Source: Vice
A group of Instacart employees in the Chicago suburb Skokie voted to unionize with the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1546 on Saturdayāa historic win for the grocery delivery platform. The vote was 10-to-4 in favor of the union, according to workers.
“The overwhelming majority of the employees made history by becoming the first Instacart employees to win a certified union election in the United States,” UFCW Local 1546 wrote in a press statement.
The union victory sends a message to other gig workers around the country who are fed up with working conditions at Silicon Valley tech companies like Instacartāwhich has faced months of backlash in the form ofĀ worker-led strikes, protests, andĀ online boycotts.
In the days leading up to the election, InstacartĀ enlisted high-level managersĀ to visit the Marianoās grocery store where the unionizing workers pick and pack groceries for delivery. The managersĀ distributed anti-union literatureĀ warning employees that a union would drain paychecks and āexercise a great deal of controlā over workers. āI encourage you to look at all of the FACTS and vote āNOā on February 1st,ā a senior operations manager for Instacart wrote in one of the memos obtained by Motherboard, dated January 22.
“The workers remained united throughout the organizing campaign despite being subjected to their company’s anti-union stance,” UFCW Local 1546 president Bob O’Toole said in a press statement. “We look forward to this opportunity to work with our new Instacart members in negotiating their first union contract.”
While independent contractors who ferry groceries to customers make up the majority of Instacartās 142,000 national āshopperā workforce, roughly 12,000 of those workers are Instacart employees, known as in-store āshoppers,ā who pack groceries in select grocery stores. These in-store workers are capped at 30 hours a week, and are legally classified as employeesāmaking them eligible to unionizeāunlike the rest of Instacartās workforce.
āInstacart cares deeply about all members of our community, which includes in-store shoppers who are part-time employees,” a spokesperson from Instacart’s San Francisco headquarters told Motherboard following news of the union’s victory. “We will always support employee freedom and choice, and we respect our employeesā rights to explore unionization.”
“Pending certification of the election results, Instacart will honor the outcome of this election and the decision of these 15 part-time employees in Skokie to choose union representation,” the spokesperson continued. “We will then begin the process of negotiating in good faith on an initial collective bargaining agreement that covers this location. While todayās election only affects in-store employees assigned to this store, we remain committed to providing the best experience for all customers and employees.ā
One of the union campaignās lead organizers, Joe Loftis,Ā told MotherboardĀ that his Instacart co-workers decided to unionize to address high turnover, the rapid pace of work, and the opaque algorithm for rating employees. He told Motherboard that unionizing employees currently earn $13 an hour, the minimum wage in Skokieāand are capped at 29 hours a week, which means they do not receive healthcare and other benefits. For many of these workers, itās a second job.
āThis is a great first step for building confidence among employees who have been abused and threatened for years,ā Matthew Telles, a gig worker in Chicago who has worked on Instacart since October 2015 and plays an active role in the drive to organize Instacart workers across the country on social media groups, told Motherboard. āI hope this gives other Instacart employees at other locations the message that itās okay to fight and step up, and lets them know that they have a massive support system from other Instacart workers and donāt need to be scared.ā
The victory for Instacart workers arrives during a period of unprecedented organizing among both blue and white collar tech workers in the United States. Between 2017 and 2019, the number of actions organized by tech workersĀ almost tripled. Last year alone, tech workers at companies including Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft led more than 100 actions. And despite the spotlight on white collar workers, the majority of these actions were led by blue warehouse workers, gig workers, and service employees, according toĀ the online databaseĀ āCollective Actions in Tech.ā
In late January, tech workers at the crowdfunding platform, Kickstarter, also voted on whether to unionize. If they win,Ā Kickstarter will be the major tech companyĀ in the United States to unionize. (Those results votes will be counted in mid-February.)
In recent months, Instacart workers have led the gig worker resistance against major tech companies. In November, several thousand gig workers went on a 3-day national strike, demanding the app reinstate its 10 percent default tip, which it slashed in 2016. Rather than listen to workersā demands, days later, InstacartĀ eliminated its $3 āqualityā bonus, one of the few remaining pay perks, which can account for up to 40 percent of pay, causing a wave of customers to declare they were deactivating the app on Twitter.
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