The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Warehouse workers vote ‘no’

With Amazon ahead in Alabama tally, union pledges to appeal.

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Amazon clinched a victory in a historic election to determine whether workers at its warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, will become the first in the U.S. to join a retail union.

With Amazon already well ahead in the tally Thursday, the union pledged to appeal the result.

In a Friday statement, the RWDSU confirmed it would file complaints with the National Labor Relations Board accusing Amazon of violating employees’ rights in the election and asking the agency to consider overturnin­g the result.

“We won’t rest until workers’ voices are heard fairly under the law,” RWDSU President Stuart Appelbaum said. “When they are, we believe they will be victorious

in this historic and critical fight to unionize the first Amazon warehouse in the United States.”

Citing documents obtained via a Freedom of Informatio­n Act

request, the RWDSU accused the company of “corrupting the election” by pressuring the U.S. Postal Service to install a mailbox on Amazon property in an effort to make employees cast their ballots there rather than someplace more free of company surveillan­ce. Employees have also said Amazon used mandatory group meetings and one-on-one discussion­s to predict harmful consequenc­es if they unionized.

Amazon has said it hosted “informatio­n sessions” so employ

ees could “understand the facts” about unionizati­on, and told the Washington Post the mailbox was a “simple, secure, and completely optional” way to make voting easier. The company declined to comment on Appelbaum’s accusation­s.

The labor board has been tallying the ballots from its office in nearby Birmingham and beaming the process live to the media via Zoom. Approximat­ely 5,800 workers were eligible to vote, and turnout was roughly 55%.

The election officially ended March 29, but Amazon and the union spent several days reviewing sealed individual ballots for such irregulari­ties as problemati­c signatures, ripped envelopes and ineligibil­ity to vote. Contested

ballots — which numbered about 500 and were disputed at a 4-1 ratio by Amazon, according to the union — were to be reviewed later only if there were enough to swing the outcome. (Reuters earlier reported the 500 total.)

The fiercely fought mail-in election lasted seven weeks and attracted national attention. The last unionizati­on vote among Amazon employees failed in 2014, when a group of fewer than 30 machinists in Delaware declined to join the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

A RWDSU victory in Bessemer could eventually force Amazon into contract talks with the union, which is focused on improving working conditions for warehouse employees. The company notes that its $15 an hour starting wage is more than double the federal minimum and that it pays health benefits.

Amazon’s sales and profit soared during the pandemic when millions of shoppers stampeded online. The outbreak put a spotlight on the safety and working conditions of essential workers at supermarke­ts, big-box stores and online fulfillmen­t centers.

In Bessemer, employees overwhelme­d by the working pace and afraid of catching COVID-19 contacted the union, setting in motion a vote that’s already seen as a watershed for Amazon and organized labor. If the RWDSU prevails, the unionizing drive could spread to other Amazon facilities, some of which are already seeing stirrings of labor activism. A loss for the union would be a setback for the U.S. labor movement, which has been in decline for decades.

 ?? AP ?? In Bessemer, Ala., employees overwhelme­d by the working pace and afraid of catching COVID-19 contacted the retail union, setting in motion a vote seen as a watershed for Amazon and organized labor.
AP In Bessemer, Ala., employees overwhelme­d by the working pace and afraid of catching COVID-19 contacted the retail union, setting in motion a vote seen as a watershed for Amazon and organized labor.

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