Amazon to face U.S. union push in year ahead
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[December 23, 2020] By
Jeffrey Dastin and Krystal Hu
(Reuters) - In 2021, Amazon.com Inc is
poised to face a renewed challenge from groups it has long countered:
unions.
Energized by protests at Amazon's U.S. warehouses and a more
labor-friendly administration assuming office, unions are campaigning at
the world's largest online retailer to see if its warehouse or grocery
workers would like to join their ranks.
A major test is expected early next year when workers at one warehouse
decide whether to unionize. The company has not faced a union election
in the United States since 2014, and a "yes" vote would be the first
ever for a U.S. Amazon facility.
Amazon, America's second-biggest private employer behind Walmart Inc,
has told workers it already offers the pay and benefits unions promise,
and it has trained managers to spot organizing activity. Its operation
in France offers a picture of what the company would avoid: strong
unions there precipitated a month-long closure of its warehouses this
year.
The upcoming vote is for associates in Amazon's fulfillment center in
Bessemer, Alabama; they will weigh whether to join the Retail, Wholesale
and Department Store Union (RWDSU). The organizing committee has
launched a social media campaign, shared union authorization cards and
collected enough to hold the election.
This week and last, the RWDSU and Amazon negotiated the election terms.
By Tuesday they agreed to have seasonal workers in the bargaining unit,
as well as process assistants, whose inclusion the union had questioned
for their supervisory authority, according to the election hearings
presided by a government labor board. That board will set the election
date.
The larger the bargaining unit's size - now expected to be over 5,700 -
the more votes the union needs to win.
In a statement, Amazon said, "We don't believe this group represents the
majority of our employees' views. Our employees choose to work at Amazon
because we offer some of the best jobs available everywhere we hire."
Average pay at the Bessemer facility is $15.30 per hour, and jobs come
with health and retirement benefits, it said.
Precedent shows the RWDSU faces an uphill battle. Union membership has
fallen to 10% of the eligible workforce in 2019 from 20% in 1983, the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in January.
Employees at the Alabama facility did not answer requests for an
interview.
VOTE 'WOULD PASS'
Amazon workers are organizing elsewhere, too. Alexander Collias, a
cashier for Amazon's subsidiary Whole Foods, said he has been
participating in walkouts because the pandemic has put workers' health
at risk and he claims management has brushed off others concerns.
"We’re definitely extremely pro-union," he said of his Whole Foods store
in Portland. "If we had a vote today, I think it would pass."
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A worker gathers items for delivery from the warehouse floor at
Amazon's distribution center in Phoenix, Arizona November 22, 2013.
REUTERS/Ralph D. Freso//File Photo
Courtenay Brown, a process assistant at an Amazon warehouse in New Jersey, said
work has increased 10-fold in her building during the pandemic, and colleagues
have fallen ill. So she's started circulating work-related petitions via
Facebook.
"We need to be able to have a voice," said Brown, 30, adding she was neutral
about the impact a union could have at her facility.
Reuters was introduced to both Brown and Collias via pro-labor groups
campaigning at Amazon. One of them was Whole Worker, a group of current and
former Whole Foods staff looking to organize the grocery chain.
Its strategy is to focus outreach and actions at the half dozen Whole Foods
stores, including in Portland and Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, where it already has
secured majority staff support, said Katie Doan, one of the group's directors.
"We’d rather focus on little stores here and there who are for sure going to
fully unionize, rather than fail nationally," said Doan, who worked for Whole
Foods in California until earlier this year.
Likewise, representatives of the United Food and Commercial Workers
International have reached out to discuss unionization, hazard pay and other
issues with Whole Foods staff, according to interviews and copies of the
communication shared with Reuters.
Seattle-area unions are meeting with Amazon tech workers, too, their coalition
leader said. One local is helping corporate whistleblowers whom Amazon fired
contest their termination as a violation of U.S. labor law, according to a
public record obtained by Reuters. Amazon said it supports workers' right to
criticize the company, but the employees in question violated internal policies.
Labor advocates say the administration of President Joe Biden is poised to help
with union efforts, making the U.S. National Labor Relations Board less beholden
to corporate interests and supporting the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO)
Act.
That bill passed the U.S. House in February and would add penalties for
companies that hinder organizing; Senate approval is far from guaranteed. Its
passage would help level the playing field for workers, said Stuart Appelbaum,
RWDSU president whose Mid-South Council is behind the Alabama union drive.
"With a change in administration, Amazon workers are going to have a much better
chance of coming together," he said.
(Reporting By Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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