Labor News & Commentary October 5 TV production workers win their first union contract & more
https://onlabor.org/october-5-2025/
By Liana Wang
Liana Wang is a student at Harvard Law School.
n todays news and commentary, HELP committee schedules a vote on Trumps NLRB nominees, the 5th Circuit rejects Amazons request for en banc review, and TV production workers win their first union contract.
After a nomination hearing on Wednesday, the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee scheduled a committee vote on President Trumps NLRB nominees for Thursday, October 9th. If the nominees advance past the committee vote, they would be cleared for consideration by the full Senate. The Trump Administration has nominated Scott Mayer, chief labor counsel for Boeing, and James Murphy, a previous NLRB staffer, to two of the four empty seats on the NLRB. Crystal Carey, an attorney who currently represents management and employers in labor law disputes, was nominated for the NLRB General Counsel position. Since August, there has only been one member, Democrat-appointed David Prouty, on the NLRB. The HELP committee also plans to vote on two nominees for the Department of Labor.
On Thursday, the Fifth Circuit denied Amazons petition for rehearing en banc in Amazon.com v. NLRB, a case concerning Amazons obligation to negotiate with the union elected as a bargaining representative for workers at Amazons Staten Island warehouse in 2022. The Staten Island warehouse was Amazons first unionized location in America. After Amazons failed attempt to challenge the Staten Island representation election, Amazon filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the NLRB in a federal district court in Texas. As part of the lawsuit, Amazon sought a preliminary injunction to prevent NLRB proceedings on Amazons obligation to negotiate with the union. Amazon appealed that decision. When the district court did not grant the injunction before a last-minute deadline that Amazon set, Amazon appealed the constructive denial of injunctive relief to the Fifth Circuit. In a 2-1 decision, a panel of the Fifth Circuit ruled that Amazon was not entitled to an interlocutory appeal, as the district court did not constructively deny Amazons motion for injunctive relief. Notably, the decision only concerns the procedural elements of the case, leaving the bigger merits questions for another day.
Meanwhile, the Production Workers Guild (IATSE Local 111) officially ratified their first union contract with the Association of Independent Commercial Producers. The contract covers nearly 5,000 production workers in TV commercials and is the first of its kind for production workers. It expands access to healthcare, ensures workers are covered by overtime protections, financial protections, and other safety protections. The contract comes as increasing numbers of entertainment industry workers seek to unionize. The IATSE represents over 170,000 workers in the entertainment industry in the U.S. and Canada.