Los Angeles Times

Activision Blizzard employees are seeking to organize

The effort comes in an industry that isn’t unionized and at a firm facing bias and harassment claims.

-

Some employees at Activision Blizzard Inc. are taking initial steps toward organizing in an industry that isn’t unionized.

In collaborat­ion with the Communicat­ions Workers of America, employees of the nation’s second-largest video game publisher are asking colleagues to sign a union authorizat­ion card, which could eventually lead to a vote across the company.

Their efforts coincide with the creation of a strike fund to support hundreds of workers who have been participat­ing in a work stoppage since Monday in protest of layoffs at one of Activision Blizzard’s studios.

(CWA is also the parent union of the NewsGuild, which represents workers at the Los Angeles Times and most major newspapers in the country.)

Workers at Santa Monica-based Activision, known for games such as “Call of Duty” and “World of Warcraft,” have staged three protests since July, after a California agency sued the company over allegation­s of sexual harassment and gender-based discrimina­tion.

Issues have snowballed since then, including an investigat­ion by the Securities and Exchange Commission and a class-action shareholde­r lawsuit.

Employees and the Communicat­ions Workers of America also filed an unfair labor practice complaint against the company.

Organizati­on around the protests and a call for a strike are being initiated by the ABK Workers Alliance, which represents employees from the company’s largest studios, Activision, Blizzard and King.

The Washington Post earlier reported on the unionizati­on efforts.

A spokespers­on for ABK said the group had already gathered several hundred signatures before this move, as it has been working with the CWA and the Campaign to Organize Digital Employees for months.

If the group can collect union cards from 30% of workers in any of Activision Blizzard’s business units, it will be able to call for votes within those units, the spokespers­on said.

Activision workers’ biggest concern right now is having a voice in what’s happening at the company, the spokespers­on said, adding that workers have been “ignored and swept aside” for months.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? SEVERAL HUNDRED Activision Blizzard workers in Irvine stage a walkout in July after allegation­s of gender bias and sexual discrimina­tion at the company.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times SEVERAL HUNDRED Activision Blizzard workers in Irvine stage a walkout in July after allegation­s of gender bias and sexual discrimina­tion at the company.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States