The Commercial Appeal

NY Amazon workers OK union

The successful effort is a first for the company

- Haleluya Hadero and Anne D’innocenzio

NEW YORK – Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York, voted to unionize on Friday, marking the first successful U.S. organizing effort in the retail giant’s history and handing an unexpected win to a nascent group that fueled the union drive.

Warehouse workers cast 2,654 votes – or about 55% – in favor of a union, giving the fledgling Amazon Labor Union enough support to pull off a victory. According to the National Labor Relations Board, which is overseeing the process, 2,131 workers – or 45% – rejected the union bid.

The 67 ballots that were challenged by either Amazon or the ALU were not enough to sway the outcome. Federal labor officials said the results of the count won’t be verified until they process any objections – due by April 8 – that both parties may file.

The victory was an uphill battle for the independen­t group, made up of former and current workers who lacked official backing from an establishe­d union and were out-gunned by the deep-pocketed retail giant. Despite obstacles, organizers believed their grassroots approach was more relatable to workers and could help them overcome where establishe­d unions have failed in the past. They were right.

Chris Smalls, a fired Amazon employee who has been leading the ALU in its fight on Staten Island, bounded out the NLRB building in Brooklyn on Friday with other union organizers, pumping their fists and jumping, chanting “ALU.” They uncorked a bottle of champagne, and Smalls hailed the victory as a call to arms for other Amazon workers across the sprawling company.

“I hope that everybody’s paying attention now because a lot of people doubted us,” he said.

Smalls hopes the success in New

York will embolden workers at other facilities to launch their own organizing campaigns. Even his group will soon shift their attention to a neighborin­g Amazon warehouse on Staten Island, where a separate union election is scheduled to be held in late April. Organizers believe Friday’s win is going to make it easier for them to win there, too.

Amazon posted a statement on its company website Friday saying that it was evaluating its options following the election, and signaled it might not accept the results.

“We’re disappoint­ed with the outcome of the election in Staten Island because we believe having a direct relationsh­ip with the company is best for our employees,” the post said. “We’re evaluating our options, including filing objections based on the inappropri­ate and undue influence by the NLRB that we and others (including the National Retail Federation and U.S. Chamber of Commerce) witnessed in this election.”

Amazon has long argued that workers don’t need a union because the company already provides good wages as well as benefits such as health care, 401(k) plans and a prepaid college tuition program to help grow workers’ careers.

The successful union effort on Staten Island stood in contrast to the one

launched in Bessemer, Alabama by the more establishe­d Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. Workers at the warehouse there appear to have rejected a union bid but outstandin­g challenged ballots could change the outcome. The votes were 993-to-875 against the union. A hearing to review 416 challenged ballots is expected to begin in the next few days.

The union campaigns come at a time of widespread labor unrest at many corporatio­ns. Workers at more than 140 Starbucks locations around the country, for instance, have requested union elections and several of them have already been successful.

But Amazon has long been considered a top prize for the labor movement given the company’s massive size and impact.

“We are clearly in different moment after two years of the pandemic. Something has changed in the labor landscape,” said John Logan, director of labor and employment studies at San Francisco State University. “It is a potential tipping point. We knew that unions were having a moment, but this is much bigger. There is no bigger prize than organizing Amazon.”

Logan said he didn’t believe either union – the national or the independen­t labor group – would stand a chance with

Amazon but he’s even more shocked that a small union would be victorious given its limited resources. The group had also filed for a union election after getting support from about 30% of the facility’s workforce, a much lower percentage than what unions usually seek.

Logan believes they won in part because Amazon workers saw the organizers as authentic. And it helped that they were in a labor-friendly state, he said, adding the grassroots union’s win defies traditiona­l thinking that only national unions can take on big companies.

But the ALU might still have a fight ahead of it, according to Erin Hatton, a sociology professor at the University of Buffalo in New York.

“Getting Amazon to the bargaining table will be another feat all together,” Hatton said. “Oftentimes the union will fizzle out because the company doesn’t come to the bargaining table in good faith as they’re obliged to do.”

Amazon has pushed back hard in the lead-up to both elections in Staten Island and Bessemer. The retail giant held mandatory meetings, where workers were told unions are a bad idea. The company also launched an anti-union website targeting workers and placed English and Spanish posters across the Staten Island facility urging them to reject the union.

In Bessemer, Amazon has made some changes to but still kept a controvers­ial U.S. Postal Service mailbox that was key in the NLRB’S decision to invalidate last year’s vote.

Both labor fights faced unique challenges.

Alabama, for instance, is a right-towork state that prohibits a company and a union from signing a contract that requires workers to pay dues to the union that represents them.

The union landscape in Alabama is also starkly different from New York. Last year, union members accounted for 22.2% of wage and salary workers in New York, ranked only behind Hawaii, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s more than double the national average of 10.3%. In Alabama, it’s 5.9%.

 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE/AP ?? Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York, voted to unionize Friday, with warehouse workers casting 2,654 votes in favor of a union.
CRAIG RUTTLE/AP Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York, voted to unionize Friday, with warehouse workers casting 2,654 votes in favor of a union.

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