New York Post

‘Whole’y crusade to bar BLM masks

- Thomas Barrabi

Whole Foods has claimed that it has the right to ban employees from wearing “Black Lives Matter” masks, arguing that a federal labor board’s attempts to force the company to allow the message violate the First Amendment.

The Amazon-owned grocery chain denied any wrongdoing in response to a National Labor Relations Board complaint that it had infringed on federal law by enforcing a workplace dress code barring the apparel.

In the Dec. 17 legal filing, Whole Foods accused NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo of an effort to “compel” speech in violation of the First Amendment.

The grocery chain also accused Abruzzo of “unlawfully infringing upon and/or diluting WFM’s protected trademarks” through her legal action by forcing Whole Foods to allow “political message in conjunctio­n with” its uniforms, Bloomberg reported.

In the filing, Whole Foods argued that the protection­s offered by the National Labor Relations Act do not extend to “political and/or social justice speech.”

The Amazon subsidiary also claimed that “Black Lives Matter” apparel and related slogans “are not objectivel­y understood to relate to workplace issues or improving working conditions at WFM’s retail grocery stores.”

A Whole Foods spokespers­on told The Post the dress code bans any visible slogans or logos that aren’t company-related and does not single out the Black Lives Matter movement.

“Our dress code policy is designed to ensure we are giving Team Members a workplace and customers a shopping experience focused entirely on excellent service and high-quality food,” a Whole Foods spokespers­on said in a statement.

“We do not believe we should compromise that experience by introducin­g any messages on uniforms, regardless of the content, that shift the focus away from our mission.”

The NLRB did not respond to The Post’s request for comment on the filing.

The dispute is expected to proceed to trial in March.

Whole Foods’ filing came weeks after NLRB prosecutor­s filed a formal complaint against the company over its dress-code policy.

 ?? ?? Whole Foods, a subsidiary of Amazon, founded by Jeff Bezos (inset), is fighting the National Labor Relations Board’s complaint that the company infringed on federal law by enforcing a dress code that forbids employees from wearing Black Lives Matter masks.
Whole Foods, a subsidiary of Amazon, founded by Jeff Bezos (inset), is fighting the National Labor Relations Board’s complaint that the company infringed on federal law by enforcing a dress code that forbids employees from wearing Black Lives Matter masks.
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