@ไลน์ฟรีเครดิต_เล่นเกมได้เงิน 2019 พันทิป_แจ็คพอต แปลว่า_หาเงิน จาก บา คา ร่า_21 ฟรี เครดิต
-
การพนันออนไลน์ ได้เงินจริงNorth Carolina Justice Center
Raleigh, North Carolina ·The North Carolina Justice Center is one of North Carolina’s preeminent voices for economic and social justice.
Read More
North Carolina Network publications
State of Working North Carolina
- September 6, 2018
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Alexandra Forter Sirota, Allan Freyer, Patrick McHugh, Suzy Khachaturyan, William Munn, and Hyun Namkoong
As North Carolina grapples with the best way to build stronger regional economies, policymakers should consider the central and positive role that public infrastructure can play in deepening the connections for the state’s workforce to jobs, the state’s businesses to markets and the state’s residents to well-being. This year’s State of Working North Carolina report […]
Your voice, your vote: Paid Sick Days and Family Leave
- August 29, 2017
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Allan Freyer
Everyone gets sick, but more than a million workers in North Carolina have no opportunity to earn paid sick leave, and even fewer can take longer-term paid leave to address a serious health condition or welcome a new child. When illness inevitably strikes, they must take unpaid time off—sacrificing their wages so they can get […]
Keeping Secrets? How non-compete agreements for low-wage workers hurt business hiring and hold down wages
- May 1, 2017
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Allan Freyer and Carol Brooke
Who knew that preparing sandwiches for $8 an hour involves trade secrets, or that cleaning apartments for even less requires proprietary knowledge about key customer accounts? Yet such is the reality for a growing segment of North Carolina’s economy, where employers in low-wage, low-skill industries are increasingly asking their employees to sign non-compete agreements as […]
How to Build An Economy that Works for All: Raise the State Minimum Wage
- October 1, 2016
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Allan Freyer
North Carolina needs an economy that works for all and ensures broadly shared prosperity. That means creating jobs that pay workers enough to afford the basics for themselves and their families—enough to buy groceries, pay the rent, put gas in the car, and keep their children in day care. Unfortunately, the jobs that paid decent […]
State of Working North Carolina 2016: Don’t Call It a Comeback
- September 1, 2016
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Alexandra Forter Sirota, Allan Freyer, Marion Johnson, Patrick McHugh and Tazra Mitchell
Hard work is supposed to provide the income to allow people to get by and set their children up for future success. North Carolina policymakers have violated that promise, both with their policy choices that make it more difficult for North Carolinians to connect to good jobs and with their failure to enact the policies […]
High Road WIOA: Building Higher Job Quality into Workforce Development
- December 17, 2015
- Keystone Research Center
- Stephen Herzenberg
In response to the federal Workforce Investment and Opportunity Act (WIOA), most states are now in the latter stages of developing federally required plans and policies for operating their systems of workforce development under WIOA. This process creates an unprecedented opportunity to build into each state’s plan concrete ideas for using state and local workforce […]
The Power of Wage Policies: How raising public sector wages can promote living incomes and boost North Carolina’s economy
- November 1, 2015
- North Carolina Justice Center
- Allan M. Freyer, Alexandra F. Sirota, and Carol Brooke
Municipal and county governments still have opportunities to take positive action to raise wages for workers living in their communities, despite recent state legislation that limits local government authority. One such policy opportunity involves raising the wages of their own public employees, a strategy that can play an important role in combatting wage stagnation and […]