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Amazon Warehouse Workers Vote Against Forming Union in Alabama
Both sides have the right to challenge the eligibility of individual ballots and the campaign process, but a ballot count official on a Zoom call of the proceeding announced that there were not enough challenged votes to affect the results.
Amazon shares rose 1.8 percent Friday, adding to earlier gains.
Union leaders had hoped the election outside Birmingham would spark a new era of worker activism. Appealing to concerns that Amazon was monitoring their every move and associating themselves with the Black Lives Matter movement, organisers told the largely Black workforce a union could get more from the company controlled by the world’s richest man.
The defeat joins high-profile failures to start unions at auto and plane factories in the US South, and illustrates the challenges of organising a major company. Amazon required workers to attend meetings, for instance.
Still, some employees described relatively good conditions and pay. Amazon offers at least $15.30 (roughly Rs. 1,100) an hour, more than twice the federal minimum wage, which applies in Alabama.
““Amazon is not perfect, there are flaws, but we are committed to correcting those flaws and management has been, thus far, on board with us,” William Stokes, an Amazon worker at the Bessemer warehouse said at a panel organised by his employer.
The vote was watched across the United States, with President Joe Biden defending workers’ right to form unions during the process.
The US South has been particularly anti-union. Nearly all the states in the area, including Alabama, passed so-called right-to-work laws that curtail unions’ abilities to mandate dues and other measures.
What’s next?
The Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), which is trying to organise the Amazon employees, said it is filing objections, charging that Amazon interfered with the right of employees to vote.
“People should not presume that the results of this vote are in any way a validation of Amazon’s working conditions and the way it treats its employees, quite the contrary. The results demonstrate the powerful impact of employee intimidation and interference,” Stuart Appelbaum, RWDSU President, told a news conference after counting ended.
“”We contend that they broke the law repeatedly in their no-holds-barred effort to stop workers from forming a union.”
The dispute likely will play out before the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and then in federal appeals court.
Union membership has been declining steadily, falling to 11 percent of the eligible workforce in 2020 from 20 percent in 1983, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Amazon, the second-largest private employer in America, for decades has discouraged attempts among its more than 800,000 US employees to organise, showing managers how to identify union activity, raising wages and warning that union dues would cut into pay, according to a prior training video, public statements and the company’s union election website.
The union objection will focus in part on what it described as Amazon pressuring the US Postal Service to install a mail box and then pressuring employees to bring their ballots to work and use the mailbox.
Out of 5,867 workers eligible to cast ballots, 3,041 voted. NLRB officials said 505 ballots were contested and 76 were voided.
Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO president, who spoke at the union’s press conference, said, “This is not the outcome any of us hoped for… but make no mistake, you won the moment that you decided to take on Amazon.”