Factbox-Recent U.S. union wins at Amazon, Starbucks and more
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[April 02, 2022] By
Hilary Russ
(Reuters) -The COVID-19 pandemic, labor
shortage, Black Lives Matter movement and other social and economic
forces have contributed to an uptick in high-profile union organizing
across the United States including a victory on Friday at an Amazon.com
Inc warehouse in New York City.
Among U.S. wage and salary workers last year, 10.3% were in a union -
half of the 1983 percentage - and union membership in the private sector
including Amazon and Starbucks Corp was just 6.1% last year. There were
149 union elections in January and February of this year, compared to
103 in the same two months last year.
Here is a look at some notable recent union victories.
AMAZON
Workers at an Amazon.com facility in New York City's Staten Island on
Friday voted in favor of forming a union, making it the online
retailer's first U.S. facility to organize.
The victory by a new, independent union at the No. 2 U.S. private
employer adds to recent successes by labor activists pushing into new
industries. Not all labor drives are successful, including the
preliminary result of a ballot count at Amazon warehouse workers in
Alabama.
STARBUCKS
Employees at nine U.S. Starbucks locations have voted in recent months
to join Workers United, an affiliate of the Service Employees
International Union. The now-unionized cafes include five in Buffalo,
New York; two in Mesa, Arizona; and one each in Seattle and Knoxville,
Tennessee.
At least 170 others had petitioned for elections as of Friday. Ballot
counts are scheduled for more than a dozen other cafes in the next
couple weeks.
Starbucks beat back the union in one Buffalo store.
NEW YORK TIMES
About 600 designers, software engineers, data analysts and other tech
employees at the New York Times voted in March to join the NewsGuild of
New York, which has won a number of other elections in the past two
years.
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A placard is seen as Amazon Labour Union (ALU) members celebrate
official victory after hearing results regarding the vote to
unionize, outside the NLRB offices in Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.,
April 1, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The March results created the largest union of tech workers in the United States
with bargaining rights. The NewsGuild also represents Reuters' U.S. journalists.
GOOGLE FIBER
Contractors for the high-speed internet provider Google Fiber, part of Alphabet
Inc, in Kansas City, Missouri voted last week to unionize. While only 10 workers
are involved, it was the first group of Alphabet Workers Union (AWU) with
bargaining rights.
AWU said it has 800 members since launching just over a year ago, but those
members do not have the right to collectively bargain.
CANNABIS INDUSTRY
In June, the United Food and Commercial Workers reached agreements with cannabis
lab Sonoma Lab Works and cannabis manufacturer CannaCraft Manufacturing to
unionize their workers in California.
As the number of cannabis growers and dispensaries have grown, so too have union
drives in the industry. UFCW said it is now the largest cannabis workers union
in the United States with more than 10,000 members.
SILICON VALLEY
In 2020, the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter's employees voted to join a
union, the first big tech company to do so. Workers at location data startup
Mapbox in August lost their bid to form a union.
(Compiled by Hilary Russ in New York; Editing by Peter Henderson, Nick Zieminski
and Will Dunham)
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