Chicago Sun-Times

Lawmakers, city labor leaders rally amid Amazon union vote in Alabama

- BY ZAC CLINGENPEE­L, STAFF REPORTER zclingenpe­el@suntimes.com | @ZacharyCli­ngen1

“Union Yes! Union Yes!” Chicago labor leaders and union members chanted Friday outside Amazon’s Chicago office.

The demonstrat­ors, who were joined by U.S. Reps. Jan Schakowsky and Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, gathered to voice support for an ongoing union vote among workers at an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama.

The crowd also urged senators to pass the PRO Act, union legislatio­n that would override right-to-work laws across the country. Schakowsky and Garcia voted in favor of the act when it passed in the House on March 9.

“It is very gratifying to see labor uniting around this struggle,” Garcia said. He added that Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders would be joining the Retail Workers Union in Alabama to encourage union organizing.

Chicago Federation of Labor Secretary-Treasurer Don Villar urged Amazon workers across the nation to unionize.

“We’ve seen the intense pressure that Amazon has placed on these workers,” Villar said. “They’re trying to crush the spirit of the workers.” Villar said the PRO Act would hold large corporatio­ns like Amazon accountabl­e for violating labor laws.

The CFL has an ownership stake in Sun-Times Media.

Unions at the rally included the Internatio­nal Union of Painters and Allied Trades, the Teamsters Joint Council 25, and the United Food and Commercial Workers.

The ongoing mail vote by almost 6,000 workers at the Bessemer warehouse is the largest union push ever at Amazon, one of the world’s wealthiest companies.

The union’s election overlaps with President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress pushing the “PRO Act,” legislatio­n that would overhaul labor law to make organizing easier. The bill represents the most significan­t labor law change since the New Deal era and follows a decades-long slide in union membership. In 1970, almost a third of the U.S. workforce were unionized. In 2020, that number was 10.8%.

Amazon, which has a long record of beating back organizing campaigns, has held mandatory sessions to tell workers a union would command dues when they already get the kind of compensati­on benefits, including health insurance, that unions negotiate.

“We believe we already offer everything the unions are requesting and that we highly value direct communicat­ion with our employees,” said company spokeswoma­n Heather Knox.

Nikeia Peals, a former Chicago Amazon worker, said she was fired from her job and denied any appeal after weather made it difficult to show up for work on time. There is no union for Chicago Amazon workers.

“This is why today I stand in solidarity with the Amazon workers in Bessemer,” Peals said.

 ?? ZAC CLINGENPEE­L/SUN-TIMES ?? U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia speaks Friday in support of union workers.
ZAC CLINGENPEE­L/SUN-TIMES U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia speaks Friday in support of union workers.

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