Workers at Amazon make another attempt to unionize

on

The second Jennifer Bates walks away from her post at the Amazon warehouse where she works, the clock starts ticking.

She has precisely 30 minutes to get to the cafeteria and back for her lunch break. That means traversing a warehouse the size of 14 football fields, which eats up precious time. She avoids bringing food from home because warming it up in the microwave would cost her even more minutes. Instead, she opts for $4 cold sandwiches from the vending machine and hurries back to her post.

If she makes it, she’s lucky. If she doesn’t, Amazon could cut her pay, or worse, fire her.

It’s that kind of pressure that has led some Amazon workers to organize the biggest unionization push at the company since it was founded in 1995. And it’s happening in the unlikeliest of places: Bessemer, Alabama, a state with laws that don’t favor unions.

The stakes are high. If organizers succeed in Bessemer, it could set off a chain reaction across Amazon’s operations nationwide, with thousands more workers rising up and demanding better working conditions. But they face an uphill battle against the second-largest employer in the country with a history of crushing unionizing efforts at its warehouses and its Whole Foods grocery stores.

Attempts by Amazon to delay the vote in Bessemer have failed. So too have the company’s efforts to require in-person voting, which organizers argue would be unsafe during the pandemic. Mail-in voting started this week and will go on until the end of March. A majority of the 6,000 employees have to vote “yes” in order to unionize.

AMAZON NOT FAVORING UNIONIZATION

Amazon, whose profits and revenues have skyrocketed during the pandemic, has campaigned hard to convince workers that a union will only suck money from their paycheck with little benefit. Spokeswoman Rachael Lighty said the company already offers them what unions want: benefits, career growth and pay that starts at $15 an hour. She added that the organizers don’t represent the majority of Amazon employees’ views.

Bates makes $15.30 an hour unpacking boxes of deodorant, clothing and countless other items that are eventually shipped to Amazon shoppers. The job, which the 48-year-old started in May, has her on her feet for most of her 10-hour shifts. Besides lunch, Bates said trips to the bathroom are also closely monitored, as is getting a drink of water or fetching a fresh pair of work gloves. Amazon denies that, saying it offers two 30-minute breaks during each shift and extra time to use the bathroom or get water.

Fed up, Bates and a group of workers reached out to the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union last summer. She hopes the union, which also represents poultry plant workers in Alabama, will mandate more breaks, prevent Amazon from firing workers for mundane reasons and push for higher pay.

“They will be a voice when we don’t have one,” Bates said.

But according to Sylvia Allegretto, an economist and co-chair of the Center on Wage and Employment Dynamics at the University of California, Berkeley, “history tells us not to be optimistic.”

The last time Amazon workers voted on whether they wanted to unionize was in 2014, and it was a much smaller group: 30 employees at a Amazon warehouse in Delaware who ultimately turned it down. Amazon currently employs nearly 1.3 million people worldwide.

Also working against the unionizing effort is that it’s happening in Republican-controlled Alabama, which generally isn’t friendly to organized labor. Alabama is one of 27 “right-to-work states” where workers don’t have to pay dues to unions that represent them. In fact, the state is home to the only Mercedes-Benz plant in the world that isn’t unionized.

That the union push at the Bessemer warehouse has even gotten this far is likely due to who the organizers are, said Michael Innis-Jiménez, an associate professor at the University of Alabama. Companies typically villainize union organizers as out-of-staters who don’t know what workers want. But the retail union has an office in nearby Birmingham and many of the organizers are Black, like the workers in the Bessemer warehouse.


Discover more from Current PH

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

MUST READ

The Unfinished Revolution: Why the Katipuneros’ Struggle for Kalayaan...

More than 129 years after the Katipunan Revolution, the Filipino struggle for kalayaan remains unfinished. From the bolo of 1896 to the laptop of 2026, the battle has shifted from colonial oppression to modern economic systems that continue to limit true freedom.
video

Independence Day Debate: Youth, Dynasties and the Fight for...

https://youtu.be/BVxHclDGgZw Independence Day Debate: Youth, Dynasties and the Fight for Freedom This Independence Day special brings together prominent voices in Philippine labor, law, and political reform...
video

Political Dynasties and Corruption: The Freedom Filipinos Still Seek

https://youtu.be/yYyw_H8a_R4 Political Dynasties and Corruption: The Freedom Filipinos Still Seek As the Philippines marks Independence Day, a deeper question remains: are Filipinos truly free? This discussion...
video

Political Dynasties, Senate Gridlock and the Crisis of Democracy...

https://youtu.be/tW7K2jdPIBg Political Dynasties, Senate Gridlock and the Crisis of Democracy Today As political tensions continue to dominate national headlines, deeper questions emerge about the state of...
video

June 12 Debate: Is Philippine Independence Still Unfinished?

https://youtu.be/CIkuOso9SII June 12 Debate: Is Philippine Independence Still Unfinished? June 12 is often celebrated as a historic victory for the Filipino people, but does independence remain...

Discover more from Current PH

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from Current PH

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading