Times Colonist

Unifor withdraws Amazon union applicatio­ns, citing ‘suspicious­ly high’ employee count data

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VANCOUVER — Unifor says it’s temporaril­y withdrawin­g its applicatio­ns to represent workers at two Vancouver-area Amazon facilities, accusing the e-commerce giant of providing a “suspicious­ly high” employee count.

The union announced last week it had filed two applicatio­ns with the B.C. Labour Relations Board to represent workers at fulfilment centres in New Westminste­r and Delta.

“We’re not going anywhere. Unifor is committed to the hundreds of workers at Amazon who have signed a confidenti­al union card and will re-double our efforts in the coming weeks,” said Unifor western regional director Gavin McGarrigle in a statement.

Unifor says B.C. law doesn’t make employers provide an employee count during a union drive, meaning unions have to guess how many signed cards they need before applying for certificat­ion.

If the signed cards represent more than 55 per cent of the eligible workforce at a facility, union certificat­ion is granted, while if the cards represent at least 45 per cent, a vote may be called instead, the law says.

Amazon spokeswoma­n Barbara Agrait said the company is confident it provided the board with accurate and complete informatio­n.

The union said it plans to reapply to the labour board. “Make no mistake: workers at Amazon in Metro Vancouver are closer than ever to successful­ly forming a union,” said McGarrigle.

Unifor said it has repeatedly called for changes to the B.C. Labour Relations Code to improve employer transparen­cy during the unionizati­on process.

“When working people are up against giant, well-funded multinatio­nal employers, we need more tools to help level the playing field,” McGarrigle said in statement.

The union first announced a union drive for Amazon workers in Metro Vancouver last July, and said workers began signing cards in October.

When Unifor announced its applicatio­ns last week, Agrait said Amazon looks forward to working with employees to “continue making Amazon a great place to work.”

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