'No sense of job security': Amazon union organizers tell lawmakers in
Alabama
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[March 06, 2021] By
Daniel Medina and Nandita Bose
(Reuters) - A group of U.S. lawmakers
visited an Amazon facility in Alabama on Friday to lend support to a
growing push to unionize its workers, in what labor leaders and
lawmakers called one of the most important union elections in United
States history.
Workers at the Amazon fulfillment center in Bessemer, Alabama, are
voting on whether to become the first employees in the U.S. to join a
union at one of the country's largest employers.
The visit comes on the heels of President Joe Biden's recent statement
defending workers' rights to form unions. While he did not mention
Amazon, he referenced "workers in Alabama."
The move by the Alabama workers, which is being backed by the Retail,
Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), is a critical one for the
U.S. labor movement that has struggled with declining membership in
recent years. It is also a watershed moment for a growing unionizing
drive within the tech industry that has long been hostile to organized
labor.
The congressional delegation includes U.S. Representatives Andy Levin,
Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, Terri Sewell, and Nikema Williams.
"This is the most important election for the working class of this
country in the 21st century," Rep. Levin said, addressing workers in
Bessemer. "This is the biggest election in the south in a generation."
Rep. Sewell, whose district includes Bessemer, likened the fight to the
civil rights struggles in the area's past.
"I know that Amazon workers stand in the same tradition as John
Lewis...as those foot soldiers that dare to change the world by having
the audacity to stand up for their rights."
Bowman went a step further and urged Amazon workers around the country
to pay attention to their working conditions.
The lawmakers also privately met with workers and organizers from the
facility.
"We just want what's owed to us," said Kevin Jackson, an Amazon worker
at the Bessemer warehouse who attended the meetings. "We want a seat at
the table."
Michael Foster, a lead RWDSU organizer, said workers at the facility
reached out to the union for help, not the other way around. "We know we
have people walking on egg shells because they have no sense of job
security," he said.
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People hold a banner at the Amazon facility as members of a
congressional delegation arrive to show their support for workers
who will vote on whether to unionize, in Bessemer, Alabama, U.S.
March 5, 2021. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers
Amazon spokeswoman Heather Knox said she does not believe the RWDSU represents
the majority of employees' views and that Amazon offered "some of the best jobs
available everywhere we hire, and we encourage anyone to compare our total
compensation package, health benefits, and workplace environment to any other
company with similar jobs."
Knox also said the company hopes "these members of Congress will spend this same
amount of energy on raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour —as Amazon did for
all of our employees in 2018."
A NEW CHAPTER
The vote could also help kickstart a new chapter for the labor movement in the
southern states, where unions have long struggled to gain a foothold, labor
experts said.
One of the main reasons for this has been fewer job opportunities in the region
and political hostility toward unions, said William Gould, a labor law expert at
Stanford Law. Gould is also a former chairman of the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB).
"But that is changing because of how companies such as Amazon have really tested
the limits of workers' endurance," he said, adding that the pandemic had
exacerbated existing health and safety issues.
Bessemer, which is about 15 miles (24 km) away from Birmingham, the most
populous city in the state, is majority African American - a fact that has also
made the fight an important one for several lawmakers.
Levin separately told Reuters Amazon's policies are "egregious", especially
those such as "trying to force an in-person election in a pandemic hotspot."
The NLRB decided on Jan. 15 to not allow in-person voting due to safety concerns
during the pandemic. Earlier this month, close to 6,000 workers began voting by
mail on whether to join the union.
Amazon spokeswoman Knox maintained that "Amazon proposed a safe on-site election
process validated by COVID-19 experts that would have empowered our associates
to vote on their way to, during and from their already-scheduled shifts."
(Reporting by Daniel Medina in Bessemer, Alabama and Nandita Bose in Washington,
Additional reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco, Editing by Rosalba
O'Brien and Aurora Ellis)
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