Current:Home > StocksAmazon loses key step in its attempt to reverse its workers' historic union vote -Elevate Money Guide
Amazon loses key step in its attempt to reverse its workers' historic union vote
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:06:03
Amazon appears to be losing its case to unravel the union victory that formed the company's first organized warehouse in the U.S.
After workers in Staten Island, N.Y., voted to join the Amazon Labor Union this spring, the company appealed the result. A federal labor official presided over weeks of hearings on the case and is now recommending that Amazon's objections be rejected in their entirety and that the union should be certified.
"Today is a great day for Labor," tweeted ALU president Chris Smalls, who launched the union after Amazon fired him from the Staten Island warehouse following his participation in a pandemic-era walkout.
The case has attracted a lot of attention as it weighs the fate of the first – and so far only – successful union push at an Amazon warehouse in the U.S. It's also large-scale, organizing more than 8,000 workers at the massive facility.
Workers in Staten Island voted in favor of unionizing by more than 500 votes, delivering a breakthrough victory to an upstart grassroots group known as the Amazon Labor Union. The group is run by current and former workers of the warehouse, known as JFK8.
The union now has its sights on another New York warehouse: Workers at an Amazon facility near Albany have gathered enough signatures to petition the National Labor Relations Board for their own election.
However, Amazon has objected to the union's victory, accusing the NLRB's regional office in Brooklyn – which oversaw the election – of acting in favor of the Amazon Labor Union. Amazon also accused the ALU of coercing and misleading warehouse workers.
"As we showed throughout the hearing with dozens of witnesses and hundreds of pages of documents, both the NLRB and the ALU improperly influenced the outcome of the election and we don't believe it represents what the majority of our team wants," Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said in a statement on Thursday, saying the company would appeal the hearing officer's conclusion.
The officer's report serves as a recommendation for a formal decision by the National Labor Relations Board, which does not have to follow the recommendation, though typically does. Amazon has until Sept. 16 to file its objections. If the company fails to sway the NLRB, the agency will require the company to begin negotiations with the union.
At stake in all this is future path of labor organizing at Amazon, where unions have long struggled for a foothold, while its sprawling web of warehouses has ballooned the company into America's second-largest private employer.
In the spring, two previous elections failed to form unions at two other Amazon warehouses. Workers at another, smaller Staten Island warehouse voted against joining the ALU.
And in Alabama, workers held a new vote after U.S. labor officials found Amazon unfairly influenced the original election in 2021, but new election results remain contested.
In that Alabama vote, the NLRB has yet to rule on ballots contested by both the union and Amazon, which could sway the results of the election. The agency is also weighing accusations of unfair labor practices by the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union that's trying to organize Alabama warehouse workers.
Editor's note: Amazon is among NPR's recent financial supporters.
veryGood! (52268)
Related
- Trump's 'stop
- 21 Useful Amazon Products That'll Help You Stop Losing Things
- Hailey Bieber Thanks Selena Gomez for Defending Her Amid “Very Hard” Time
- The Supreme Court ponders when a threat is really a 'true threat'
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Prepare for next pandemic, future pathogens with even deadlier potential than COVID, WHO chief warns
- Lonely pet parrots find friendship through video chats, a new study finds
- As world leaders attend G7 summit in Hiroshima, atomic bomb survivor shares her story
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Heartbroken Shawn Johnson East Shares Her Kids Were on Lockdown Due to Nashville School Shooting
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Heartbroken Shawn Johnson East Shares Her Kids Were on Lockdown Due to Nashville School Shooting
- You Returning for a Fifth and Final Season as Joe Goldberg's Killer Story Comes to an End
- Carrie Underwood's Biggest Fitness Secrets Revealed
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Sephora 24-Hour Flash Sale: 50% Off Peter Thomas Roth and Too Faced
- German police investigate suspected poisoning of Russian exiles: Intense pain and strange symptoms
- 'Tales of Middle-earth' tempts and divides 'Magic' fans with 'LotR' crossover
Recommendation
Trump's 'stop
Make Easter Easier With 15 Top-Rated Kitchen Finds You Never Knew You Needed
Inside Reese Witherspoon and Jim Toth's Drama-Free Decision to Divorce
Largest-ever Colombian narco sub intercepted in the Pacific Ocean
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
The MixtapE! Presents Ed Sheeran, Maluma, Anuel AA and More New Music Musts
The Fate of Grey's Anatomy Revealed
The Bachelor's Caelynn Miller-Keyes Shares Travel Must-Haves and Packing Hacks