Happy Labor Day, California! You’re ranked best place to be a worker

”Survey says” looks at various rankings and scorecards judging geographic locations while noting these grades are best seen as a mix of artful interpretation and data.

Buzz: As we celebrate Labor Day, let’s note that California was graded as the best state for workers in one new ranking.

Source: My trusty spreadsheet reviewed state workplace scorecards by left-leaning Oxfam, which “tracks how states protect, support and pay workers.”

Topline

California was No. 1 in the Oxfam ranking followed by Oregon, New York, Washington and Massachusetts.

Worst places to work? North Carolina, then Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama.

And California rivals? Texas was No. 45, Florida, was No. 28.

Details

Oxfam’s grades came from studying three slices of the workplace.

Pay patterns: California ranked No. 2 among the states after Washington. Then came Maine, Connecticut and Massachusetts. Worst? North Carolina, then Indiana, Alabama, Utah and South Carolina. Rivals? Texas was No. 40, and Florida was No. 28.

Worker protections: California ranked No. 2 after Oregon. Then came New York, Washington, Connecticut and Massachusetts. Worst? Mississippi, then North Carolina, Arkansas, Georgia and Alabama. Rivals? Texas was No. 37 and Florida was No. 28.

The right to organize: California ranked No. 1 followed by New York, Oregon, then Colorado, Delaware and Ohio. Worst? Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Rivals? Texas was No. 45 and Florida was No. 25.

Quotable

“California has some of the nation’s strongest unemployment benefits and minimum wage laws, provides paid leave and has a domestic workers bill of rights,” says Kaitlyn Henderson, Oxfam’s senior research adviser. “It’s also one of only three states that mandate a heat standard for all outdoor workers, which is especially important given the record temperatures we saw this summer. California provides a model for how other states, and the federal government, can support working families.”

Caveat

Let’s politely say several right-leaning scorecards see California’s business climate far differently.

The Golden State drew an average No. 48 ranking for being boss-friendly in gradings from CEO Magazine, Tax Foundation and Rich States, Poor States.

Tops were Florida in my composite rankings, then North Carolina, Utah, Indiana, Nevada and Texas. Worst was New York and New Jersey, then after California came Minnesota and Vermont.

Bottom line

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