Today’s Cache | Amazon unfulfilled
The Hindu
After Amazon’s Staten Island warehouse workers voted to form a union, the ecommerce giant is mounting a legal battle to overturn the win.
In March, Amazon’s JFK8 warehouse workers went to vote on whether they should form a union or not. Their demands included increased break and lunch time, higher wages, and safer working conditions.
Workers cast 2,654 votes to be represented by Amazon Labour Union (ALU) and 2,131 against, according to the U.S. National Labour Relations Board (NLRB). This gave the pro-union group a win by more than 10 percentage points.
This is a significant win for Chris Smalls, an ex-Amazon worker at the JFK8 facility, who was ousted in 2020. The unit employs over 8,000 workers.
In his campaign, Smalls urged workers to disrupt Amazon’s plan to curtail union activities at the company. He used social media to name and shame union-busters to get his message across a large number of workers.
Amazon wanted to sabotage the labour movement by removing union-related material from its cafeteria. And it pasted its own posters on the walls, urging workers to vote against the formation of a union. But the union backers finally won.
The victory at JFK8 is pivotal as several labour union leaders see Amazon to be an existential threat to labour standards as it is linked to a wide range of industries.
For Amazon, the win is “disappointing”. So, it appealed the ALU win, and has accused the new union of threatening workers unless they voted to organise. An attorney for the labour group called Amazon’s accusation "really absurd".