Co-founders of First Shift Justice Project, Laura Brown and Keira McNett, are employment lawyers who each bring to this work a decade or more of experience in representing and advising workers in a number of contexts, including female workers in low-wage jobs who suffer from workplace discrimination. Both Laura and Keira are also mothers of young children.
Laura Brown
Keira McNett
Why We Do This Work
We have both spent over a decade working with workers in low-wage jobs, hearing about their workplace problems and helping them address violations of their workplace rights. In doing this work, we met many women (and some men) who lost their jobs due to the birth of a child or the need to care for a disabled, elderly or ailing family member. When we each became mothers ourselves, we began to understand these challenges in an even deeper way. We have been moved by the stories of fellow parents, including experiences of pregnant women who were forced on leave during pregnancy “for their own good;” mothers who were fired for taking time off work to care for a sick child; and fathers who were fired for taking time off to accompany their partners to the hospital to give birth.
Traditional legal services alone are not adequate to serve the needs of these workers. When work and family collide, workers in low-wage jobs frequently do not seek legal help in a timely way because they are not aware of the laws which might protect them in this context and do not recognize that their rights are being violated. Even where employers’ violations of the law are clear, these workers have difficulty pursuing legal recourse because of their urgent need to search for work and also continue to care for family members.
First Shift Justice Project will better serve these workers by using a preventive, client-centered approach to reach families, educate them about their rights, and enable them to exercise their rights before they have been violated.
We envision a shift in workplace culture that values not only paid employment but also the work of family caregiving. We can advance this vision by giving workers the tools to assert their rights and, by doing so, to foster work environments where employers and workers expect to have respectful and productive conversations about family responsibilities.
