Thursday, May 28, 2020

Unboxing scheduling practices for U.S. warehouse workers [feedly]

Unboxing scheduling practices for U.S. warehouse workers
https://equitablegrowth.org/research-paper/unboxing-scheduling-practices-for-u-s-warehouse-workers/

Workers in the United States struggle with low-quality work schedules.1 The Fair Labor Standards Act is the main piece of labor legislation regulating work hours. The law, passed in 1938, protects workers from overwork by establishing a system of overtime compensation. Over the past 80 years, however, the nature of work scheduling problems has changed. Large numbers of workers in the United States face work schedules that are unpredictable and unstable. Many have difficulty amassing a sufficient number of work hours to pay the bills.

A growing body of research on "just-in-time" scheduling in the retail and service sector illustrates the consequences that bad work schedules have for people's lives. But to advocate effectively for improvements in scheduling quality for all workers, more information is needed about contemporary scheduling problems across a wider range of industries.

This past February, the Washington Center for Equitable Growth hosted a convening of 26 researchers, advocates, and workers to discuss scheduling practices in the warehouse sector. By sharing research, ideas, and lived experiences, participants described an industry where workers often experience the volatilities and uncertainties inherent in the business, such as irregular spikes in supply or consumer demand, through problematic scheduling practices. As convening participant Beth Gutelius—an expert on the logistics industry, an associate director of the Center for Urban Economic Development at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and senior researcher at the Great Cities Institute—described, the nation's supply and demand are reconciled on the warehouse floor, and workers often bear the risk of that reconciliation.

The goal of the February convening was to identify new avenues for research on schedule quality in the warehouse sector. Discussions at the convening informed the findings presented in this report. The first section presents a brief overview of scheduling quality based on research primarily conducted in the retail and service sector. To begin applying this learning to the warehouse industry, the next section discusses the role of the sector in supply chains and resulting market pressures. The third section considers how the pressures and peculiarities of the warehouse sector's position in that supply chain may be affecting job quality and scheduling practices. We conclude by describing the path of research and interventions necessary to advance our understanding of scheduling in the warehouse sector.

Taken together, these sections point to and support several key principles for scheduling researchers examining the U.S. warehouse sector:

  • Research in the retail and service sector has been foundational to our understanding of scheduling practices and quality, but it may not be generalizable to warehouses.
  • Researchers and advocates interested in warehouse scheduling must be cognizant of the broader context of the warehouse industry, such as variations in supply chains, outsourcing, and the use of new technology.
  • Warehouse workers face serious challenges to their health and well-being due to unsafe working conditions and an overly taxing pace of work. These job-quality issues are intertwined with scheduling issues and should be studied in tandem.
  • Replicating the developmental pathway of scheduling research in the retail and service sector will inform the field's understanding of warehouse scheduling and aid policymakers interested designing appropriate interventions.

Our February convening points the way toward expanding the knowledge base around scheduling in warehouses to help inform policymakers and firms seeking to improve productivity, safety, and well-being at this critical link in the U.S. economy's supply chains.

PROBLEMATIC SCHEDULING PRACTICES ARE WIDESPREAD, AFFECTING JOB QUALITY AND PRODUCTIVITY

Problematic scheduling practices are widespread, affecting job quality and productivity

Research in the U.S. retail and service sector provides valuable insight into the causes, prevalence, and effects of problematic scheduling practices. To optimize labor costs, managers try to ensure that there are neither too many nor too few employees working to meet their customers' needs at any point in time. Many employees, therefore, find that their schedules are highly responsive to the perceived ebbs and flows of consumer demand, as well as decisions made further up the supply chain, such as the timing of product shipments. Their schedules are thus irregular and unpredictable.2

Employers have used new developments in technology to implement what are often called just-in-time schedules. Scheduling software now commonly used in the retail and service industry relies on algorithms that take into account product shipments, customer traffic, and even weather when setting and modifying schedules. Managers using these technologies are found to be overly sensitive to perceived changes in demand.3 This means that individual workers' schedules fluctuate even more than the consumer demand to which they aim to respond.

More researchers are turning their attention to scheduling as a component of work quality. As part of this emerging scholarship, scheduling expert and convening participant Susan Lambert, a professor in the School of Social Service Administration and director of the Employment Instability, Family Well-Being, and Social Policy Network at the University of Chicago, and her colleagues articulate five dimensions of scheduling quality that affect workers' well-being:

  • Stability
  • Predictability
  • Timing
  • Quantity
  • Control4

To assess the quality of a schedule, one must look across all five dimensions. (See text box).

A highly predictable schedule, for example, may be low quality if it includes many "clopening" shifts, where employees are assigned consecutive closing and opening shifts with minimal rest time in between. In contrast, a schedule that has nonstandard hours, such as overnight shifts, may be high quality if a worker exerts control and chooses that schedule because it fits his or her needs and preferences.

Unfortunately, many retail and service workers report schedules that cannot be considered high quality when looking across these dimensions. Approximately 70 percent of workers employed by large firms in this sector report last-minute shift changes; a majority have experience with clopening shifts; and a quarter report experience with "on-call" shifts, where an employee must be available for work but may not actually be called in to work.5 In addition to these undesirable hours and shift changes, employees often get very short notice of their work schedules, with two-thirds of workers in these firms reporting that they receive less than 2 weeks' notice of their upcoming schedules.

By justifying just-in-time scheduling as a cost-control mechanism, firms may be overlooking the unintended human capital and business costs of these practices. Research by convening participant Kristen Harknett at the University of California, San Francisco and her co-author, Daniel Schneider at UC Berkeley, find that poor scheduling quality is associated with income volatility, household economic instability, and other measures of well-being, including psychosocial distress, issues with sleep quality, and general unhappiness.6 Low wages also are associated with these outcomes, but unstable and unpredictable schedules are more strongly associated.

Tired and unhappy workers are unlikely to be performing at their full potential. When the clothing retailer Gap Inc. implemented an intervention designed to improve scheduling practices as part of a randomized control pilot study, workers slept better and were more productive at work.7 This productivity led to a 7 percent increase in profitability at the study's treatment stores, suggesting both employees and employers could benefit from higher-quality schedules.

Research documenting the impact of scheduling quality on retail and service workers has led some firms to rethink their irregular scheduling practices and informed statewide and citywide ordinances advancing "fair workweek" legislation.8 There is, conversely, a relative dearth of research documenting scheduling practices in the warehouse sector. So far, only Chicago's scheduling ordinance covers workers in warehouses, but the sector is included in the federal Schedules that Work Act and a comparable bill and campaign in New Jersey.9

As more fair-workweek advocates turn to the warehouse sector, there is greater need for research on scheduling practices in the industry and their effects on job quality.

WAREHOUSE WORKERS' POSITION IN THE SUPPLY CHAIN IS LIKELY TO AFFECT SCHEDULE QUALITY

Warehouse workers' position in the supply chain is likely to affect schedule quality

Recognizing the factors that contribute to scheduling practices in warehouses requires an understanding of the unique role the industry has in connecting products to consumers. In the most basic terms, a supply chain involves:

  • Suppliers producing or procuring raw materials
  • Manufacturers sourcing these materials from suppliers and then turning these materials into finished products for sale
  • Distributors or retailers connecting products to consumers

The link between each one of these points is the warehouse sector, which stores, sorts, and prepares materials and goods for transport as they move along a vast array of different supply chains.

All actors in supply chains have their own costs and risks associated with their role, but they also add to the value of the final products along the way. Producers of raw materials such as lumber, for example, may need to expend resources to mitigate the higher risk to worker safety, but the materials they provide are invaluable to manufacturers. Some of the costs and risks with which warehouse managers must contend include supply chain volatility, such as bouts of excess supply or excess demand, as well as other exogenous economic risks such as tariffs, trade wars, and public health crises.10

Warehouses are often thought of as a stopping point in supply chains that adds little economic value to goods. A product's value may increase during the manufacturing process or in a retail store when it is surrounded by attractive displays, a comfortable shopping environment, and knowledgeable sales staff. But a product rarely becomes more valuable sitting on a warehouse shelf awaiting shipment. This perception that warehouses add little value to a product influences how other suppliers, manufacturers, and distributors in supply chains interact with the warehouse sector and demand from it.

In an increasingly competitive market, warehouses face pressure to reduce costs, increase output, and shorten delivery time. A recent report by Beth Gutelius and her colleague at the University of Illinois at Chicago Nik Theodore, called "The Future of Warehouse Work: Technological Change in the U.S. Logistics Industry," provides a detailed review of how warehouses are adapting to evolving industry demands.11

Over the years, the warehouse industry has responded to these dynamic risks and pressures by adopting new technologies and staffing structures. Advancements in analytics and automation are now used to increase profits by shortening the time that goods sit on shelves and to create popular fast-shipping windows that are now a selling point and staple in e-commerce.12 While the use of automation has drawn significant public interest, it is only part of the story.13

Firms also deploy staffing practices designed to increase flexibility for management, such as the use of part-time workers, freelance workers, and irregular work hours.14 Some warehouses are following their retail counterparts in turning to algorithmic just-in-time scheduling software programs that promise to control labor expenses as a means of achieving greater profitability.15 Some researchers and advocates suspect that problematic scheduling practices could lead to similar insecurities for warehouse workers as those experienced by retail and service employees, but there needs to be more research on the effect of these practices on warehouse workers specifically.

In addition to just-in-time scheduling software, the warehouse sector has adopted other means of controlling labor costs that intersect with scheduling quality. Domestic outsourcing, where companies contract out specific roles in the production process so that workers are not directly employed by the firms for which they are working, is a growing trend across the U.S. workforce, and the warehouse sector is no different.16 Since the 1980s, more firms have opted to contract with third-party logistics companies to manage their warehouses.17 In 2019, more than half of spending on logistics overall was outsourced to these firms.18

One service that third-party logistics companies provide is the management of the warehouse workforce. Mirroring broader trends in the industry, many of these firms have turned to temp agencies to help provide their just-in-time labor needs.19 According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, occupations within the warehouse sector have some of the highest composition of temporary workers of any industry.20 Research suggests this type of workplace fissuring is associated with lower wages and worsening job quality.21 More research is needed to understand how outsourcing and the use of temporary workers impacts scheduling practices specifically.22

The warehouse sector is not unique in the pressures it faces to minimize costs. Yet the industry's role as an intermediary between other actors in the supply chain may manifest in workers' schedules in ways that are unique to the sector, including increased demand for faster shipping times and the potential for the industry to place low value on human capital because individual workers are seen to add little to the product's overall value. Scheduling researchers can help shed light on these manifestations and point policymakers and advocates to appropriate interventions.

SCHEDULING PRACTICES IN THE WAREHOUSE SECTOR INTERSECT WITH OTHER JOB-QUALITY ISSUES

Scheduling practices in the warehouse sector intersect with other job-quality issues

Low-quality schedules do not exist in isolation—this job-quality issue intersects with other safety and quality-of-work concerns in the warehouse sector. One example of this intersection is the amount of hours demanded of warehouse workers, which is frequently higher than that of retail and service employees.23 Standard shift length can be long: Amazon.com Inc., an industry leader, assigns 10-hour shifts. While retail workers struggle to amass full-time hours, warehouse workers are often assigned mandatory overtime. Even 40 hours of this physically demanding work can tax workers' health. When hours push past the 40-hour mark, some describe their schedules as "brutal" even as they appreciate the extra bump in their paychecks.

What's more, mandatory overtime around periods of high consumer demand can keep workers on the job up to 60 hours a week.24 Because the overtime is mandated, workers cannot revert to full-time schedules without the risk of termination. In the parlance of scheduling-quality research, warehouse schedules are high in quantity of hours but low in levels of employee control.

Feelings of fatigue or even exhaustion stemming from overwork are not just quality-of-life issues. Tired workers also may be more prone to on-the-job accidents or other severe health incidences that stem from high-intensity, high-pressure jobs. Statistics from the U.S. Occupational Health and Safety Administration show that this sector has a nonfatal occupational injury rate nearly twice the private-industry average (4.5 percent, compared to 2.8 percent).25 Investigative reporting suggests that specific warehouses and facilities may have even higher rates of serious injury, approaching 10 percent.26

Of course, not all injuries can be attributed to overwork. It is probable, however, that the poor scheduling practices described by researchers and advocates are contributing to an environment where workers are forced to prioritize wages over well-being.

Workers unable to take on the long hours or the grueling pace of work27 may find themselves pushed out of their jobs, if not directly fired. If workers are being assigned schedules that are unsustainable or incompatible with their home lives, then it may drive them to quit, potentially without the safety net of Unemployment Insurance or a new job lined up. Over the past decade, the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey shows a steady increase in the level and rate of workers quitting their positions in the transportation, warehousing, and utilities industry while turnover due to layoffs or firings has increased more slowly.28 (See Figure 1.)

Figure 1

The role that scheduling plays in this turnover is not clear. On the one hand, workers across industries quit more often when there is confidence in the labor market, as has been the case in recent years.29 On the other hand, research in the retail and service sector identifies a significant association between unpredictable schedules and employee turnover.30 This has the potential to cause a vicious cycle in which poor-quality schedules drive some workers out of the industry, worsening the schedules for those left behind who must take on the additional work.

More research is needed to disentangle the relationship between scheduling quality and turnover in this industry. If scheduling is driving this increase in workers quitting, then it would imply that low-quality schedules have likewise increased in the sector over the past decades, which research has yet to identify.

Poor-quality schedules first and foremost impact workers, but they also are likely to have unintended consequences for businesses through increases in labor costs. The turnover discussed above results in significant costs for firms.31 Mandatory overtime might help firms meet consumer demand, but U.S. labor laws appropriately require time-and-a-half compensation for this work, making this business practice costly.32 Because warehouse work is physically taxing, worker productivity is likely to decline as consecutive hours of work increase. Thus, firms that rely on poor-quality schedules to cut costs could actually be paying more money for less productive workers—and exhausting their staff in the process. More research is needed to explore these links.

EXPANDING THE KNOWLEDGE BASE ON WAREHOUSE SCHEDULING WILL SUPPORT FIRMS AND POLICYMAKERS DESIGNING APPROPRIATE INTERVENTIONS

Expanding the knowledge base on warehouse scheduling will support firms and policymakers designing appropriate interventions

The field of scheduling research in the retail and service sector developed from a chain of four distinct yet related "types" of research could be replicated for the warehouse sector. They are:

  • Type one, consisting of descriptive research documenting scheduling practices
  • Type two, involving causal research to identify the consequences of these documented scheduling practices for workers and business
  • Type three, involving the conceptualization and documentation of interventions to improve scheduling
  • Type four, consisting of evaluations of these interventions

The relationship of these types is logical and not inherently temporal; it is not necessary that the research be conducted in the order described.

Taken together, research across these four types will expand the knowledge base on scheduling in warehouses and will inform advocates, policymakers, and firms seeking to improve scheduling practices. Let's look at each one in turn.

Descriptive research

Reporting, testimony, and preliminary research suggest that scheduling in warehouses has issues across the five domains of scheduling quality: stability, predictability, timing, quantity, and control. Fundamentally, there remains a need for descriptive research on scheduling practices across the industry in these five scheduling categories. As researchers begin to unpack the scheduling realities of the warehouse sector, it is also an opportunity to assess whether the measures of scheduling quality (the five domains outlined above) are still applicable to warehouse workers or if new measures are needed.

Therefore, descriptive research must document scheduling practices as they unfold in the warehouse sector. Building upon the work of leading scholars in the field, researchers can structure their research questions around the five domains of scheduling quality identified above. Such research questions may include:

  • How do shifts vary for warehouse works? (stability)
  • How far in advance do workers receive their schedules, and are last-minute changes common? (predictability)
  • How common are nonstandard hours, such as overnight work, in the warehouse sector? (timing)
  • How many work hours are typical per shift/day/week? (quantity)
  • Are workers able to request shifts or modify their schedules to meet their needs? (control)

Of course, the warehouse industry is complex, so any descriptive research should look for heterogeneity-based factors, such as worker demographics, company type, job type, and other factors.

DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH

What are the scheduling issues faced by workers in the warehouse sector?

Scheduling practices in the retail and service industry are well-documented, but what are the experiences of those in warehouses? How do warehouse workers fare in the five dimensions of quality scheduling: stability, predictability, timing, quantity, and control? Are there other unidentified domains unique to warehouses, in addition to the five identified above?

Causal research

Researchers also should engage in research on the causal implications of these scheduling practices and other business decisions by warehouse firms. While it remains challenging to identify watertight identification strategies in the scheduling context, a variety of research strategies have been used to move past description to shed light on the consequences of scheduling practices. This research attempts to shed light on causal linkages using randomized controlled trials and quasi-experimental methods.

There are probably some unique aspects of the warehouse sector that affect scheduling practices, such as the prevalence of third-party logistics companies described above or the role of automation and artificial intelligence. Causal research could test whether variations in the structure of a warehousing workplace impact the type or frequency of low-quality schedules. Conceptually, this would involve models with a measure of scheduling quality as the dependent variable and workplace factors serving as the independent variables.

The second track of causal research should focus on the effects of scheduling practices on workers. Investigative journalists and worker advocates are starting to share stories of workers in warehouses and the conditions under which they work.33 Scheduling practices factor into these stories about worker safety and the quality of work, but researchers can play an important role in disentangling the effect of scheduling quality specifically. Causal research could unpack how the documented scheduling practices uncovered in descriptive research are affecting worker's well-being on and off the warehouse floor.

The data necessary to conduct this kind of combined descriptive and causal research may be obtained from a variety of sources. In studying similar research questions in the retail and service sector, researchers could collect original data through worker/manager surveys obtained through social media recruitment or daily text messages, time diaries, focus groups, and interviews. Researchers also might be able to negotiate data-sharing agreements with individual warehouse and logistics firms, although accessing sufficient data to make cross-company comparisons may be onerous.

Then, there are third-party payroll firms. They may be able to provide a wealth of scheduling information across firms if sufficient data-sharing agreements can be negotiated. Among the leaders in the industry and their payroll services platforms are Automated Data Processing Inc.'s ADP Workforce Now, Kronos Inc.'s Kronos Workforce Ready, and OnPay Inc.'s eponymous payroll service.

Secondary data analysis using national surveys, despite some measurement concerns, also can help researchers study volatile work schedules if thoughtfully employed.34 While multiple surveys contain questions that can provide insight into respondents' work schedules, identifying respondents working in the warehouse sector specifically and ensuring a sufficient sample size is one barrier to using nationally representative surveys.

Several key surveys, among them the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, the General Social Survey, and the Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking offer information on several aspects of scheduling quality, including measures of scheduling quantity, fluctuation, nonstandard work timing, predictability, and employee schedule control.35 These surveys ask respondents to identify the industry in which they are employed, which can shed light on the type of work performed by respondents with unstable schedules.

CAUSAL RESEARCH QUESTIONS

What are the factors impacting scheduling in warehouses?

Are there unique aspects of warehouses that affect scheduling practices such as outsourcing, supply chain structure, technology, inventory type, organizational structure and ownership, or collective bargaining arrangements? If so, how do these or other factors affect scheduling practices?

What are the impacts of scheduling for workers in the warehouse sector?

If there are documented scheduling issues in the warehouse sector, how are these issues affecting workers? Are these practices affecting health outcomes, childcare access, income volatility, career pathways, mental health, or other areas?

Documenting scheduling interventions

Workers, advocates, policymakers, and—to some extent—employers have recognized the negative consequences of poor-scheduling quality and taken action to ameliorate its negative effects. To date, interventions to improve scheduling policies have been informed by research in the retail and service industry, but warehouse workers have largely been excluded from the enacted legislation at the state and local levels thus far. That might change as more efforts to enact fair workweek legislation across the country and nationally have included protections for warehouse employees. This interest in the scheduling practices of warehouse firms underscores the importance of high-quality research and the potential pathways, or tracks, interventions might take.

The first potential track for interventions is workplace-specific improvements to scheduling policies. Through collective bargaining agreements, grassroots organizing, and legal action, workers and advocates have pushed individual companies to change their scheduling practices. Among others, Gap, Starbucks Corp., Williams-Sonoma Inc., and Abercrombie & Fitch Co. have all announced changes to their scheduling practices, such as ending clopening and on-call shifts, though advocates question the degree to which some of these firms have followed through on their promises.36

Some of the retail companies implementing these changes have, in part, been influenced by research linking improved scheduling quality with productivity and profitability. Expanding the knowledge base on scheduling in the warehouse sector may prompt a similar response by firms in this industry.

The second potential track for intervention is legislative. Thus far, most political energy around improving worker schedules has targeted municipal and state legislative bodies. Those that have passed legislation designed to provide workers with more stable, predictable, and adequate schedules are:

  • New York City
  • San Francisco
  • Seattle
  • Philadelphia
  • Emeryville, California
  • Chicago
  • The state of Oregon

Efforts are underway in Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Washington state to pass similar legislation. The Schedules that Work Act has been introduced at the federal level.

As researchers begin documenting potential workplace and legislative interventions in the warehouse sector, it will be important to hear directly from workers themselves. Poor scheduling quality has, in part, derived from the tendency to view workers as widgets that can be used or discarded erratically in order to control business costs. Researchers or policymakers considering interventions must avoid any similar tendencies. Focus groups, interviews, or worker advisors on research teams will help elevate the perspective of warehouse employees and could diversify the array of potential interventions.37

RESEARCH QUESTIONS TO DOCUMENT INTERVENTIONS

What interventions to improve scheduling quality are being implemented in the warehouse and logistics sector?

Have firms in the warehouse sector adopted scheduling interventions piloted in other sectors, such as tech-enabled shift swapping, establishment of standardized shifts, core scheduling, designating a group of part-time-plus employees, and targeted additional staffing? Have they implemented new interventions tailored to the nature of warehouse work?

Are covered warehouse managers aware of and responsive to fair workweek ordinances?

For warehouses covered by fair workweek ordinances, such as those in Chicago, are managers aware of the new law? How well do managers understand the law's provisions? What supports are firms supplying to managers to help them comply with the law?

Evaluating interventions

The final link in the research chain examined in this report is evaluation of interventions. Much of the ongoing research on scheduling in the retail and service sector is focused on evaluating interventions, and some firm-specific evaluations have been effective tools in changing companies' scheduling practices.38 Whether such evaluations can be completed in the warehouse space is dependent on firms' willingness to pilot scheduling interventions and partner with researchers.

Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are proving that this kind of partnership is possible in the warehouse industry.39 Leveraging the association with high-quality schedules and worker productivity and profitability may be one way to encourage warehouse and logistics firms to support such research in their own sector.

With more jurisdictions adopting fair workweek legislation, it creates natural experiments for researchers to evaluate their effectiveness. Early evaluations of these ordinances are promising, but more research is needed to firmly establish the evidence base for these legislative solutions.40 Only Chicago covers warehouse workers under its scheduling ordinance, so pending evaluations may have limited applicability in the warehouse sector. Researchers should prioritize warehouse-specific evaluations in Chicago or other jurisdictions that are now considering ordinances that cover this sector, such as New Jersey.

These evaluations also must consider how the power of workers, or the lack thereof, factors into the effectiveness of these interventions. An evaluation of Seattle's ordinance, for example, noted that structuring an ordinance in which enforcement is "complaint-driven" potentially diminishes compliance with the law compared to strategic enforcement.41 These ordinances put the responsibility on individual workers to alert the appropriate authorities to any compliance issues.

This requires workers to have both familiarity with the law's specific provisions and confidence in a process that allows them to make complaints without retaliation. Research indicates that unions can be an important enforcement tool, in part because they provide workers with an intermediary entity for reporting violations without fear of retaliation.42 Any evaluations of scheduling interventions, therefore, must account for the presence of unions or other forms of worker power. Interviews and focus groups with workers can also provide insight into how satisfied workers are with the interventions and serve as another tool for promoting worker voice.

RESEARCH QUESTIONS TO EVALUATE INTERVENTIONS

What are the outcomes for warehouse workers with new scheduling quality interventions?

Following the implementation of workplace-specific or legislative interventions, how have worker schedules changed across the five domains of scheduling quality (stability, predictability, timing, quantity, and control)? Do workers express satisfaction with these interventions? If scheduling practices have changed, has there been any impact on workers' hourly pay, income, or employment status? How have these interventions impacted other measures of worker well-being, such as safety on the job?

How are the outcomes for firms with new scheduling quality interventions?

How have firms responded to new workplace-specific or legislative interventions? Do firms report any unexpected costs or challenges in complying with interventions? Are managers and executives supportive of the changes? What supports from firms have improved compliance with scheduling interventions? How does the industry's role in the supply chain impact the efficacy of scheduling interventions?

CONCLUSION

Conclusion

As the warehouse sector in the United States continues to grow and faces more scrutiny on working conditions and worker safety, researchers and advocates are paying attention to the role scheduling practices play in the industry. As in the case of retail and service workers, the use of new technologies is changing the way work is scheduled, assigned, and distributed in warehouses.

The extent to which warehouse workers encounter similar scheduling issues to workers in the retail and service sector, however, remains an open question. In convening researchers, advocates, and workers, Equitable Growth continues its efforts to broaden understanding on scheduling practices across industries. The learning from this convening, summarized and supplemented above, highlights the unique aspects of the industry, as well as areas ripe for further study.

Building off this learning to expand the knowledge base around scheduling in warehouses will help inform policymakers and firms seeking to improve productivity, safety, and well-being at this critical link in the U.S. economy's supply chains.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Sam Abbott is a family economic security policy analyst at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth. Alix Gould-Werth is the director of family economic security policy at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The Washington Center for Equitable Growth would like to thank the researchers, advocates, and workers who participated in the February 2020 research convening, "Work Schedules in the Warehouse and Logistics Sector." Their scholarship, insight, and experiences informed the content of this report. Additionally, the authors would like to thank Susan J. Lambert and Beth Gutelius, whose expertise on scheduling practices and the logistics sector, respectively, were foundational in the planning of the convening and this report.

Finally, special thanks are owed to Erin Kelly, Alex Kowalski, Beth Gutelius, Maggie Corser, and Peter Fugiel for their review and comments on drafts of this brief.


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The Great Recession Badly Hurt Kids’ Schooling; Today’s Recession Could Do Much Worse [feedly]

The Great Recession Badly Hurt Kids' Schooling; Today's Recession Could Do Much Worse
https://www.cbpp.org/blog/the-great-recession-badly-hurt-kids-schooling-todays-recession-could-do-much-worse

Whenever our kids return to school, a severely diminished learning experience awaits them unless the federal government learns an important lesson from the past and significantly boosts state aid — and soon.

The last time that states faced a budget crisis, in the wake of the Great Recession of a decade ago, emergency federal aid closed only about one-quarter of state budget shortfalls. Once the aid was gone, states started cutting funding to K-12 schools to help comply with their balanced budget requirements. By 2011, 17 states had cut per-student funding by more than 10 percent. Local school districts responded by cutting teachers, librarians, and other staff; scaling back counseling and other services; and even reducing the number of school days. Even by 2014 — five years after the Great Recession ended — state support for K-12 schools in most states remained below pre-recession levels.

School districts have never recovered from the layoffs they imposed back then. When COVID-19 hit, K-12 schools employed 77,000 fewer teachers and other workers even though they were teaching 2 million more children, and overall funding in many states was still below pre-Great Recession levels.

Money matters in education. As my colleague Cortney Sanders recently noted, "Adequate school funding helps raise high school completion ratesclose achievement gaps, and make the future workforce more productive by boosting student outcomes, studies show." The Great Recession in particular hurt students' educations, driving down test scores and the rate at which students attend college, Northwestern University economist C. Kirabo Jackson and two colleagues found.

Now, with the deepest economic downturn since the Great Depression closing businesses and sending unemployment soaring, state income and sales taxes — on which states overwhelmingly rely to fund education and other services — are drying up. As a result, we estimate that state budget shortfalls over the next three years will total $765 billion.

Federal aid to date, plus state rainy day funds, can close about one-fifth of those state gaps, leaving states $590 billion short.

Without significantly more federal aid, these gaps could prompt school districts to make far larger cuts than they did in the wake of the Great Recession, leading to larger class sizes, stagnant teacher pay, and outdated learning materials.

The impact on public education could be severe. Across the country, states provide 47 percent of all K-12 funding (with localities providing 45 percent and the federal government providing the rest). At the same time, education comprises about 26 percent of state budgets, making education a prime target for lawmakers looking to cut at a time of big state budget shortfalls.

Already, several states are announcing large education budget cuts that will harm children and families. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has announced plans to cut $300 million in K-12 funding and $100 million in college and university funding for the current year. Meanwhile, Georgia's top budget officials told the state's schools to plan for large cuts for next year that will almost certainly force districts to make layoffs.

Additional cuts are likely at the local level, where governments and school districts face enormous budget gaps of their own.

Meanwhile, states face new, unanticipated costs due to COVID-19, including access to devices and connectivity for distance learning, additional food services for students from low-income families, and expanded learning time to offset the learning loss caused by school closures. Expanded learning time alone could cost districts $36 billionthe Learning Policy Institute estimates.

Every classroom in America is at risk; the danger may be greatest for low-income kids and children of color, for whom an excellent K-12 education is particularly important as they seek to overcome historic barriers to opportunity. While state funding typically reduces disparities between wealthy and poor school districts, funding cuts magnify those disparities — and that's what happened with the Great Recession, when state funding fell as a share of total school funding. Today, high-poverty school districts — which face higher costs — receive more state and local funding than low-poverty districts do in only about a third of states.

With so much at stake for students and their families, the President and Congress need to provide significant fiscal relief to states, localities, tribes, and territories to minimize education cuts. The House-passed Heroes Act includes about $1 trillion in additional state, local, and education aid, including these must-haves:

  • An increase in the federal matching rate for covering Medicaid costs — a highly effective form of aid that quickly delivers direct savings to states, freeing up funds that they can reallocate to protect schools and other fundamental public services.
  • Direct, flexible funding to states, tribes, and territories to help them offset the loss of tax revenues.
  • Direct funding to local school districts, via increased state grants distributed according to the funding formula of the existing federal Title I program.
  • Additional direct funding to local governments, which are facing their own revenue losses.

Now that the House has passed the Heroes Act, giving states aid of this magnitude — and soon — should be a top priority for the Senate and President.

Whatever federal policymakers do, however, states likely will need to draw down their reserves, close tax loopholes, raise new revenues, and find other ways to protect education funding and other programs serving vulnerable children and families. The education of a generation is at stake.


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Without federal aid, many state and local governments could make the same budget cuts that hampered the last economic recovery [feedly]

Almost every EPI article, well researched and backed by stand-up, professional economics, ends up being an argument for more socialism, more public goods, for capitalism being better managed, and for  fascists being removed from power and its chief gangsters imprisoned. This one is no exception

Without federal aid, many state and local governments could make the same budget cuts that hampered the last economic recovery

https://www.epi.org/blog/without-federal-aid-many-state-and-local-governments-could-make-the-same-budget-cuts-that-hampered-the-last-economic-recovery/

If policymakers should learn one lesson from the long, sluggish recovery from the Great Recession, it is that cutting public spending, particularly by state and local governments, is a recipe for prolonged economic pain. My colleague Josh Bivens has described in detail how the state and local austerity of the early 2010s was both an unprecedented cutback in public spending following a recession and directly to blame for the slow pace of recovery.

Unfortunately, facing massive projected losses in revenue as the coronavirus has forced them to lock down their economies, many state and local governments are already cutting critical services and laying off staff. The April jobs report showed that nearly 981,000 state and local public-sector jobs have already been lost. To put that in perspective, that's more than all the state and local public-sector jobs lost in the Great Recession and its aftermath.

As shown in Figure A, the peak for state and local government employment occurred in July 2008. As state and local budgets deteriorated throughout that year, governments began cutting services and staff. When the recession officially ended in June 2009, lawmakers in many states were already cutting services and staff, choosing to slash budgets rather than pursuing new revenues. These cuts accelerated in 2010 as relief funding from the federal recovery act dried up, and continued for several years, particularly in many states where conservative lawmakers took control following the 2010 elections. The result was a loss of nearly 800,000 state and local public sector jobs by July 2013.

Figure A

It's critical to note, however, that not every state was cutting staff and services during this time. From July 2008 to July 2013, 18 states either preserved or grew their state and local public-sector workforces—keeping teachers, police, firefighters, nurses, and other critical service providers on the job. As shown in Figure B, the 18 states that did not make cuts tended, on average, to grow their public-sector workforce by 3.3%, while 32 states and the District of Columbia cut their state and local public-sector workforce (S&L) by an average of 4.1%. States that preserved or grew their public-sector workforce fared much better coming out of the recession, with fewer job losses overall, fewer private-sector job cuts, less growth in unemployment, and faster job growth as the recovery took hold.

From July 2008 to July 2013, total nonfarm employment shrunk by 1.7% in states that cut their state and local workforce, yet grew slightly (0.6%) in states that preserved or grew their state and local public sector. Of course, total nonfarm employment includes state and local government workers, so it's important to consider the employment changes strictly in the private sector. The pattern is the same: On average, states that kept teachers, nurses, firefighters, and other public-sector workers on the job essentially maintained the same level of private-sector employment over this period. In contrast, states that cut state and local government employment lost, on average, 1.3% of jobs outside of state and local government.i

Figure B

This loss in nongovernment jobs isn't all that surprising given that for every dollar spent by state and local governments, more than half of the resulting economic activity occurs in the private sector. States and local governments that lay people off are not only adding those workers to the unemployment rolls, they are also threatening private-sector jobs that depend upon the spending of public-sector staff.

Analyzing differences in unemployment rate changes is a little less straightforward than job numbers since workers giving up looking for work can lower unemployment. Still, states that cut state and local public-sector jobs did experience larger increases in unemployment, on average, than states that preserved their public sectors. From July 2008 to July 2013, the unemployment rate rose by an average of 1.6 percentage points in states that cut state and local public-sector jobs, while only growing 1.2 percentage points in states that preserved those jobs.

Federal aid to states in the wake of the recession was woefully inadequate, yet state lawmakers' decisions on how to respond to budget shortfalls—cutting staff and services or seeking new revenues— contributed to two fairly distinct trajectories of state recovery. Figure Cshows the different job growth trajectories for states that cut their state and local government services and staff versus states that preserved or grew their state and local workforce. From June 2009 to June 2015, states that preserved or grew their state and local public workforce averaged total nonfarm job growth of 8.8% and 10.5% growth in the private sector. In contrast, states that cut their public sectors averaged total nonfarm growth of only 6.2%, with 8.2% growth in the private sector.

Figure C

We can see the same trend looking at individual states, illustrated in Figure D. The more a state cut their state and local public-sector workforce, the fewer private-sector jobs they tended to add in the first six years of the recovery.ii

In fact, states that maintained their public-sector workforce recovered more than a year and a half faster than states that made cuts. Public-sector-preserving states went from their total nonfarm job trough back to their pre-recession level of employment in 49 months, on average. For public-sector-cutting states, it took an average of 68 months.

Figure D

No one knows when the threat of the coronavirus will subside, but mitigating the economic hardship caused by the pandemic is within lawmakers' control. States' experience in the Great Recession and its aftermath offers a clear cautionary tale of how not to respond to an economic downturn and large drop-offs in revenue. The best thing that lawmakers can do to bolster an economic recovery—whenever that is possible—is to preserve the critical public services that keep local economies running. Congress must send aid to state and local governments to ease the budget shortfall that states and localities are facing because of the pandemic. At the same time, state lawmakers should seize this moment to reform tax systems whose regressive designs in many states exacerbate inequality, which—on its own—hinders growth. State lawmakers should establish new, progressive sources of revenue that can support strong public services, make state tax systems more equitable, and are better able to recover from future recessions.

i.  All the values in these calculations exclude data for North Dakota. During this period, North Dakota experienced a boom in natural gas production that caused an enormous, atypical increase in jobs. Over this period, North Dakota grew their state and local public sector workforce; including it skews the averages significantly upward.

ii.  There is undoubtedly some two-way causality here. Just as cuts to the public sector lead to less private-sector consumption, declining private-sector jobs lead to lower tax revenues which lead to cuts to the state and local public sector. Yet looking at lagged changes during the period of large state and local public-sector cuts does show the same overall trend. For example, examining private-sector job changes from June 2011 to June 2012 relative to state and local job changes from June 2010 to June 2011 presents a similar picture. Moreover, if private-sector job loss were driving cuts to the public sector, policymakers would need to take action to break that cycle, and stabilizing demand through expanded public spending is typically the simplest way to do just that.


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Criminalization of black and brown communities in the Midwest adds to public health crisis during COVID-19 pandemic [feedly]

Criminalization of black and brown communities in the Midwest adds to public health crisis during COVID-19 pandemic
https://www.epi.org/blog/criminalization-of-black-and-brown-communities-in-the-midwest-adds-to-public-health-crisis-during-covid-19-pandemic/

The first installment of this three-part series on the impact of the coronavirus in the Midwest describes how weak labor protections have put Midwestern food processing workers at risk for coronavirus. Here we describe how incarceration puts people in the Midwest at risk during the pandemic and what state and local policymakers can do to protect the health and safety of people and families impacted by incarceration.

During a public health crisis, we're reminded that our communities are only really safe when everyone is safe. Across the nation—and throughout the Midwest—our communities include jails, prisons, and detention centers. And now, people who are incarcerated face an urgent problem: greater health risks from COVID-19. Overcrowding inhibits physical distancing and isolation of people who've contracted the virus, and inadequate medical care and supplies in these facilities prevents necessary testing, treatment, and sanitation. Decades of so-called "tough on crime" laws have overcrowded Midwestern jails and prisons and put the people who are incarcerated and the surrounding communities at risk.

State and local policymakers must do more to protect the health and safety of people impacted by incarceration and the workers coming in and out of these facilities as well. Proper medical care; prioritizing people for release from jails, prisons, and detention centers; eliminating unnecessary fees and fines; protecting people on parole and probation; and ensuring incarcerated people are able to communicate with their family and friends without creating additional economic hardship are all steps that should be prioritized during the coronavirus pandemic and further highlight reforms necessary even when we are not facing a global health emergency.

What does incarceration in the Midwest look like?

All states throughout the Midwest have seen a dramatic increase in incarceration over the last 40 years. They have incarcerated people in jails, prisons, detention centers, and juvenile justice facilities at higher rates (652 people per every 100,000 people in the state on average across the Midwest) even when compared with wealthy democracies around the world. Racial disparities are especially stark for black people, who are overrepresented in jails and prisons in every Midwestern state. For example, of the 10 states with the highest black–white differential in incarceration in state prisons, five (Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois, and Nebraska) are in the Midwest and three of these (Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota) imprison black people at more than 10 times the rate of white people. Latino and indigenous people are at least two times as likely to be incarcerated in many Midwestern states, including Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. These communities are also more likely to have underlying health conditionsthat lead to higher rates of death after contracting the virus, a risk factor that reflects and compounds durable patterns of segregation and discrimination.

What can be done to protect the health and safety of people impacted during the COVID-19 pandemic?

Provide necessary medical care and supplies such as soap, hand sanitizer, and masks

Providing affordable, accessible, quality health care and medical and sanitizing supplies are essential to prioritize the health and well-being of people who are incarcerated. However, for decades health care for incarcerated people has been undermined by contracts with private companies and insufficient resources, who put profit over people. Medical care and personal protective equipment should be provided at no cost to incarcerated people. Likewise, staff, and visitors should have soap, sinks, hand sanitizer, and masks. For example, in Minnesota, the Department of Corrections is waiving co-pays for medical visits and taking additional measures to make soap available and frequent hand-washing possible.

Reduce admissions and the number of people currently in jails and prisons

The Prison Policy Initiative recommends reducing admissions into jails and state and federal prisons and also releasing people who are currently incarcerated. For example, at the end of March, Gov. Pritzker issued an executive order to prevent new admissions to Illinois state prisons. In Michigan, Gov. Whitmer issued an executive order allowing local officials to prioritize release for people who are elderly, have chronic health conditions or other serious medical issues, pregnant women, people nearing their release date, and people with drug or alcohol addictions or mental health issues that could be treated elsewhere. In Ohio, advocates have been calling for state officials to reduce prison populations, by at least 10,000, to bring the number of incarcerated people in the system closer to its design capacity of 38,500. At least partly in response to this advocacy, Gov. DeWine's administration has taken steps to reduce the number of people incarcerated in state prisons by about 1,300 to just over 47,500, down from nearly 49,000 in March.

Release people being held in detention centers

Advocates such as the Detention Watch Network are also calling for the release of immigrants held in detention centers, eliminating check-ins with Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) and mandatory court appearances, and stopping local enforcement operations. ICE officials, as well as state and local elected officials, can all take steps to protect the health and safety of immigrants in detention centers. In addition to similar physical distancing challenges due to overcrowding in jails and prisons, detention centers have a well-documented history of limited access to health care and lack of basic hygiene that put people who are detained at even greater risk during the pandemic. There are nearly 30,000 people incarcerated in immigrant detention centers around the country, with close to 3,000 people incarcerated in Midwestern states. Some of the highest concentrations of people detained in the region are located in Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Illinois, and Wisconsin. As of April 25, 2020, ICE confirmed 10 COVID-19 cases among people detained in Michigan and 47 cases among people detained in Ohio.

Prevent unnecessary pre-trial detention and economic hardship by waiving fees, fines, and court debt

Throughout the Midwest, pre-trial policies have driven an increase in incarceration as people are locked up without a conviction and await trial or deportation. This includes people who are incarcerated because they simply cannot afford to pay bail or other court-related fines and fees. The Fees and Fines Justice Center recommends waiving fees, fines, and court debt and not issuing warrants for unpaid fees and fines or for failing to appear in a related hearing. The Michigan executive order referenced above also allows local officials to prioritize releasing anyone incarcerated for failure to appear in court or failure to pay court-related fees and fines, as well as people incarcerated for a traffic violation. As another example, Nebraska's Supreme Court suspended the execution of warrants for unpaid fees and fines between March 30 and June 30, 2020.

Protect the health and safety of people who are on parole and probation

Eliminating unnecessary in-person communications typically required for people on parole and probation, and reducing the number of people who are on parole and probation rolls, would also reduce the risk of spreading the coronavirus. In most Midwestern states, the number of people who are on parole and probation exceeds the number of people who are incarcerated. For example, while 78,000 people are incarcerated in jails, prisons, and detention centers in Ohio, more than three times as many are on probation and parole. In Indiana, 47,000 people are incarcerated while two times as many people are on probation and parole. People under this form of correctional control may be required to appear in court, take on-site drug tests, receive home visits, and pay regular fees despite already struggling to make ends meet. Fees are also often required for GPS/electronic monitoring which creates both additional economic hardship and health and safety issues by restricting travel for those who may need to seek medical treatment. Technical violations of parole and probation based on these and other requirements put people at risk for incarceration in the future. Policymakers can also suspend incarceration based on technical violations of probation that would have not have otherwise led to incarceration.

Ensure families can maintain communication with loved ones

Many jails, prisons, and detention centers are now required to prevent people from visiting their family and friends while physical distancing guidelines are in place. It is critical that families are able to maintain communication with their loved ones who are incarcerated without creating additional economic hardship in the form of expensive phone callsvideo calls, and emails. For example, the Kansas Department of Corrections is providing two free 15-minute phone calls and three free 30-minute video calls per week until in-person visitation restrictions are lifted. The Iowa Department of Corrections is providing four free e-mails per week for each incarcerated person. After U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Dick Durbin of Illinois called on federal prisons to take actionphone calls and video calls are now free in all federal prisons.

The economic, health, and social crises created by incarceration were well-documented long before the onset of the coronavirus. The solutions highlighted here also point to the need for long-term, permanent reforms for thriving healthy communities in the Midwest and around the country, not just in times of the extreme crisis.

The authors thank the Detention Watch NetworkFees and Fines Justice Center, and Prison Policy Initiative for their expertise and resources on the topics discussed here.


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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

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Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Parents Are Struggling to Provide for Their Families during the Pandemic [feedly]

Parents Are Struggling to Provide for Their Families during the Pandemic
https://www.urban.org/research/publication/parents-are-struggling-provide-their-families-during-pandemic


The economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic threatens the health and well-being of families across the nation and is particularly consequential for the nation's 77 million children ages 18 and under. Using data from the Urban Institute's Health Reform Monitoring Survey collected in late March and early April 2020, we assess how the pandemic is affecting family employment and caregiving, financial decisions, and material hardship among parents living with children under age 19. We find the following: More than 4 in 10 parents reported that they or someone in their family lost work or work-related income because of the coronavirus outbreak. This proportion rises to about 5 in 10 for non-Hispanic black parents and low-income parents and to more than 6 in 10 for Hispanic parents. Low-income parents were less likely to be able to work from home and more likely to have had difficulty arranging child care than higher-income parents. The same holds true for Hispanic parents, who were less likely to be able to work from home and more likely to have had difficulty arranging child care than non-Hispanic white parents. Parents reported coping with the pandemic's economic impacts by cutting back spending on food, reducing savings, and going into debt. More than one-third of parents reported problems paying for housing, utility, food, or medical costs in the past month, including roughly half of low-income parents and black and Hispanic parents.  

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