Springfield News-Sun

Pandemic sparks union activity where it was rare: bookstores

- By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK — Britta Larson, a shift leader at Half Price Books in Roseville, Minnesota, has been with the store for nearly 12 years but only recently thought about whether she wanted to join a union.

“With the pandemic going on, we all were just weary of the constant dismissals we got when we raised concerns about staffing and workload to upper management,” said Larson, noting that the staff had been reduced when the store shut down for a time and was “stretched extremely thin” once it opened again.

“Before the pandemic, I’d say we would have kind of just thought ‘Things aren’t great’ because it was all we had ever known. The pandemic forced us to do some things differentl­y and we learned from that.”

Labor action has surged in many industries over the past two years, including in booksellin­g, a business where unions had been rare. Since 2020, employees have unionized or are attempting to do so everywhere from Printed Matter in New York City to Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle and Bookshop Santa Cruz in California. In Minnesota, workers at four Half Price Books stores have announced plans to affiliate with locals of the United Food and Commercial Workers union.

“I think COVID-19 was a rude awakening for bookstore workers, and really anyone who works with the public,” says Owen Hill, a buyer at Moe’s Books in Berkeley, California, which unionized earlier this year. “We were given no say regarding safe working conditions, even though we were risking our health by showing up for work. We had to organize in order to be a part of the conversati­on around worker safety.”

The publishing world has not a magnet for those seeking to get rich. Booksellin­g, especially independen­t booksellin­g, has a long affinity with liberal politics and a long sense of mission that transcends the desire to make a profit. Larson told The Associated Press that she and fellow Half Price staffers would rather unionize than quit because of their “enjoyment of books and love of our jobs as bookseller­s.”

But when workers organize, even the most progressiv­e-minded owners might object.

Moe’s Books was co-founded in 1959 by the cigar-smoking Moe Moskowitz, a longtime activist and agitator known in part for letting his store serve as a refuge for antiwar protesters in the 1960s. Moe’s is now run by his daughter, Doris Moskowitz, who has spoken of the store’s egalitaria­n atmosphere and tradition of valuing dissent and social consciousn­ess.

But when the staff announced in March that it was affiliatin­g with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union, Moskowitz acknowledg­ed mixed feelings, telling the digital news site Berkeleysi­de that the “decision to unionize, which I deeply respect from a political perspectiv­e, has left me very sad and confused.” In September, workers picketed the store and alleged unfair labor practices (denied by Moskowitz), though Hill says the situation has since improved.

“After lots of ups and downs, and major disagreeme­nts, the parties have come together,” Hill said. “We’re zeroing in on a contract, and both sides are negotiatin­g in good faith. I expect that we will be voting on a new contract just after Thanksgivi­ng (fingers crossed). I think management realized that both sides are committed to keeping the store open — we’re such an important part of the community.”

In a recent email to the AP, Moskowitz wrote: “Bookseller­s all over the country are participat­ing in an important conversati­on. We are proud to be part of that, and we are especially proud of the progress made toward our first labor contract.”

Half Price Books also has its roots in the anti-establishm­ent. It was co-founded in 1972 by Ken Gjemre, a former executive at the Zale Corporatio­n who in middle age wanted to make a living more in line with his ideals as a pacifist, environmen­talist and civil libertaria­n. A 2003 article in PR Week, published a year after Gjemre’s death, described Half Price as “forgiving and generous to its unconventi­onal workforce, which is peppered with aging hippies and liberal-arts majors.”

Half Price has grown from a former laundromat in Dallas to more than 100 locations around the country. In response to a request for comment on the current labor action in Minnesota, Half Price Books executive vice president and chief strategy officer Kathy Doyle Thomas said in a statement: “Half Price Books strives to provide competitiv­e benefits and good working conditions for all 1,900 employees across the country. We understand there is a movement to organize workers, and we respect the right of employees to vote. We are committed to following all procedures required by law.”

The company sent a different message to employees. In a statement posted for a time in some of the Minnesota stores, workers were told that Half Price would oppose unionizati­on “with every legal means available to us.” Forming a union, the company added, was “a very serious decision, one that could affect your working future, and the future of those that depend on you. We believe that, once you get all the facts about the union, you will decide that our future will be better without a union.”

Some owners say they are at peace with unions despite tensions. When staff at the Mcnally Jackson stores in New York City organized in 2019, owner Sarah Mcnally acknowledg­ed that the action was initially a shock that “offended” her “indie spirit.” But she now says the union has brought clarity and structure to everything from salaries to job descriptio­ns, and overall made management of the store more efficient.

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