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They made a video

UFCW press release: https://www.ufcw.org/press-releases/whole-foods-union-victory/

An articleSource: https://archive.is/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/27/business/whole-foods-union-vote.html

By Danielle Kaye

Jan. 27, 2025

Workers at a Whole Foods Market in Philadelphia voted on Monday to become the first unionized store in Amazon’s grocery chain, opening a new front in the e-commerce giant’s efforts to fend off labor organizing in multiple segments of its business.

Employees at the sprawling Whole Foods store, in the city’s Spring Garden neighborhood, voted 130 to 100 in favor of organizing with the United Food and Commercial Workers union, the National Labor Relations Board said.

Store employees said they hoped a union could help negotiate higher wages, above the current starting rate of $16 an hour, and better benefits. Some longtime employees, who have been with Whole Foods since well before Amazon bought the chain in 2017, said reductions in benefits and cuts in staffing levels when Amazon took over, among other changes, had been sources of frustration.

But those leading the union campaign hinted at a broader goal: to inspire a wave of organizing across the chain’s more than 500 grocery stores, adding to union drives among warehouse workers and delivery drivers that Amazon is already combating.

“I expect others to follow, and that will increase the leverage that we have at the bargaining table,” said Ben Lovett, an employee at the Philadelphia store who has led the organizing. “We’ve shown them that it’s possible to organize at Amazon.”

“This fight is far from over,” Wendell Young IV, president of U.F.C.W. Local 1776, which represents food and retail workers in Pennsylvania, said in a statement, “but today’s victory is an important step forward.”

Whole Foods said in a statement that the company was “disappointed” by the election result, but that it offered competitive compensation and benefits for employees and that it was “committed to maintaining a positive working environment” at the Philadelphia store.

The successful bid to form a union comes against a backdrop of what several workers have described as a campaign of intimidation from Whole Foods. They pointed to ramped-up monitoring of employees and anti-union messaging in the store since workers went public with their organizing efforts in the fall.

In unfair labor practice charges filed with the labor board earlier this month, U.F.C.W. Local 1776 accused Whole Foods of firing an employee at the Philadelphia store in retaliation for supporting the union drive. The union also accused the chain of excluding the store’s employees from receiving a raise that had been given this month to all of its other workers in the Philadelphia area.

Whole Foods said it had complied with all legal requirements when communicating with employees about unions. The company denied allegations of retaliation, arguing that it could not legally change wages during the election process and that it had delayed a raise until after the election to avoid the appearance of trying to influence votes.

“A union is not needed at Whole Foods Market,” the company said in a statement ahead of the election, adding that it recognized employees’ right to “make an informed decision.”

The company, which has five days to challenge the election outcome before the result will be certified, will have to bargain with the union for a contract covering the store’s unionized workers, the N.L.R.B. said in statement announcing the result.

But winning a union vote doesn’t ensure that contract talks will progress. Amazon warehouse workers who unionized nearly three years still do not have a contract.

In 2022, workers on Staten Island voted to form Amazon’s first union in the United States; it is now affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Amazon has challenged the election outcome in court, and has refused to recognize or bargain with the union. Delivery drivers, who work for third-party package delivery companies serving Amazon, have also mounted campaigns with the Teamsters.

Last week, Amazon said it was closing all of its warehouse and logistics operations in Quebec, the Canadian province where unions had gained a foothold among some Amazon workers, and would lay off 1,700 employees.

The union push in Amazon’s grocery business resembles, in certain ways, union organizing at Starbucks that has spread to more than 500 stores in the United States since 2021, said Brishen Rogers, a labor law professor at Georgetown University.

In grocery stores and coffee shops, employees work side by side, day after day, in conditions that are often conducive to getting to know one another and forming networks of solidarity, he said. Those dynamics do not always exist in warehouses, where workers tend to be under constant surveillance.

“I would not be shocked,” Mr. Rogers said, “if it had a snowball effect across different Whole Foods locations, much like Starbucks.”

Ed Dupree, who works at the Whole Foods store in Philadelphia and has been involved in the union campaign there, said he was in touch with workers at other locations across the country who were interested in unionizing. At least 10 other Whole Foods stores have started to organize, he said.

The new political landscape in Washington may pose hurdles for the Philadelphia workers as they try to negotiate a contract, or for other stores that might file for union elections. After the Biden administration’s embrace of unions, President Trump is expected to appoint a new N.L.R.B. general counsel whose approach could make it harder for organizing campaigns to succeed.

Employers typically exploit weaknesses in federal labor law to avoid reaching a first contract with newly unionized employees, said Kate Andrias, a professor of labor and employment law at Columbia University. Legal barriers to organizing and bargaining exist regardless of the government’s stance on labor, though companies might feel more emboldened to intimidate workers under President Trump, she said.

“We’re likely to see the law become less favorable to workers during the Trump administration,” Ms. Andrias said. But, she added, “even in periods when there have been hostile labor boards in the past, workers have been successful in organizing unions.”

spoiler

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Though the elimination of collective bargaining is the most controversial part, the bill proposes several other changes to public sector employees and unions.

It would restrict certain government resources from going toward union activity — that includes ensuring taxpayer funds won’t pay a public employee for the work they do for a union. And unions wouldn’t get special exemptions for using public resources, like property (if other groups or people have to pay to use a public room or space, so does the union).

People who are employed by a union, but aren’t actually employed by the entity the union represents — for instance, someone who works for a teachers union full time, but isn’t actually employed by the school district — would no longer have access to the Utah Retirement System.

And the bill would offer professional liability insurance for teachers, which in most cases is only currently offered through a union, Teuscher says. That would offer teachers “extra protection” for things like employment disputes, he said.

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full text

Amazon is quitting Quebec to ‘shock and awe’ workers worldwide

The corporate giant feared a ‘breakthrough’ after Quebec workers unionized and were set to secure the first collective agreement in the world

by Mostafa Henaway

Analysis

Jan 23 2025

Amazon has a message for its army of precarious workers worldwide: dare to unionize and you will be punished.

After failing to thwart a historic unionization drive in Quebec, Amazon is now shuttering all its operations in the province, laying off nearly 2,000 workers. 

The move is a brazen attempt to punish workers in the province who achieved what many thought impossible. In May 2024, about 300 workers at the Laval warehouse successfully unionized—a historic first in Canada—despite facing two years of anti-union tactics, intimidation, and surveillance. What’s more, they were set to become the first Amazon workers anywhere in the world to secure a collective agreement.

For Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, this move isn’t just about crushing the Laval workers and their union; it’s a direct assault on the entire global working class. It marks a growing offensive by corporations and the capitalist class who are trying to put workers in their place with austerity measures and attacks on labour organizing. 

Here in Quebec, Amazon’s move leaves 1,700 workers—many of them immigrants, international students, and people with families—jobless in the midst of rising unemployment and a worsening cost-of-living crisis. 

Meanwhile, the tech oligarch Bezos continues to amass unimaginable wealth, with his fortune now exceeding $200 billion

Amazon feared a ‘breakthrough’ for workers in Quebec

Amazon’s time in Quebec has been brief—but marked by worker resistance throughout.

The company opened its first fulfillment centre in Lachine in 2020 and quickly expanded to seven facilities across the province. In the winter of 2022, workers at the Lachine warehouse launched the first sustained campaign to improve working conditions. In response, Amazon resorted to union-busting tactics, including pressuring workers not to sign union cards. These actions were later deemed unlawful in a Quebec labour ruling.

While that campaign didn’t end in union certification, the breakthrough came in May 2024 at the Laval facility—the first Amazon warehouse in Quebec and Canada to successfully unionize.

The victory didn’t come easy. As a labour organizer who for a time worked undercover at that warehouse, I saw Amazon’s exploitation, surveillance, and relentless anti-union intimidation firsthand. 

What sets the Laval case apart from unionization drives in other parts of the world is a unique provision in Quebec’s labour code: employers are legally required to reach a first collective agreement with a union, once it exists. If negotiations then stall, the dispute goes to arbitration. 

This has given Laval workers a powerful tool not available in other other jurisdictions.

In the United States, for example, Amazon workers in Staten Island—whose historic union victory inspired workers globally—have been left without a contract for more than two years now. Amazon has refused to even come to the negotiating table. 

A first collective agreement in Laval would have represented a major breakthrough for Amazon workers worldwide, potentially inspiring more than 1.5 million employees, and set a precedent the company was desperate to avoid. 

Amazon has claimed that its decision to leave Quebec is driven by costs and profitability, not union activity. But the company has long valued its market dominance over profits. And it has always been willing to wield that monopolistic power to crush workers’ rights, even at the cost of short-term financial gains. 

The real motives behind the corporate giant’s recent announcement are clear: this is an aggressive “shock and awe” campaign designed not only to discipline workers here but to send a message of intimidation across its global operations. 

Amazon’s actions in Quebec, announced just two days after Jeff Bezos and other tech oligarchs stood alongside Donald Trump during his inauguration, are emblematic of a dangerous trend. 

As more and more of our economy is controlled by wealthy corporations and oligarchs that run them, the fight for workers’ rights is about the future of our democracy. 

Our solidarity and fightback are even more profound in this period. This is not just their fight—it’s a fight for all of us.


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some local policies to help out each other

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AVN declined to comment, but last week, it launched a FAQ page for attendees of the event. “The hotel has assured us that the strike will not impact the AVN Expo and Awards. Contingency measures are in place to maintain a memorable guest experience and exceptional service during the event,” the page says. 

On January 9, the Adult Performance Artists Guild (APAG) issued a statement about the strike: “As the union for performers in the adult industry, care for the safety and well-being of our workers is paramount to our mission,” they wrote. “We feel this for not only our members and other workers in the adult industry but for all workers, regardless of their jobs. As union representatives, we support the sacrifices made by workers on strike, fighting for better working conditions. The officers of APAG voted unanimously to support our fellow union workers in Culinary Workers Local 226, and we will not cross their picket line in a show of solidarity.”

And on Saturday, marking day 58 of the strike, APAG members joined Local 226 workers and their families for a march from the Las Vegas Strip to Virgin Hotels, blaring vuvuzelas and holding signs referencing Virgin Las Vegas’ contract negotiation offer of an estimated 30 cents an hour in wage increases. 

“The Adult Performance Artists Guild (APAG)’s decision to stand with Culinary Union strikers and honor the picket line at Virgin Las Vegas demonstrates unity, and the Culinary Union applauds the unwavering solidarity shown by the APAG and their members,” Ted Pappageorge, Secretary-Treasurer for the Culinary Union, said in a statement. “Workers across industries share the same fight for dignity, fair pay, respect, and protections on-the-job, and Culinary Union is proud to stand with APAG in solidarity as strikers continue to take on a billionaire-owned company that refuses to treat workers fairly. APAG’s support sends a powerful message: When workers stand together, we are unstoppable. To APAG members and all customers choosing not to cross the picket line – thank you for standing with workers on strike, with your continued support we will win.”

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We are about to make the news, lol. We'll probably be voting in about a month.

It's been six months of work since this all started, and we've got probably 40% of people on our side. We've lost 10 employees in the last couple months. Some retired, some were fired, some quit, including two people in the OC. So it's been a bit of a rollercoaster.

A terrible manager who helped kick off this whole thing by being awful got fired. The old store manager who helped kick this off by backing up the terrible manager retired. We were hoping it would lead to positive changes, but of course not. The new regime has been continuing to harass an injured employee for who knows why, so fuck 'em. We are filing several complaints with L&I and the NLRB, and a couple of us will probably be making enemies for life with some in upper management (although a few of us have already been pegged as troublemakers and they are clearly trying to make us miserable enough to quit), so I hope we succeed.

We haven't been able to sit and talk to about half the store, so it's not exactly where we wanted to be and is kind of risky, but unless everyone else breaks to the anti-union side we should be good. Thankfully we haven't run into a lot of anti-union brainworms, but a lot of people are scared to talk about it or are treated fine so don't see the problem we are trying to address so have been dismissive. Still lots of us are burnt out with the store in general and are only staying to vote on the union, so we figured we should go for it now, before there's another 5 people gone and more new people to talk to. When we drop cards and we can be way more open when talking to people.

I know it's not a very radical union, and the changes we can expect will likely be positive and necessary but mundane, but the people we've worked with in our local UFCW have been awesome and I appreciate their time and effort. I know its' their job and they get paid for it, but they've been taking a four hour round-trip a couple times a week to help get this done.

Praying to Saint Fidel to grant us his luck.

timmy-pray fidel-si

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“I certainly would not want to discount the organizing and the efforts of the workers who did go on strike. Hopefully, it will spur some more activity but the history of publicity strikes is not very good. I do think a serious analysis needs to be done of levels of participation. The tendency however, is to simply declare victory and learn nothing. But I also think we need a sober analysis of what kind of labor movement it would take to organize Amazon. I do not think we can talk about organizing giant employers without talking about the structure and ideology of our labor movement. In order to truly take on these giant employers, we would need a labor movement capable of employing picket line militancy and solidarity tactics capable of mobilizing the entire labor movement against corporate giants,” Joe Burns wrote to me.

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Guess who's trying to hiring scabs at $600 a day plus lodging.

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Fucking stellar news, they are smol and broke for now, but sweeping gig economy via an app is promising avenue (somewhat, either force them to bleed more money if it fails or fuck them if it doesn't - which requires solidarity and boycotts of uber, which treat hounds likely won't do). Still pog to try

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After 26 days of escalating actions, striking workers at the Catalonian paint manufacturer Acrylicos Vallejo have won significant victories at the negotiating table. Vallejo manufactures the Game Color and Model Color line paints that are most popularly used for miniatures and wargames. According to a post on the Catalonian labor organization CGT’s Bluesky page, a pre-agreement has been signed that would guarantee workers a salary increase, a parental aid package, new workplace harassment protocols, and occupational safety improvements.

As previously reported by Polygon, nearly all of the 85 workers had begun a 16-day partial work stoppage in late November before escalating to a full strike on Dec. 11 — a year after Vallejo had been purchased by investment firm ProA Capital for just under $53 million. In the days leading up to this announcement, CGT works council president Patricia Pérez described the alleged actions of Vallejo management over the last year in an article first published in Catalan by Poder Popular and commissioned for English translation by Rascal News.

According to Pérez, the alleged conditions at the Vallejo factory were not only dangerous, but not in compliance with Spanish law. In addition to a lack of employee showers (a requirement for companies which handle dangerous chemicals) and machinery in disrepair, Pérez claimed that panels from the factory ceiling were often broken and falling, allowing rain to fall on the factory floor. The translation describes an alleged “authoritarian” work environment, with unreasonable expectations for worker productivity that led to CGT filing a lawsuit against Vallejo management. Pérez also claimed that the company’s safety protocols are “biased” and portray “victim[s] of harassment as the perpetrator.” One employee, who filed a complaint against the company, was allegedly fired three days later on the grounds of “low productivity.”

Pérez told Poder Popular that the labor actions had pushed Vallejo management to “set aside any discussions of productivity” and begin “genuine negotiations.” Though those initial wage propositions were presented as “minimal” in the Poder Popular article, the final agreements announced in the CGT social post include: a salary increase of up to €3000 per year, a social paternity package of €500 for the birth of a child, with €200 education allowance for each child below 25 years of age — an amount which must be multiplied by 1.5 for single-parent families.

This victory follows multiple years of ongoing labor actions across sectors, including the currently ongoing SAG-AFTRA Voice Actors strike, the Amazon Teamsters strike, and the Starbucks Workers United strike.

Vallejo is a company that makes acrylic paint commonly used for hobby painting like warhammer miniatures and such.

seeing the workers win an agreement from a strike is always heartwarming to see

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Today is a historic day.

For the first time, Amazon workers across the country are going on strike, starting at 7 distribution centers across the country. This action comes in the midst of the holiday shopping season, as Amazon workers are being forced to work grueling overtime to meet overwhelming demand.

In the coming days, additional Amazon facilities will join the strike: JFK8 in New York City; DGT8 in Atlanta; DFX4, DAX5, and DAX8 in Southern California; DCK6 in San Francisco; and DIL7 in Skokie, Illinois, along with other locations.

By 6 a.m. at the DBK4 facility in Queens, New York, hundreds of drivers hit the picket lines, refusing to deliver packages. They engaged in conversations with their co-workers — some of whom were entering the facility to work, others who were convinced to join the picket line. Many who were about to enter the facility instead parked outside and stood with their co-workers, joining the strike. There is growing solidarity among the workers. “We work for nothing– we don’t get protection, we don’t get money– and we work for this rich boss who is exploiting us. This strike is for our respect,” one driver said to another, convincing him to join the picket line. They were joined by healthcare workers, UPS drivers, students, and young people, all standing in solidarity with this historic strike.

The police have already arrived at the picket — specifically the Strategic Response Group, notorious for its brutal treatment of Palestinian protesters over the past year. The cops arrested both a driver and a Teamster. The driver, who was pulling out of Amazon with a truck full of packages, stopped to engage with the striking workers. In response, the police pulled him from his vehicle and arrested him — an outrageous act of intimidation. This driver has been freed by the police and the strikers are undeterred. They will not back down.

Full article

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A union representing more than 11,000 Starbucks baristas in the US says its members will hold a five-day strike starting on Friday morning, in a dispute over pay and working conditions.

Workers United says the walkouts will start in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Seattle, with strike action set to spread each day and reach hundreds of stores by Christmas Eve unless a deal is reached.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/23765490

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Companies in the newly formed gig-nursing industry have also been lobbying on labor rules that could allow them to shortchange nurses, further reducing the quality of patient care.

gig-nursing industry

just fuck me up, fam

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