LOS ANGELES — For two years, labor organizers tried to unionize employees at a trio of celebrated California national parks, but they couldn’t reach critical mass.
Then came mass firings of National Park Service employees in February under the Trump administration. Many employees were reinstated, but litigation concerning the legality of the firings winds on. The park service has lost about a quarter of its staff since Trump reclaimed the White House, and that’s on top of a proposed $1 billion budget cut to the agency. Copy article link
kAm%9:D DF>>6C E96 D42=6D E:AA65] |@C6 E92? hfT @7 6>A=@J66D 2E *@D6>:E6 2?5 $6BF@:2 2?5 z:?8D r2?J@? ?2E:@?2= A2C<D H9@ 42DE 32==@ED G@E65 E@ F?:@?:K6[ H:E9 C6DF=ED 46CE:7:65 =2DE H66<] |@C6 E92? e__ DE2776CD — :?4=F5:?8 :?E6CAC6E:G6 A2C< C2?86CD[ 3:@=@