FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 30, 2022
Contact: Denise Romano, dromano@twu.org
Huge Victory for Transportation Workers: Court Ruling Allowing Meal & Rest Breaks for Flight Crews Still Stands
In a huge victory for transportation workers, a motion to overturn a 9th Circuit Court ruling extending meal and break protections to California-based flight crews, was denied by the Supreme Court. The Court also rejected a similar case from airlines seeking an exemption from Washington state’s sick leave law. Airline workers will receive the same state-level protections as their colleagues in other industries as a result of these decisions.
Under California law, employers are required to provide employees with ten-minute rest breaks for every four hours worked, as well as thirty-minute meal periods for every five hours worked. These meal and rest requirements have been in place for over a decade and help to ensure the health and safety of workers while preventing harms associated through overwork.
However, airline executives and their lobbyists have been attempting to deny flight attendants and other crew members these laws by falsely claiming that federal law pre-empted states from applying labor protections to this group. Airlines have lost this argument in nearly every lower-level court and today’s final decision by the Supreme Court makes it clear state legislatures can improve airline workers lives through state-level powers.
“The TWU has been leading the charge to prevent these cuts from happening, not only in California, but in Illinois, New York, and elsewhere” said TWU International President John Samuelsen. “It should go without saying that every worker deserves rest and meal breaks, every worker deserves sick leave and time to care for their families, every worker deserves access to quality healthcare and a minimum wage. The airlines have been wrong on this from the start and the TWU is going to ensure that workers assert these rights in every state.”
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The TWU represents more than 155,000 members across the airline, railroad, transit, universities, utilities and service sectors