Catherine Friend
Catherine Friend

Bad SCOTUS! Part 3: Bakeries!

This is the third of four ‘anticanon,’ Supreme Court decisions that everyone agreed were very wrong. This one has to do with bakeries. Yummm…

In 1897 New York passed a law that said bakery employees could not work more than 60 hours in a week. (A few years earlier bakers had gone on strike to protest the horrible working conditions, so NY took notice and passed the law.) I can’t help but add—if bakers were working too many hours, who knew what would end up in that bread?

Lochner, a bakery owner, challenged the law on the basis of contracts: Labor has the right to make ‘contracts’ with employers without state interference under the right to privacy protected by the 14th Amendment. The Supreme Court agreed, basically saying “Sure, what the heck. Let the business owners do what they want. Yeah, capitalism!”

For decades the Lochner v NY decision prohibiting states from doing anything to help improve workers’ lives. Finally a 1937 SCOTUS decision overturned Lochner v. New York. I should say more, but this is a complicated issue and I don’t have the patience to dive into it and figure out all the details. There. Now you know. I lack patience.

Final anticanon decision next week. Sheryl’s already guessed it. 🙂

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The Big Pivot

About Me

After twenty-five years on the farm, I’m adjusting to the adventures of city life. Part of that adjustment is figuring out what I want to write about now, since sheep are no longer part of my daily life. I’m challenging myself creatively by painting with pastels and playing the ukelele as I seek my new writing path.

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Catherine Friend is a fiscal year 2021 recipient of a Creative Support for Individuals grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board. This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.