As part of a coalition led by organizations including the Restaurant Opportunities Center United and the National Employment Law Project, the National Partnership for Women & Families submitted comments today opposing a rule that could cost tipped workers an estimated $5.8 billion dollars in tips every year. The National Partnership’s comments focus specifically on how the U.S. Department of Labor’s proposed rule, which rescinds regulations that say the tips workers earn cannot be confiscated by employers, would disproportionately harm women and their families. Women – mostly women of color – make up nearly two-thirds of tipped workers nationwide. The comments are available here.
Largest U.S. Survey of Birth Experiences to be Released Summer 2025
Listening to Mothers IV will feature data from several thousand people who gave birth in 2023 WASHINGTON, D.C. – December 10, 2024 – Today, MomsRising/Mamás con Poder and Black Mamas Matter Alliance joined the National Partnership for Women & Families...