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Catholic bishops call for improved worker protections amid Labor Day reflections

Homilies

American Catholic Tribune Sep 2, 2024

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Reverend Joseph E. Kurtz, D.D. Bishop | Archdiocese of Louisville

Labor Day marks a time to “recommit ourselves to building together a society that honors the human dignity of all who labor,” said two Catholic bishops in a joint statement.

Begun in 1882, the observance — which developed from labor activist movements of the late 19th century — celebrates “the social and economic achievements of American workers,” according to the Department of Labor.

“Our faith calls us to pray, work and advocate for protections that allow all laborers to thrive,” said Archbishop Borys A. Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia and Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas, who respectively chair the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development and Committee on Migration.

Citing Scripture, Catholic social teaching, and papal encyclicals, the two bishops pointed to the church’s “long history of proclaiming the essential role labor plays in helping people to live out their human dignity” as children of God.

Yet the bishops noted that dignity is threatened by several factors, including low wages and declining union representation.

“Too many people and families are living in poverty due to jobs with low pay that often provide little or no benefits (and) erratic work schedules” while offering “insufficient protections,” said the bishops in their statement.

As of 2024, more than 39 million workers in the U.S. (23% of the nation’s workforce) earn less than $17 per hour, with women, Black, Latino and Hispanic communities particularly impacted, according to Oxfam.

The federal minimum wage, currently $7.25 per hour, “does not provide a living wage for most American families,” wrote Amy K. Glasmeier, professor of economic geography and regional planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in a 2023 article posted on the school’s “Living Wage Calculator” website.

Glasmeier noted that two working adults with two children would each need to work 96 hours per week at two full-time minimum-wage jobs to earn a living wage. A single mother with two children would need to work 252 hours per week or six full-time minimum-wage jobs to do the same.

In addition to wages, union representation has eroded “especially in the private sector, leaving workers with less protection and a weakened bargaining position,” said Archbishop Gudziak and Bishop Seitz in their statement.

Union membership in the U.S. has dropped by half over the past four decades, from 20.1% in 1983 to 10% in 2023, according to Pew Research.

“We know it does not have to be this way,” said Archbishop Gudziak and Bishop Seitz.

Migrant laborers, who have bolstered the workforces of “many communities … grappling with labor shortages due to changing demographics and other factors,” are often “mistreated at a higher rate than their native-born counterparts, including through the evil of human trafficking,” said the two bishops. “Additionally, immigrants face outright hostility and discrimination due in part to misconceptions and harmful political rhetoric dismissive of the human person.”

Many immigrant workers experience wage theft and “legitimately fear reprisal if they speak up,” said the bishops.

Yet immigrants “boost innovation and overall economic output,” with their contributions having “a net positive impact on the federal deficit,” said the two bishops citing a July 2023 report from the Congressional Budget Office.

The U.S.’s troubled immigration system and labor shortages also place children at risk of exploitation said; "We have witnessed concerning affronts to children's dignity native-born immigrants alike whose innocence has been traded for cheap—and often dangerous—labor," they said." With child labor law violations rising dramatically states taken steps further weaken standards exposing young hazardous conditions long hours."

Amid such threats human dignity Church offers vision future requires society choose between thriving economy justice dignified conditions safeguarding vulnerable among us,"said Archbishop Gudziak Bishop Seitz." We must reject exclusion."

As examples bishops pointed initiatives Iowa-based Escucha Mi Voz (“Hear My Voice”), advocates immigrant refugee communities support USCCB’s Campaign Development; USCCB’s advocacy policies protecting vulnerable laborers children

“Throughout Scripture we see time again how God shows us care those vulnerable honor sacredness everyone—no matter his her circumstances life" wrote Archbishop Gudziak Bishop Seitz "Let strive without ceasing protect sacredness life build respects uplifts each person’s dignity."

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