Amazon calls for election re-run after workers voted for first U.S.
union
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[April 09, 2022] NEW
YORK (Reuters) -Amazon.com Inc on Friday called for an election re-run
after workers at a New York City warehouse voted to create the company's
first U.S. union, saying that the U.S. labor board and worker-organizers
suppressed turnout.
The Amazon Labor Union (ALU) rejected the allegations made by the online
retailer that is the second-largest U.S. private employer.
Amazon made its demand a week after the landmark victory for organized
labor, which for years has sought to offer protections to workers at the
company. Some 55% of employees who voted from Amazon's JFK8 warehouse in
Staten Island opted to join the ALU, which has argued for higher pay and
job security. Turnout was about 58%.
Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said in a statement: "We want our
employees to have their voices heard, and in this case, that didn't
happen - fewer than a third of the employees at the site voted for the
union."
Amazon also accused the ALU of intimidating workers and distributing
marijuana to gain votes in its favor, according to a company filing on
Friday.
Derrick Palmer, vice president of the ALU, said Amazon is trying to
"demean our character and undermine our efforts."
The U.S. National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) now must process Amazon's
objections before certifying the election result. The timing for this
was not immediately clear.
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Amazon Labour Union (ALU) organiser Christian Smalls reacts as 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
In its filing, Amazon said the NLRB improperly helped the ALU gain standing to
hold an election and created the impression that it supported the union. Amazon
also accused the NLRB of hampering turnout through mismanagement in the polling
area and by allowing camera crews on site that scared away voters.
An NLRB spokesperson declined to comment on these objections but the board has
said previously that it is independent and that its enforcement actions against
Amazon have been consistent with its congressional mandate.
The ALU pushed back against Amazon's claims, saying the company did not contest
low turnout in a prior union election in Alabama in which workers voted against
organizing. The ALU said it was Amazon that had intimidated workers, and the
union has filed dozens of unfair labor practice charges against the company.
(Reporting by Doyinsola Oladipo in New York and Jeffrey Dastin in Palo Alto,
California; Editing by Leslie Adler and Will Dunham)
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