US Senator Introduces the First Bill To Give Gig Workers Benefits (techcrunch.com)
Virginia Senator Mark Warner has introduced a bill that will give basic benefits to gig workers. "Warner has just proposed the first-ever piece of national legislation aimed at helping on-demand and other non-traditional workers without traditional benefits, like paid sick days or a retirement plan, have some sort of a safety net," reports TechCrunch. "The bill asks the federal government to set aside $20 million in funding for organizations to use to look at the types of benefits programs individual workers could take with them from job to job." From the report: "[Portable benefits is] that emergency fund," Warner told BuzzFeed, which first reported news of the bill. "It might be a fund to take care of a disability if you get hurt. It might work with some existing retirement programs. Part of it would be, depending on what happens with Obamacare, an ability to help deal with health care expenses. I think there will be a variety of models." The funding wouldn't be enough to cover everyone, of course, but if it gets the green light a draft of the bill indicates it would earmark $5 million toward grants doled out by Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta for organizations already looking into portable benefits and $15 million for new programs.
... but would it have been too much to ask, to mention that he is of course a Democrat.
"did not actually happen in the us, uk, other countries"
and did you ever stop to wonder why?
it wasnt because he was wrong.
it was because we began fixing things, aka the progressive movement of the early 1900s that sought to correct the excesses of the gilded age.
it didnt happen because we fixed the problem, or tried to, before the masses became discontented enough to resort to widespread violence (bread riots still occured, but not as widespread as in other nations that did NOT correct thier problems).
so.
once again.
you only prove your own ignorance.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.