Random Lengths News

Gen Z Moves to Unionize

Amazon, Starbucks have been successful at keeping unions at bay. Labor leaders Chris Smalls and Tyler Keeling change the equation

- By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

There’s no doubt that the labor leaders who are succeeding in organizing in places where labor has struggled to gain a foothold in recent decades (i.e. Starbucks and Amazon) are different from legacy labor unions. They aren’t like Richard Trumkas, a third-generation labor leader, whose political pedigree included United Mine Workers of America president John L. Lewis. Or ILWU icon, Harry Bridges, who drew his early inspiratio­n from his time as a merchant seaman, and his uncle Renton Bridges, a Labor Party activist and shipmate who was a member of the Wobblies and participat­ed in the 1917 general strike in Australia. Or even Dave Arian, past president of the ILWU Local 13 and later president of the ILWU Internatio­nal. Arian is similar to Trumka in that his labor pedigree included Harry Bridges.

Recently, Random Lengths News had the opportunit­y to interview the lynchpin of this past year’s most surprising labor victories, which include the Amazon Labor Union’s president Chris Smalls and Starbucks Lakewood store union organizer Tyler Keeling. What is telling about both of these 1

young men is that neither of them grew up in a particular­ly union family nor did they learn the history of union struggles from school. What they are doing is a basic Do It Yourself struggle brought on by the necessity of the times.

Amazon v. Chris Smalls

Chris Smalls grew up in a single-parent household with his brother in Hackensack, New Jersey. The plight of the working masses in a capitalist society was far from his mind as he spent his time playing basketball and football, writing rap songs with his friends, and dreaming of becoming a hip-hop artist. Smalls’ mother worked as an administra­tor at a hospital, and according to a report in a Time magazine article, she had once been part of SEIU 1199. He told Time that the union made so little difference in their lives that she “forgot that she was even a part of the rank-and-file at one point.”

He added that she hadn’t remembered organizing for a contract. “A co-worker reminded her.”

Smalls gave hip-hop a shot as a career, but when his ex-wife got pregnant with twins, he set aside his music dreams in favor of a more stable income. After stints at Amazon facilities in New Jersey and Connecticu­t, Smalls was hired at JFK8 in 2018. He worked as a process assistant, overseeing customer items being picked to be packed and shipped. Smalls said he was happy working for Amazon and was hungry to move up in the company.

He said the career route from a process assistant to a salaried manager took two years. Smalls recounted applying to become a manager more than 50 times.

“Unfortunat­ely, it took me four and a half years to realize that two interviews [out of those 50 applicatio­ns] were unacceptab­le,” he said.

“Especially when I opened up three buildings and trained hundreds of their employees,” Smalls said. “There’s no way that I shouldn’t been a manager from the qualificat­ions that I had, so it was easy for me to fight and stand up when the time came.”

Keeling and the Coffee Giant

Keeling grew up in the town of Apple Valley about two hours northeast of Los Angeles. For context, he grew up in deep poverty. Apple Valley is a place that the rest of California has forgotten about with few jobs and no industries. Many left towns like Apple Valley during the Great Depression in search of jobs in the big cities and never came back, a few others remained.

Historical­ly it had been a thoroughfa­re for Indigenous peoples such as the Shoshonean, Paiute, Vanyume, Chemehuevi, Serrano and later the Mojave peoples who were attracted to the water and vegetation around the Mojave River. Spanish missionari­es arrived and set up missions to evangelize the Indigenous people, while cowboys and Mormons rustled cattle or searched for a place they could be left alone to practice their faith.

Keeling said work wasn’t really a thing in his family because there was no viable opportunit­y for a consistent income. His dad worked as an independen­t laborer shoeing horses and his mom worked whatever minimum wage jobs she could get for however long she could keep them.

“There was not some rich deep history connected to labor. I come from a very underserve­d area, very deep in poverty. I come from a place where you live and die,” Keeling said. “I got out because I was lucky I had a couch to crash on after I graduated high school. So I got out of town as fast as I could.

“But that was not conducive to a successful life in a lot of ways. I, very much, am somebody who got lucky to get out and then ended up where

I am now organizing stores and stuff like that,” Keeling said.

Through Starbucks, Keeling said he went back to school for software engineerin­g because that’s a job where he can make a decent income.

“I’m a Starbucks worker. I’m working for poverty wages. I don’t have some sort of social safety net,” Keeling said. “My mom’s dead and my dad’s out of my life and my grandparen­ts are gone. Like, I have no social safety net whatsoever.”

Keeling has worked at Starbucks since 2016 and he went back to school in a last-ditch effort to find a rope out of poverty.

“It’s been hell. This is the first time ... organizing my store with my co-workers, with my community, with the people I love that I see every day ... That was my first real step out of poverty because I’m fighting for a union job now.”

The Challenge for Gen Z

The nature of work is fundamenta­lly different from generation­s past. But if there’s a moment in labor history to which today is akin, it would be the proto-labor movement that sprung up shortly after the Industrial revolution in the 19th century.

Despite technologi­cal advances and corporatio­ns tinkering with work culture to eliminate the need for unions, the labor relationsh­ips and working conditions have changed little. The tinkering is noticeable in the terms these corporatio­ns use to refer to their workers. Walmart calls them “associates.” Starbucks calls them “partners.” Amazon refers to them as “team members.” And they do it all to obscure the dividing line between employer and employee.

These corporatio­ns have formed work cultures around core principles that are designed to make everyone feel they have an equal stake in the success of the corporatio­n, but they don’t. More importantl­y, corporatio­ns hope to make employees feel as if they are able to expect some equitable compensati­on or reward for their contributi­on, whether it’s physical or intellectu­al or both. The end game, of course, is the corporatio­n hopes to anticipate the worker’s every need and desire so that a worker would not need to seek a union to bargain on their behalf. And for a while, the Walmarts, the Amazons, and the Starbucks of the world have been successful. Until now.

In a twist of fate, workers are using the comhave

 ?? Illustrati­on by Noel Tinsman-Kongshaug ?? Tyler Keeling, a leader in unionizing Stabrucks, and Chris Smalls, a leader in unionizing Amazon.
Illustrati­on by Noel Tinsman-Kongshaug Tyler Keeling, a leader in unionizing Stabrucks, and Chris Smalls, a leader in unionizing Amazon.
 ?? Photo courtesy of the White House. ?? Chris Smalls meets with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in July, shortly after speaking to Congress about unionizing Amazon.
Photo courtesy of the White House. Chris Smalls meets with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in July, shortly after speaking to Congress about unionizing Amazon.

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