Is Labor Day Still
Relevant?
Justice Perspective, September, 2013, WNY Catholic
Did you know that Labor Day was
declared a national holiday in 1894 during the Presidency of Grover Cleveland? Or
that it was established in response to the killing by the US military of 30
workers striking against the Pullman Railway company?
Did you know that just three years earlier
in 1891 Pope Leo XIII issued his encyclical Rerum
Novarum, on the rights of workers and the dignity of work?
As we celebrate Labor Day 2013 we
should be conscious of what the holiday is all about and what the Church
teaches about the issue of work and workers. Unfortunately, it seems that we
have allowed the retail industry in this country to hijack this holiday and
turn it into nothing more than another reason to participate in our national
pastime of shopping.
The tragedy is that while many
people use Labor Day to shop, those who work in the retail industry not only do
not have a holiday, but frequently have to work even longer hours to
accommodate the extra business. And retail employment in our country accounts
for 24% - nearly one fourth - of all jobs, so a significant number of our
citizens are compelled to work on a day that was intended to honor workers.
In their 2013 Labor Day Statement,
the US Bishops remind us that each Labor Day “is an opportunity to take stock
of the ways workers are honored and respected.” And it seems that if we “take
stock” honestly, we might conclude that honor and respect for workers is,
perhaps, at its lowest point since the sweat shops and child labor factories of
the early 1900s.
The Bishops point out that half of
the jobs in our country pay less than $27,000 per year. That is the poverty
line for a family of five. The Church has consistently supported the moral
obligation of paying workers a “just wage”, which the Church defines as the
amount necessary for a person to provide for their own material, social,
cultural, and spiritual life and that of their dependents. How many people do you know that can do that
on $27,000 a year or less?
Acknowledging the widening gap
between the affluent and the poorest people in our nation, the Bishops say that
the only way to reduce that gap is by creating quality jobs that provide a just
compensation and enable workers to live in the dignity appropriate for
themselves and their families. And yet so many employers continue to move jobs
overseas, or employ increasing numbers of part-time workers to avoid paying
benefits, or encourage employment turnover to keep mostly lower-paid workers.
Consider, too, that there has been a
consistent effort on the part of employers to eliminate and prevent unions from
representing workers. In 2012, only 11.3% of public and private workers were
part of a union – down from 20.1% just thirty years ago in 1983. And for private sector workers, only 6.6% of
them are represented by unions. The Bishops highlight that Catholic teaching
has consistently affirmed the right of workers to choose to form a union and
bargain collectively. These days this right is being squashed in both the
public and private sectors.
As Catholics, we should either
follow the request of our Bishops to promote the dignity of the human person
through work that is honorable, pays just wages and recognizes the God-given
dignity of the working person; or we should just stop celebrating “Labor Day”.
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