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Amazon Labor Union faces next showdown in upstate New York
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Now, the group is about to make its third attempt. On Wednesday, workers at an Amazon facility near Albany, New York, will begin voting on whether to join the ALU and become the second unionized Amazon warehouse in the United States. Ballot-casting will take place from Wednesday through Monday, with the vote-count scheduled for Oct. 18, according to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).
Workers around the country “at other Amazon facilities and other companies” are watching the vote this week, according to Thomas Kochan, a labor researcher and professor emeritus at the MIT Sloan School of Management’s Institute for Work and Employment Research. He said Amazon’s pushback to the ALU in Staten Island has revealed how the cards are stacked against workers trying to unionize.
“Some will get discouraged because they see how futile and how difficult it is,” Kochan said. “Others are going to get incensed by this.”
In an interview with CNN Business, ALU president Chris Smalls said he has been at the ALB1 facility as often as he can to meet with workers. But he nonetheless appeared to play down the ramifications of the latest vote, suggesting the organizing activity itself is a victory. “The expansion of the ALU is definitely historical by itself,” he said. “I don’t think nothing’s up for stake,”
“Win or lose, I think workers fighting back is just amazing to see,” he said.
On Tuesday, Smalls tweeted news that another Amazon fulfillment center in Moreno Valley, California, submitted a petition for a union election with the ALU. The NLRB confirmed to CNN Business that it had received the petition.
“The win at JFK8 [in Staten Island] is what kicked this all off,” said Samuel Molik, an Amazon worker at the ALB1 facility. Of Smalls, Molik said: “He’s the inspiration to be able to stand up, to be able to bring workers together to demand better conditions, demand a seat at the table.”
Amazon has long maintained that it prefers working with employees directly, versus through a union. In response to request for comment on the ALB1 vote, Paul Flaningan, an Amazon spokesperson, told CNN in a statement: “We remain skeptical that there are a sufficient number of legitimate signatures to support the union’s petition for an election, but the NLRB is moving forward.”
“We’ve always said that we want our employees to have their voices heard, and we hope and expect this process allows for that,” Flaningan added.
Fighting to expand on a ‘surprise’ win
Flaningan said Amazon ramped up hiring to meet demand from Covid-19 “and like other companies in the industry, we saw an increase in recordable injuries during this time from 2020 to 2021 as we trained so many new employees.” He added that the company has invested billions of dollars in new operations safety measures.
Goodall, the lead organizer at ALB1, said she and fellow workers met with representatives from other unions, including the Teamsters and the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), the latter of which has tried and so far failed to unionize an Amazon facility in Alabama. But they quickly found common ground when meeting with the ALU.
“We came in with the understanding that Amazon was going to be a beast and a bully, and they were going to do everything in their power to stop the union,” she said. “When we met with the ALU, we understood that they already beat the billion-dollar bully.”
While Kochan said the ALU’s victory in Staten Island is an inspiration to workers across the country, the pushback the group has received throughout the union drive and after reveals how difficult it is to form a collective bargaining unit under current labor laws, which are mostly enforced by financial penalties.
“I think they have an uphill battle ahead,” Kochan said of the union vote at the ALB1 facility. “Our labor law is completely out-of-date and ineffective in protecting workers’ rights to organize. The law is supposed to provide workers the ability to organize a union free of employer retaliation, but in reality, the penalties are too weak, the enforcement takes too long.”
While retaliating against workers seeking to unionize is illegal, Goodall said she thinks this doesn’t matter to Amazon because it can afford to pay any fines it may face later. “It is absolutely an unfair game that they are creating,” she said.
Goodall hopes unionizing at her facility will lead to a “better quality of life” for workers. “That includes, of course, higher wages,” she said, but emphasized that it’s also about “being respected and appreciated” as workers for a company as powerful and wealthy as Amazon.
Smalls, meanwhile, told CNN that the ALU has been fielding an explosion of interest from other Amazon workers who were similarly inspired by its victory in April. “We got buildings and workers reaching out from all over the country,” Smalls said.
“We want to inspire other people to get involved and take back their power, and it’s been happening with Starbucks, and other industries,” Smalls added. “We’re just happy to be another piece to the labor movement as it continues to grow.”
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