Amazon.com Inc.’s fierce resistance to unionization,
skepticism among workers that organizing could get them a better deal and
decisions on election parameters all contributed to the apparently lopsided
defeat of a labor drive at the company’s warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, people
close to the events said.
اضافة اعلان
A vote by workers on whether to unionize failed on Friday by
a more than 2-to-1 margin in a major win for the world’s largest online
retailer. The union plans to challenge the results based on Amazon’s conduct
during the election.
Union leaders had hoped the campaign just outside Birmingham
would create Amazon’s first organized workplace in the country and spark a new
era of worker activism. Instead, it has illustrated the continued challenges
facing the labor movement.
Officials at the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store
Union (RWDSU) argued that Amazon’s unfair tactics were to blame in an election
where only just over half of eligible workers cast ballots.
In a statement, the RWDSU said, “The results of the election
should be set aside because conduct by the employer created an atmosphere of
confusion, coercion, and/or fear of reprisals and thus interfered with the
employees’ freedom of choice.”
Amazon in a blog post denied the outcome resulted from
intimidation of its employees.
“We’ve always worked hard to listen to them, take their
feedback, make continuous improvements, and invest heavily to offer great pay
and benefits in a safe and inclusive workplace,” it said.
The e-commerce company campaigned for weeks, plastering the
warehouse and even a bathroom stall with anti-union notices, stopping work for
mandatory employee meetings on the election, and bombarding staff with text
messages criticizing the RWDSU.
In one of the messages seen by Reuters, warehouse leadership
warned that collective bargaining could result in workers losing benefits —
something the union has disputed. “Everything is on the table,” the text
declared.
And in one of the mandatory meetings, presentations asserted
union leaders used membership dues for improper purposes such as expensive cars
and vacations, a former employee at the company’s warehouse told Reuters. The
union did not immediately comment on the claim.
But some warehouse workers pointed to shortcomings in the
union drive. Many younger workers, lacking experience with unions and knowledge
of labor history, were never persuaded of the benefits of organizing, these
people said. Some cited Amazon’s above-average wages, and better working
conditions overall than other local employers.
‘Good paying job’
Denean Plott, 56, who picked customer orders at the
warehouse until March and voted for the union, said, “It is a good paying job.
They do have wonderful benefits.” And young employees “don’t feel they need a
union because they’re not putting health and safety at risk as much.”
Some cited fear that voting for a union would mean a
constant battle with management they would rather avoid.
A group of warehouse dock employees who do heavy lifting
were against the unionization effort and appreciated Amazon’s current benefits,
which include receiving health insurance upon hiring, according to one of the
former fulfillment center employees. These dock workers also held skeptical
views of unions generally, associating them with corruption, the former
employee said.
Union leaders had hoped the election would fuel a revival of
worker activism, at a time when only 6.3 percent of private sector workers
belonged to unions in 2020, according to US Labor Department statistics.
Private sector union membership declined by 428,000 in 2020 from the year
before.
High-profile union organizing drives have failed at
factories in the South run by Nissan Motor Co. and Volkswagen AG, and aircraft
maker Boeing Co. In each of those cases, as at Amazon, union leaders bet that
workers unhappy with wages and working conditions would jump at the chance to
have a union go toe-to-toe with management. In each case, the unions were
wrong.
The retail workers’ union also struggled in Bessemer with
some of the challenges that carmakers previously hurled at the auto workers’
union (UAW). Car company officials made much of the conviction of several UAW
leaders on charges of embezzling union funds, for instance. William Stokes, a process
assistant at the Amazon warehouse who voted no, told journalists he had
concerns about union conduct.
Other union decisions may have backfired. In December,
Amazon lawyers filed lengthy exhibits with regulators delineating thousands of
additional individual employees at the Bessemer warehouse they said should be
allowed to vote, beyond the 1,500 the union originally proposed. The union
later accepted sending ballots to more than 5,800 workers.
Companies often try to pack such proposed bargaining units
with additional workers to dilute union support, making it harder to achieve a
majority, according to labor experts including former US National Labor
Relations Board (NLRB) members.
Harry Johnson, a Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP partner
representing Amazon, said Amazon simply wanted “to make sure that everybody
essentially doing the same job at the fulfillment center would have a chance to
vote.” He added that, generally, additional voters can include temporary
workers not necessarily more inclined to side with the company.
Stuart Appelbaum, the RWDSU’s president, said in an
interview, “The bargaining unit size was larger than we thought appropriate,
but the alternative was to go through several years of litigation if we didn’t
accept it, prior to the vote.”
He said that despite Friday’s result, the Bessemer campaign
had created momentum. “We have breathed life into the labor movement” and
“opened the door to Amazon organizing.”
Defeating the union
The union’s push for a mail-in vote, rather than the socially
distanced in-person election that Amazon proposed, was successful. But the NLRB
had set a March 29 deadline for submitting ballots, several weeks after they
were mailed. That gave Amazon nearly two additional months to bombard workers
with text messages and other communications urging them to vote against
unionization.
“Time is the weapon employers use to defeat the union,” said
Mark Pearce, a Democratic NLRB chair during the Obama administration.
Concerns about US Postal Service operations, prominent leading
up to the November 2020 US presidential election, likely contributed to
allowing weeks between the mailing of ballots and the deadline for returning
them, Pearce said. Regardless, the additional time likely conferred some
benefit to Amazon, he added.
The union did garner support from US lawmakers and President
Joe Biden as the vote drew closer. Democratic Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont
and rapper Killer Mike held rallies in Bessemer supporting the union drive.
But some labor advocates including US Representative Andy
Levin of Michigan said the power imbalance between the workers and the company
was just too much to overcome.
“The pressure a company like Amazon builds up against you
can feel like a 1,000lb weight on your chest,” Levin wrote on Twitter. “The
company’s goal is to create so much pressure, anxiety and fear — and to make
workers feel that pressure will never go away as long as the union is around.”
The setup of Amazon’s warehouse itself may have tipped the
vote in the retailer’s favor. The size of many football fields, it was not a
space for social gathering, let alone union organizing discussion.
The buzz of machines obscured people’s voices, desks were
spread out, social-distancing became the norm due to COVID-19, and cell phone
use while on the clock was not allowed, current and former workers told
Reuters.
Plott, one of the former Amazon employees, said, “You might
be in that area for hours and not see a soul.”