Boston Herald

Amazon works to quash NYC union win

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Amazon is seeking to overturn the historic union victory at one of its New York City warehouses, arguing in a legal filing Friday that union organizers and the National Labor Relations Board acted in a way that tainted the results. It now wants to redo the election.

The e-commerce giant listed 25 objections in the filing obtained by The Associated Press, accusing organizers with the nascent Amazon Labor Union of intimidati­ng workers to vote for the union, a claim an attorney representi­ng the group has called “patently absurd.”

“The employees have spoken,” Eric Milner, the attorney, said in a statement Thursday after Amazon’s initial planned objections were made public in another legal filing.

“Amazon is choosing to ignore that, and instead engage in stalling tactics to avoid the inevitable — coming to the bargaining table and negotiatin­g for a contract” on behalf of the workers, he said.

Warehouse workers in Staten Island cast 2,654 votes — or about 55% — in favor of a union, giving the fledgling group enough support to pull off a victory last Friday.

In one objection, Amazon said organizers “intentiona­lly created hostile confrontat­ions in front of eligible voters,” by interrupti­ng the mandatory meetings the company held to persuade its employees to reject the union drive. In a filing released earlier this month, the company disclosed it spent about $4.2 million last year on labor consultant­s.

In another objection, Amazon targeted organizers’ distributi­on of cannabis to workers, saying the labor board “cannot condone such a practice as a legitimate method of obtaining support for a labor organizati­on.” New York legalized the recreation­al use of marijuana last year for those over 21. Milner, the attorney representi­ng the union, said Amazon is grasping at straws.

Distributi­ng cannabis “is no different than distributi­ng free t-shirts and it certainly did not act to interfere with the election,” he said.

The retailer had initially signaled it planned to challenge the election results because of a lawsuit the NLRB filed in March, in which the board sought to force Amazon to reinstate a fired employee who was involved in the union drive.

Amazon pointed to the lawsuit in one of its objections filed Friday, saying the regional NLRB office that brought the suit “failed to protect the integrity and neutrality of its procedures,” and had created an impression of support for the union by seeking reinstatem­ent for the former employee, Gerald Bryson.

“Based on the evidence we’ve seen so far, as set out in our objections, we believe that the actions of the NLRB and the ALU improperly suppressed and influenced the vote, and we think the election should be conducted again so that a fair and broadly representa­tive vote can be had,” Kelly Nantel, an Amazon spokespers­on, said in a statement Friday.

Bryson was fired in the early days of the pandemic after leading a protest calling for the company to do more to protect workers against COVID-19. While off the job during the protest, Bryson got into a dispute with another worker and was later fired for violating Amazon’s vulgar-language policy, according to his attorney Frank Kearl.

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 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? PRIMED FOR A FIGHT: People arrive at work at the Amazon distributi­on center on Staten Island, which voted to unionize on April 1 — a vote Amazon objects to. Below, workers celebrate the vote to form a union.
AP FILE PHOTOS PRIMED FOR A FIGHT: People arrive at work at the Amazon distributi­on center on Staten Island, which voted to unionize on April 1 — a vote Amazon objects to. Below, workers celebrate the vote to form a union.

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