WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senators Dick Durbin (D-IL), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), and Sherrod Brown (D-OH) have introduced a bill to curb abuses that deprive employees and retirees of their earnings and retirement savings when businesses collapse. The Protecting Employees and Retirees in Business Bankruptcies Act would make several reforms to Chapter 11 bankruptcy law, putting workers’ interests near the top when companies file for bankruptcy.
“It’s unacceptable that when a big corporation files for bankruptcy, the interests of its employees and retirees can be placed below those of wealthy executives. This type of preferential treatment is unfair, and this bill seeks to level the playing field so those who give their lives to a company aren’t kicked to the curb,” Durbin said.
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“When a company goes into bankruptcy, workers on the assembly line or in the branch office should be treated just as fairly as executives in the c-suite,” said Whitehouse. “This bill would help put the interests of workers and retirees near the top of the list of considerations when a business craters.”
“When a company files for bankruptcy, the workers and retirees who spent their careers fueling the business shouldn’t get shortchanged to subsidize executive payouts,”said Brown.
Corporate bankruptcies are nothing new to American workers. In too many instances, workers’ claims for compensation and benefits are denied while executives’ claims are given preferential treatment. It is time for a more balanced and just approach.
The Protecting Employees and Retirees in Business Bankruptcies Act will protect workers from losing out by:
Improving Recoveries for Employees and Retirees:
Reducing Employees’ and Retirees’ Losses:
Restricting Excessive Executive Compensation Programs:
Today’s bill is similar to bills Durbin, Whitehouse and Brown have introduced in the last three Congresses.