Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Google workers form new union

- By Matt O’brien

A group of Google engineers and other workers announced Monday that they have formed a union, creating a rare foothold for the labor movement in the tech industry.

About 225 employees at Google and its parent company, Alphabet, are the first dues-paying members of the Alphabet Workers Union. They represent a fraction of Alphabet’s workforce, far short of the threshold needed to get formal recognitio­n as a collective bargaining group in the U.S.

But the new union, which will be affiliated with the larger Communicat­ion Workers of America, says it will serve as a “structure that ensures Google workers can actively push for real changes at the company.”

Its members say they want more of a voice not just on wages, benefits and protection­s against discrimina­tion and harassment but also broader ethical questions about how Google pursues its business ventures.

Google said Monday that it has tried to create a supportive and rewarding workplace but suggested it won’t be negotiatin­g directly with the union.

“Of course, our employees have protected labor rights that we support,” said a statement from Kara Silverstei­n, the company’s director of people operations. “But as we’ve always done, we’ll continue engaging directly with all our employees.”

Unionizati­on campaigns haven’t historical­ly been able to gain much traction among elite tech workers, who earn big salaries and other perks like free food and shuttle rides to work.

But workplace activism at Google and other big tech firms has grown in recent years as employers call for better handling of workplace sexual harassment and discrimina­tion, opposition to Trump administra­tion policies and avoiding harmful uses of the products they’re helping to build and sell. Google software engineer Chewy Shaw, who has been elected to the new union’s executive council, said he and others decided to form the group after seeing colleagues pushed out of the company for their activism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States