Exclusive-Teamsters organizing workers' unions at 9
Amazon.com facilities in Canada
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[September 17, 2021] By
Julia Love and Moira Warburton
(Reuters) - The Teamsters workers' union
has launched campaigns to organize employees in at least nine Canadian
facilities of U.S. e-commerce company Amazon.com, according to Reuters
interviews with union officials.
The influential union took the first step earlier this week to organize
employees at one of Amazon's Canadian facilities, and the interviews
reveal it is widening such efforts across the country, where the
e-commerce company employs about 25,000 workers and plans to add 15,000
more.
The campaigns could be seen as a bet by the Teamsters that early success
unionizing employees in a more labor-friendly market such as Canada will
inspire similar results south of the border, where Amazon has so far
fended off unionization attempts.
In the latest challenge to Amazon's anti-unionization stance, Edmonton,
Alberta's Teamsters Local Union 362 filed for a vote on union
representation at a company fulfillment center in nearby Nisku late on
Monday.
Interviews with Teamsters units in other cities and provinces show that
the union's efforts stretch from the Pacific coastal province of British
Columbia to the Canadian economic heartland in southern Ontario.
The Teamsters' Edmonton unit says it has enough signed cards calling for
a union to meet the 40% threshold to require a vote. Two of the union's
units in Ontario and one in Alberta have confirmed they are signing
membership cards with Amazon workers.
And two of the five units that confirmed to Reuters that they are
organizing said they are running campaigns at multiple sites, bringing
the total Amazon facilities involved in some level of organizing to at
least nine.
“Any locals that have an Amazon facility in their area are doing an
organizing campaign,” Jim Killey, an organizer with Teamsters Local 879
near Hamilton, Ontario, told Reuters.
Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Earlier in
the week Amazon Canada spokesperson Dave Bauer said in an emailed
statement: "As a company, we don't think unions are the best answer for
our employees."
Unions would prevent the company from changing quickly to meet
employees' needs and represent "the voices of a select few," he added.
The Teamsters say they can help the workers win better wages and
benefits, such as leaves of absence.
SLEEPING IN THEIR CARS
Unionization votes in Canada do not have any direct bearing on the
United States, but they could raise enthusiasm, said John Logan, a labor
professor at San Francisco State University.
“Organizing at a place like Amazon requires workers to take a certain
amount of risk,” Logan said. “If they can look to other places and see
that that risk has paid off for other workers, then they are far more
inclined to do it themselves.”
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The logo of Amazon in Lauwin-Planque, northern France, February 20,
2017. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo
Union members are going to great lengths to connect with Amazon workers,
sleeping in their cars to catch the employees after graveyard shifts and forging
ties at local churches.
The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which has more than a million
members in the United States and Canada, has made organizing Amazon a top
priority, describing it as an “existential threat."
Amazon does not have any unionized facilities in North America. The Teamsters is
one of a handful of unions trying to undertake the daunting task of organizing
its vast, high-churn workforce.
Earlier this year, the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU) lost
a vote to organize workers in Bessemer, Alabama, by a more than two-to-one
margin. Amazon pushed hard against unionization, and the result is being
disputed.
The Teamsters have indicated they will not seek to hold such votes in the United
States any time soon, arguing the process is unfairly tilted toward employers.
But in Canada, where labor laws are more favorable, the Teamsters see an
opportunity to go straight to the ballot box.
The Teamsters' Killey said his chapter is campaigning at Amazon facilities in
Milton, Cambridge and Kitchener, all traditionally working-class towns just west
of Toronto, Canada’s most populous city.
"Where we see there is a lot of support, we're going to go full steam ahead,"
said Christopher Monette, spokesperson for Teamsters Canada.
Jason Sweet, president of Teamsters Local 419 in Ontario, said his unit has
begun signing cards with workers in the greater Toronto area and has formed
WhatsApp groups with Amazon workers to keep them abreast of the union’s efforts,
delivering updates every 48 hours or so. "We are trying to build relationships
from the inside," he said.
In British Columbia, Teamsters Local 31 President Stan Hennessy said potential
members have been receptive.
“It’s our hope that we can help these workers,” he said. “They certainly can use
some help.”
(Reporting by Julia Love in San Francisco and Moira Warburton in Vancouver;
Editing by Peter Henderson and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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