, movements like Occupy Wall Street have brought together white-collar young professionals and blue-collar and service workers who all feel cheated by a vastly unequal economy.

Interns may not stage a mass work stoppage or march on Fifth Avenue. But they are a new breed of troublemakers. Their plight echoes the labor conflicts of early-modern times that stirred disaffected young apprentices to rise up against their masters. When young people realize that an apparent stepping stone is really an indefinite dead end, they learn quickly that their labor rights are not worth trading away for empty promises. Once the mask slips on the illusion of "making it" after college, they might even find common cause with other workers who already know how hard it is to get a fair day's pay.

MarxSchmarx
30th June 2013, 05:12
I think a serious share of the problem falls on those young people, often from privileged backgrounds as the article notes, who openly break ranks.

Scabs have always been a problem. And if the working class has to deal with scabs who are idiotic enough to work for free, we have serious problems.

This has been an issue in North America for some time. It is high time these abuses are exposed. However, this kind of indentured servitude is not unique to those with bachelor's degrees.

In North America, for example, medical "residents" who have MD credentials work long hours for little pay to keep American health infrastructure functional. In the natural sciences, "post-docs" who have their PhDs and a generation or two ago would have been assistant professors on the tenure track as glorified research assistants with no job security. and then you have "judicial clerks", people who are ready to enter the legal profession who compete fiercely over a chance to actually spell out the vague opinions of judges who enjoy lifetime employment.

At least these people are for the most part compensated, however poorly and nominally, which is much better than so-called "interns". But I think this sort of indentured servitude is not unique to any one profession, and attempts to harp on the egregious violations of the other white collar workers fail to take in the exploitation of training labor from medical doctors through pencil pushers with their "internship" at 16th Century Fox.

It is also worth noting that elsewhere, however, such practices are surprisingly routine. In the German speaking countires, for example, internships are common graduation requirements among, for instance, engineering students. Often the universities help offset such costs, although that doesn't quite make them a better system.

wherever they do it- whether they be Austrians with government support or wealthy teenagers who can afford such expenses - it's tempting to call those who take unpaid internships for what they are: scabs. But we've all taken jobs we feel we shouldn't have against our better judgment, and it's easy to criticize others as scabs when we ourselves may not have mouths to feed.

Die Neue Zeit
30th June 2013, 08:34
Comrade, I was never introduced to the "scab" aspect until your post, actually. I posted the article so I could refer to it later on in the Theory thread on Left Unity, with regards to politicized social services, the example here being legal services underlying class-action lawsuits.

MarxSchmarx
1st July 2013, 04:30
Comrade, I was never introduced the "scab" aspect until your post, actually. I posted the article so I could refer to it later on in the Theory thread on Left Unity, with regards to politicized social services, the example here being legal services underlying class-action lawsuits.

Fair enough. I think what makes the dynamics here so tricky is that this is effectively a form of downward pressure on wages forced by the ruling class that can afford such internships. Maybe the way forward is to highlight how people who can't really afford such internships take them anyway because they have no other realistic option. I think an emphasis on that angle, rather than the injustice of un/under-paid labor per se, seems more conducive to stoking our sense of injustice. After all, unpaid and underpaid labor, if it's engaged in by the childen of the bourgeoisie as an optional sacrifice, is quite different than such labor engaged in by people who have few alternatives.

Die Neue Zeit
2nd July 2013, 05:18
Shouldn't the fight here be for the immediate elimination of unpaid internships, anyway? Also, according to the article the key to proliferating class-action lawsuits is to shatter all illusions in class mobility for these same "children of the bourgeoisie" through unpaid internships. Across the Atlantic, this would undercut Tory rhetoric of "strivers" because such within unpaid internships end up screwed at the back end anyway.

On a more critical note, this article also shows why I disagree with Standing's lumping together the "children of the bourgeoisie" in this scenario, along with freelancers, with the working poor or "emerging service workers," the true precariat. Working with the first two groups should not compromise the struggle for class-based political independence (i.e., letting these yuppies into worker-class organizations), nor should the latter abstain from the former and not aim for hegemony / being a Volkspartei in the loosest sense.

blake 3:17
3rd July 2013, 04:05
There is a place for short term placements or educational practicums. But the the production of the intern class should be ended.

@DNZ -- how would you actually establish someone as working class? A means test? I'm not opposed to the intention, I just fail to see a pragmatic answer.

Die Neue Zeit
4th July 2013, 05:22
Blake, the very pragmatic answer is occupational profiling: The same way registration forms today ask for occupation titles, and especially the same way some application and professional verification forms ask for brief occupational descriptions. If someone is a security guard, it's something they'll put something along those lines as their job title, and back that up with a brief job description.

This same profiling can ask how many employees work under the registrant or applicant, and other questions. For obvious reasons it doesn't go straight to the "Are you of the working-class?" question. To the applicant, the "class" issue shouldn't be obvious as long as income declaration isn't on the form (and such shouldn't be on it).

blake 3:17
4th July 2013, 06:09
So then how does that play out on this issue? The line between children of the bourgeoisie and freelancer isn't occupational.

Die Neue Zeit
5th July 2013, 05:32
Both groups wouldn't be party-movement members, though.

A career profile of several years could be asked, between five and ten for example. Profiles of manual, clerical, and professional workers would stand out very much as each job title and brief job description for each are stated on the form.

Die Neue Zeit
5th July 2013, 06:34
Fair enough. I think what makes the dynamics here so tricky is that this is effectively a form of downward pressure on wages forced by the ruling class that can afford such internships. Maybe the way forward is to highlight how people who can't really afford such internships take them anyway because they have no other realistic option. I think an emphasis on that angle, rather than the injustice of un/under-paid labor per se, seems more conducive to stoking our sense of injustice. After all, unpaid and underpaid labor, if it's engaged in by the childen of the bourgeoisie as an optional sacrifice, is quite different than such labor engaged in by people who have few alternatives.

In addition to my response above, I would like to add in my usual anti-economism slant that, although this topic of unpaid interns launching class-action lawsuits is still very much within the realm of mere labour disputes (italicized for economistic readers, not comrades like yourself), if we go by the framework for dispute resolution, the proliferation of class-action lawsuits within the sphere of labour disputes is actually a good thing!

The bread-and-butter tred-iunionizm sticks only to negotiation and mediation, and is only sometimes forced to arbitration. A mass litigation culture for labour disputes is a nice spark.

blake 3:17
7th July 2013, 01:43
The bread-and-butter tred-iunionizm sticks only to negotiation and mediation, and is only sometimes forced to arbitration. A mass litigation culture for labour disputes is a nice spark.

It's more complicated than that.

Die Neue Zeit
7th July 2013, 04:28
Blake, yes it is. I forgot to mention punitive damages. Don't worry, because I'm working on something on this topic as I post this!

Hit The North
9th July 2013, 13:43
The bread-and-butter tred-iunionizm sticks only to negotiation and mediation, and is only sometimes forced to arbitration.

Ffs! this issue is already being tackled in the UK by the TUC and various organisations such as Intern Aware.

http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/index.php/news/content/view/full/132889

Their approach isn't to hand the matter over to lawyers but to build campaigns of awareness in order to fight the matter politically and not merely judicially.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2012/dec/01/interns-rebel-against-unpaid-placements


A mass litigation culture for labour disputes is a nice spark.

The only beneficiaries of this approach will be the lawyers and the legitimacy of the bourgeois courts. I don't know if it is possible to oppose internships from a more bourgeois position than you do here.

Die Neue Zeit
15th July 2013, 04:32
Ffs! this issue is already being tackled in the UK by the TUC and various organisations such as Intern Aware.

http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/index.php/news/content/view/full/132889

Their approach isn't to hand the matter over to lawyers but to build campaigns of awareness in order to fight the matter politically and not merely judicially.

Awareness campaigns aren't enough, and who said anything about handing the matter over to lawyers? Do they themselves provide the same kind of labour law services that other law firms provide but on behalf of employers? No.


The only beneficiaries of this approach will be the lawyers and the legitimacy of the bourgeois courts. I don't know if it is possible to oppose internships from a more bourgeois position than you do here.

Again, how will stereotypical lawyers benefit if those providing the legal services on behalf of employees-cum-plaintiffs are workers organizations themselves?

Hit The North
15th July 2013, 10:09
Which "workers organisations themselves"? Given that you've already disqualified the trade unions, you must mean the workers organisations in your head.

Die Neue Zeit
16th July 2013, 14:40
The whole notion of workers organizations needs to have an expanded scope of activity.

Hit The North
16th July 2013, 14:46
That doesn't answer my question.

Die Neue Zeit
17th July 2013, 05:03
Well, SYRIZA is organizing legal services through "legal help in courts to cut mortgage payments": http://www.revleft.com/vb/syriza-becoming-party-t174530/index.html

That's not "workers organizations in my head." That's outright political reality. If not trade unions, then why not political organizations?