Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is expected to be confirmed as labor secretary

Walsh’s nomination has been relatively uncontroversial.

During a mostly amicable confirmation hearing, he was asked repeatedly by senators on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee about disparities for women and people of color on issues such as unemployment during the coronavirus pandemic, on wages and earnings, and health care.

“We are dealing with a system of systemic racism that we have to continue to address,” Walsh said at the hearing. “It’s not simply just throwing fancy words out there, but in policies, it’s actually doing the work, rolling up our sleeves.”

Walsh will inherit a Labor Department navigating a complicated economic and public health crisis, with an estimated 18 million workers collecting unemployment benefits and others who have left the workforce since last year. He will oversee agency decisions about the proper level of safety compliance necessary for workplaces during the pandemic. Walsh also will face other challenges that predate the pandemic, such as how to regulate contract and gig work.

Under President Donald Trump, the agency passed rules that exempted a large number of workers from the paid sick leave requirements in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act and issued strict guidelines for unemployment insurance payouts to gig and self-employed workers that labor advocates and workers considered restrictive.

Its workplace safety division, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, has drawn particular ire for doing little to enforce safety standards for workplaces during the early days of the pandemic — the worst occupational health crisis in modern times.

Source: WP