Kimball writes: "A bootstrap Amazon unionization effort is underway in Staten Island, and lo and behold, Amazon is firing up the union-busting campaign early. We've heard allegations that it threatened Bessemer, Alabama, warehouse workers with shutting down the warehouse amid their attempt to unionize."
Amazon workers protesting. (photo: Val�rie Macon/AFP/Getty Images)
01 May 21
bootstrap Amazon unionization effort is underway in Staten Island, and lo and behold, Amazon is firing up the union-busting campaign early. We�ve heard allegations that it threatened Bessemer, Alabama, warehouse workers with shutting down the warehouse amid their attempt to unionize. Now it�s just dumping a crock of misinformation out in the open.
Organizers have shared Amazon�s internally disseminated bulleted guide for employees on how to not sign a union authorization card. Similar messages were photographed on TV screens, which organizers say were installed in the JFK8 facility. The �information� sews seeds of distrust in organizers and deliberately twists unionization as a forfeiture of rights.
We only been out there 4 days @JeffBezos @amazon Really?? Already you could of least gave me a week anyway I expected this I�ll see y�all tomorrow outside #JFK8Everyday until it�s done @amazonlabor @TCOEW pic.twitter.com/HdAPGpDsyU
— Christian Smalls (@Shut_downAmazon) April 24, 2021
The full memo, titled �What You Need to Know About Union Authorization Cards,� dated April 24th, reads:
If approached to sign a union authorization card, know the facts!
Setting aside the fear-mongering portrayal of labor organizers as shady dudes trying to collect your information under cover of darkness on a sidewalk, let�s get to the facts!
As we saw in Bessemer�where an overwhelming majority reportedly signed authorization cards and then voted no after an oppressive corporate anti-union campaign�Amazon will likely throw tens of thousands of dollars at efforts to convince workers that trying is hopeless and that they must accept what Amazon decides to give them. This is not true. Organizers in Staten Island are using a more local strategy to tap into community trust by forming their own organization, the Amazon Labor Union, from scratch. This departs from many traditional unionization efforts, where organizers attempt to form a union under a stalwart organization. (In Bessemer, for example, Amazon workers attempted to unite under the Retail Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU)).
Leading the drive in Staten Island are Christian Smalls and Derrick Palmer, two workers who were fired and disciplined, respectively, after organizing a protest for covid-19 safety measures in Staten Island�s JFK8 warehouse. Amazon fired Smalls, a former JFK8 supervisor, for allegedly breaking a quarantine order the company issued him as the protest plans were made public. (Motherboard later revealed that the company plotted to attack Smalls with a smear campaign.) New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a wide-ranging lawsuit against Amazon for, among other things, allegedly retaliating against the two former employees.
Smalls and Palmer aren�t going the conventional route for this union drive. Typically, a union would keep its plans private before a union authorization effort so as to stall the onslaught of anti-union propaganda. Smalls, who spoke to Gizmodo over the phone while pamphleting, said he thinks that coming out early will work to their advantage.
�I want to strike while the iron is hot,� he said while intermittently greeting former coworkers. �Emotions are high because of Bessemer, and putting everything on Front Street is helping us get the information out. People got to understand, at Amazon, you work long hours, get home from work, and you�re tired,� he added. �If you have kids, you�re not going to be in tune with what�s going on with the controversy unless you hear about it.�
When asked why Smalls didn�t accept the support of a larger union, he said they�re trying to rewrite the playbook for a new generation of unions. �We want to incorporate something new and something more 21st century. A lot of these unions are traditional, which is not a bad thing. But we want to make sure that we include the younger generation.� This means a more personal social media presence and organizing online without a union hall. They can also tap into a more general faith in unions in New York City, where a lot of people are married to union members.
He paused momentarily to tell a passerby: �Come on and sign, I know the rumors are buzzing... yeah, I�m the one they fired.�
Smalls believes a familiar face is more likely to persuade people to unionize, rather than an outside organization that has to win over workers from scratch with limited personal access. Before the drive, he�d warned workers that Amazon would send these kinds of messages seen above and call them into meetings with managers. �They came back to me the next day and were like, you were right,� he said. �So they understand how Amazon is going to lie to them.�
In a statement to Gizmodo, Amazon recycled familiar lines. �We respect our employees� right to join, form, or not join a union, without fear of reprisal, intimidation, or harassment,� the company wrote in a statement, which went on to extol high worker pay (in New York, minimum wage), benefits, and �opportunities for career growth,� the last of which has been disputed by numerous employees and ignores Amazon�s exceptionally high turnover rate. The company also directed us to their great ratings on LinkedIn and Forbes.