Source: Left Voice

Photo by Ron Adar/Shutterstock
Amazon really doesnāt want workers to unionize.
At its warehouses around the country, Amazon hires intelligence analysts to track ālabor organizing threatsā and spies on employeesā interactions in closed Facebook groups.
In Bessemer, Alabama, Amazon has pulled out all the stops to thwart the unionization effort, including everything from threats of job loss, phone calls to workers, and anti-union meetings during work hours. The company successfully petitioned the city to change the amount of time at red lights near the facility so organizers have less time to talk to workers in their cars. Amazon is paying consultants nearly $10,000 a day to stop the unionization effort.
But the struggle in Bessemer seems to be opening the floodgates. Amazon workers in Baltimore, New Orleans, Portland, Denver, and Southern California have reached out to the Retail Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU) about unionizing their own warehouses. RWDSU says they have heard from more than 1,000 Amazon workers around the country.
Bessemer isnāt the only Amazon union push going on now. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters is pushing to unionize workers at Amazon locations in Grimes and Iowa City, Iowa. The driveās organizers have spoken to between 400 and 500 Amazon workers in the area, which includes the location of a new 1,000-employee facility in Bondurant that opened last December.
The working conditions at Amazon fulfillment centers are nothing short of abhorrent. The company tracks each warehouse workerās productivity and generates automatic warnings ā without any supervisor input ā if, for example, someone spends ātoo longā in the bathroom. Workers find themselves sometimes forced to pee in bottles just to keep their jobs. Workers are allotted only a minimal amount of ātime off-taskā (TOT) ā a period in which they are not mechanically scanning packages. Every move is tracked, and workers who fall below a āproductivity thresholdā are disciplined or fired. The result of all this is a high serious injury rate in the facilities ā 7.7 percent, which is about double the most recent industry average (which is already quite high).
Amazon is the second-largestĀ private employer in the United States, and workers have yet to succeed in organizing a union in a single facility. Retaliation is a real threat. Bloomberg News reports, āAn employee in Nashville was fired in retaliation for discussing workplace conditions, and another in Illinois was pulled off of a shift āto discourage employees from engagingā in activism, according to complaints filed in February with the National Labor Relations Board.ā The company has fired ātroublemakersā like Chris Smalls and countless people whose names we donāt know. AĀ 2014 attempt by Amazon technical workers to organize in the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers was thwarted by Amazonās rigorous anti-union campaign.
Only 6.3 percent of private-sector employees in the United States are currently unionized. Walmart, the largest U.S. private employer, engages in similar anti-union tactics. Legal and illegal union-busting tactics are commonplace, making the basic right to a union difficult to win. Thatās why itās essential to fight for the PRO Act, as well as even more extensive laws that bar union-busting.
Even with the drive at Bessemerās Amazon warehouse opening the floodgates for unionization efforts across the country, weāve seen all too many unions function as ābusiness unionsā in a top-down manner and donāt fight for their workers. Thatās why workers need to fight for more than just a union, but for unions run by the rank and file ā to make them real fighting tools for the working class.
Unions are essential, and workers know it. Bloomberg reports on a 28-year-old New Orleans Amazon warehouse worker who drove five hours to Bessemer to support the union organizing fight. He told a rally, āIf the most powerful company in the world can be unionized in an anti-union state like Alabama, it gives hope to people in Louisiana, in Mississippi, in West Virginia who are trying to do the same thing ⦠We just have to support the fight wherever itās at because the fight is going to come to us.ā
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate