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Oil Refineries Fight Against California Environmental Law

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Oil refiners are hard at work to combat and suspend a crucial California environmental law that requires companies to reduce their carbon footprint. This opposition has gotten supporters of clean technology to fight back to make sure this law stays intact and that oil refineries are held accountable to follow the regulations to reduce their amount of pollution.

Proposition 23, an initiative on the November ballot, would suspend the 2006 law that requires greenhouse gas emissions in the state to be reduced to 1990 levels by 2020. This law was the first of its kind in the United States to cut down on greenhouse emissions and force strict regulations on oil refineries to comply.

If this law is suspended, it will make it that much more difficult for any other state in the future to push through legislation to combat pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, and move forward with cleaner technologies to replace the heavy use of oil.

Oil refiners Valero Energy Corp. and Tesoro Corp., both based in San Antonio, have given about $4 million and $1.5 million so far in support of Prop. 23. Earlier this month, an oil refining subsidiary of Koch Industries Inc. contributed $1 million, according to the filings.

Refiners are among the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases in California, and would incur high costs to comply with the law, known as AB 32. It is obvious that these companies want to avoid paying any more costs, so they are trying to throw as much money at the situation as they can to attempt to convince legislators that them saving some money is more important to the nation rather than reducing the amount of pollution the release into the atmosphere.

At the same time, environmental groups and individuals, including clean-technology investors, have made a stand to oppose Proposition 23. Both the former Secretary of State, George Shultz, and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger are also highly vocal opponents of Prop. 23, and have expressed their support of cleaner technologies for the future.

The ballot measure, if passed, would suspend AB 32 until the state unemployment rate drops to 5.5% or lower for one year. California’s unemployment rate was 12.3% in July, and economic forecasts have the rate remaining above 8% for the next five years, according to the nonpartisan state Legislative Analyst’s Office.

Deciding what measures to take that will determine the well-being of our planet based solely on unemployment numbers is not something that the majority of people agree with. In a July Field Poll, 36% of likely voters in California said they would vote in favor of the measure, while 48% said they would oppose Prop. 23.

While opponents of Proposition 23 may not be able to outspend oil refining companies for support, the general consensus of California residents remains that they are ready to move away from oil as the only source of energy and power, and recognize the future of clean technologies to greatly reduce the negative impact that human consumption has placed upon the Earth.

Lawyers For Labor Law Representation

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lawyers deal with a wide array of cases that fall under the legal branch of labor law. These include discrimination on the basis of gender, race or age, sexual harassment, negligence in terms of safety conditions at work, issues of slavery and wages. These cases are usually extensive and demanding of both the defense and the prosecution sides, thus there is need to pick out the most competent lawyer to represent your case.

Lawyers represent both corporate as well as individual clients who have a labor law case to pursue. The best ones are of course who have the portfolios that show these two types of clients as this will indicate to you what their legal philosophy is concerning labor rights and the issues that pertain to these. Therefore when factoring in which labor law attorney will represent your case it is very important to find a layer who does not have contradicting views as yours regarding the work place case that you are involved in. Give that some cases of labor discrimination are embarrassing, be certain about the lawyer’s stance toward discrimination, harassment, and abuse.

Lawyers are widely available on the internet through specialized legal advice sites. The lawyers that can be easily accessed and that are recommended by the trustworthy sites are a good place to start in your search for a labor law attorney. Seeking the advice of friends and other clients who have been represented by this lawyer is also highly recommended. Lawyers are best found through the legal authorities such as the Bar Association, the Law Society, and the Solicitors Regulation Authorities among others. In fact, this latter method of finding a labor law attorney is the most preferred given the large number of firms and lawyers that are in the city.

Labor Law – Reasons For Unions

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Ironically, the very entities, Big Business, which despises Labor Unions are the sole reason for their existence. As the nation entered into the Industrial Revolution, the factories in the cities became magnets for rural people yearning to make a decent living for their families.

Cities like Detroit, auto making capital, Pittsburg, steel king and hundreds of others watched their population swell to overabundance seemingly overnight.

These rural workers, black and white, along with their urban counterparts were a hearty bunch of people. They were used to long hours of hard work on the farm, barely scratching out a living. Many had never seen inside plumbing before coming to the city so they weren’t the ungrateful type.

You would think the combination of cheap, hard working labor and, for that time, state of the art production methods, would be a marriage made in Business Heaven, and so it was, initially.

The time passed and the workers’ families continued to live in squalor due to no decent housing being made available and low wages kept them from moving where decent housing did exist. The workers were forced to work long hours under unbearable conditions with little to show for it.

For instance, workers at a GM factory were forced to sit inside the factory for 5 hours without water or toilet facilities, while waiting for parts to arrive. In those days working 8 hours was just that…working. If the factory was closed down 3 hours for some reason, the workers were forced to work an additional 3 hours for no pay, to make production.

The treatment of workers with production speed ups, no pay increases, no medical benefits, in fact no benefits of any kind, began to breed unrest. This simmering unrest spawned the birth of Unions. The unions provided a means in which workers, as a collective unit, could present grievances to their employer in hopes of solving problems.

Big Business resoundly rebuked the idea of any union or group of workers telling them what to do with their company. Instead of acknowledging the Union as the workers bargaining agent, the companies hired thugs and strike breakers, Pemberton being the most vicious and infamous, to destroy the unions by whatever means they deemed necessary.

Soon picket lines where unions were on strike became the scene of bloody and at times deadly confrontations between workers, hired thugs and the police. The police were nearly always on the companies’ side as the worker was viewed as breaking the peace and unlawfully occupying private property.

These bloody confrontations began gathering National attention when the National Guard was called out to break strikes. The idea of American soldiers firing on American citizens brought a public outcry which finally the politicians could no longer ignore.

President Roosevelt signed the National Labor Relations Law, the single most important piece of labor law ever enacted, which granted the workers the right to organize into a Union. It allowed the union to be recognized as the workers sole bargaining unit capable of negotiating contracts for better wages, benefits and working conditions.

It’s rather ironic that after years of outsourcing jobs and the Union membership numbers declining, the current treatment of American workers is rekindling the spark of unrest which originally created the need for a union.

In a perfect world of owners becoming wealthy yet sharing the wealth with the workers who produce it, there would be no need for a Union. However, as long as American business puts profits ahead of All else, ignoring society’s needs and their obligations, there will always be a need for the Union.

Sadly, the events of corruption and greed displayed by people who operate the businesses the last few years, there is little doubt Unions should be considered an inherent right of every American to become a member of.