Amazon's Staten Island warehouse workers file petition for union
election
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[October 26, 2021] By
Jeffrey Dastin and Nivedita Balu
(Reuters) -Workers at an Amazon.com Inc
warehouse in New York City's Staten Island borough have filed a petition
to form a union, the U.S. National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) said on
Monday, though the company questioned whether enough legitimate
signatures were gathered.
The move represents the second time that U.S. staffers for the world's
biggest online retailer have aimed to unionize this year, following a
failed effort https://www.reuters.com/article/us-amazon-com-union-idTRNIKBN2BW1HQ
at an Alabama facility in April. Though Amazon has long resisted such
efforts, some employees are advocating for more protections and benefits
in light of a COVID-19 pandemic that put their safety at risk.
Chris Smalls, a former employee at the Staten Island warehouse, led the
organizing drive and collected around 2,000 signatures to request an
official vote through the NLRB. Smalls rose to prominence last year when
Amazon fired him, alleging he violated a paid pandemic-related
quarantine when he showed up at his facility to protest work conditions.
"This is monumental for the workers," Smalls said in an interview. "This
is proof that you can stand up, fight back and organize your workplace."
The NLRB confirmed that the union petition was filed electronically with
the board.
Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said, "We're skeptical that a
sufficient number of legitimate employee signatures has been secured to
warrant an election. If there is an election, we want the voice of our
employees to be heard and look forward to it. Our focus remains on
listening directly to our employees and continuously improving on their
behalf."
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Amazon workers protest outside the NLRB office as workers arrive to
unionize, in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., October 25, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
For the past six months, some staff at the Staten Island warehouse, called
"JFK8," and other nearby facilities have been organizing to form what they call
the Amazon Labor Union (ALU). Smalls said he set up a tent outside the
warehouse, while some current workers championed the same cause on the inside.
These workers are demanding higher wages, job security, safer conditions, better
medical leave and more paid time off. According to Smalls, Amazon has put out
anti-union literature, and his group has responded with their own literature.
The organizing drive is being held at Amazon's only New York City fulfillment
center, one of the company's large warehouses from which it ships many goods.
It is not clear when an election would be held if regulators green light the
petition.
Amazon handily beat back an effort by the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store
Union (RWDSU) to organize its Bessemer, Alabama, warehouse.
Workers rejected joining the RWDSU by a more than two-to-one margin this spring,
but another vote could be held as the NLRB reviews union claims that Amazon
violated labor laws during that election.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Palo Alto California and Nivedita Balu in
Bengaluru; Writing by Anna Driver; Editing by Mark Porter and Will Dunham)
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