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(Courtesy CALMatters) Laurence Berland, speaking, and Rebecca Rivers, left, with glasses, were among those reported fired.
(Courtesy CALMatters) Laurence Berland, speaking, and Rebecca Rivers, left, with glasses, were among those reported fired.
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Bloomberg blows in

That big Thanksgiving-week storm isn’t all that’s about to sweep California. In launching his last-minute bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, Michael Bloomberg will be making a big play for the Golden State.

The former New York City mayor and business mogul, who officially announced his candidacy Sunday, has entered the race too late to have a shot at winning early-voting states like Iowa and New Hampshire. Instead, The New York Times reports, he will focus “on the delegate-rich March primaries in states such as California and Texas.”

First up: a $31 million ad blitz airing in dozens of cities including Los Angeles. That includes 20 ads on NBC’s 5 p.m. news broadcast in L.A. this week, points out Times reporter Shane Goldmacher.

However: Like his rivals Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren, Bloomberg skipped the California Democratic Party convention this month, a confab of progressive activists and labor leaders not likely to show the moderate former Republican a lot of love. Bloomberg, a charter school supporter, is no stranger to politics in the Golden State — or to losing here:

  • He gave $3.5 million to a committee supporting former L.A. mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s unsuccessful run for governor in 2018.
  • He gave more than $500,000 to support Marshall Tuck’s losing bid for state superintendent of schools in 2014.
  • He gave $750,000 to support losing ballot measures that sought to raise taxes on cigarettes in 2006 and 2009. He also gave $500,000 to the ballot measure voters passed in 2016 to raise cigarette taxes to fund health programs.

Behind Black Friday

Workers at an Amazon fulfillment center in Riverside County are injured more than four times as often warehouse workers nationwide, reports a new investigation by Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting. And the injury rate at 23 Amazon warehouses the report examined was more than double the industry’s national average.

“The root of Amazon’s success appears to be at the root of its injury problem, too: the blistering pace of delivering packages to its customers,” says the blistering report from Reveal.

An Amazon worker in Tracy tells Reveal the pace of work became unmanageable after robots were added to the warehouse, and two Southern California warehouse workers say they got urinary tract infections from holding their bladders so they wouldn’t get docked for taking time off to use the restroom.

Meanwhile at Google

Four Google employees who had criticized the tech giant and taken part in labor organizing were fired on Monday, “escalating tension between management and activist workers at a company once revered for its open corporate culture,” Bloomberg reported, citing a companywide email. The memo said the firings were for violations of its data-security policies.

All four had spoken publicly against company actions, including Google’s work with federal border agencies and the Chinese government, according to The New York Times. Tech Workers Coalition, made up of workers from Google and other companies, dubbed them the “Thanksgiving Four,” and urged others to offer them jobs.

Robots rising

Hefty raises for high-skill workers haven’t trickled down in recent years to the low-skill end of the pay scale. And the news is about to get worse as automation comes for office clerks, fast food workers, retail sales people and cashiers, economics reporter Judy Lin reports.

In CalMatters’ latest explainer, Lin explores what’s happening to California’s work force, and takes a look at why the Newsom administration believes labor unions are part of the solution.

Some highlights:

  • Metro areas with the highest and lowest risk of job disruption are in California. That means you have a better chance of weathering the next 15 years if you live in San Francisco or San Jose. Worse if you live in Riverside, San Bernardino, Merced or Modesto.
  • Health, technology and business will continue to grow. Demand remains high for home health aides, personal care aides and nurse practitioners as California faces a graying tsunami.
  • The administration believes union jobs will ensure quality jobs but the tide will be tough to turn: Just 8.3% of the private-sector workforce is unionized.

What to watch:

Newsom’s Future of Work commission and rules for gig workers, a sector of the future economy where Newsom is looking for a win.

 

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