Threat of Amazon workers’ strike spreads during peak holiday season

Mon, 16 Dec 2024, 21:21
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Thousands of workers at Amazon are threatening to strike at the company after giving the company a

deadline

of 15 December to agree to begin negotiating a first contract with the union representing employees.

The strike threats, which started in New York, have now spread to Chicago and Atlanta. They come during Amazon’s peak holiday season and after the company

experienced

record sales during its 2024 Black Friday and Cyber Monday events

The workers at the company’s JFK8 warehouse in Staten Island became the first Amazon warehouse in the US to win a union election in March 2022. But the company has yet to begin negotiating a first contract with Amazon Labor Union (ALU-IBT Local 1). Workers are pushing for improvements to pay, safety and job security.

Amazon workers at another New York City site, the delivery station DBK4 in Queens, also

voted

to strike in solidarity with the contract fight and their push for union recognition from the company.

The Teamsters have been

organizing

workers at 10 Amazon facilities around the US in California, Illinois, Georgia and New York.

Workers at two Amazon facilities near Atlanta, Georgia and a delivery facility in Skokie, Illinois, outside of Chicago, also voted to authorize strikes and

walked out

on strike along with New York City workers.

“Driving for Amazon is tough,” said Luc Rene, a worker at DBK4, in a statement. “What’s even tougher is fighting a mega-corporation that constantly breaks the law and games the system. But we won’t give up.”

The strike comes in the wake of the US senate health, education, labor, and pensions (Help) committee

report

released on 16 December into high injury rates at Amazon. According to the report senior Amazon executives rejected internal recommendations that would have relaxed productivity quotas because of concerns about how it would impact the company’s performance.

The report also backed up

union-sponsored research

that claimed injury rates at Amazon were far higher than those of its peers.

“It’s beyond unacceptable that Amazon, the 2nd largest corporation in America, owned by Jeff Bezos, the 2nd wealthiest person on Earth, continues to put their huge profits ahead of the health & safety of their workers,” Senator Bernie Sanders, the Help committee chair,

wrote on X.

Amazon

disputed

the report’s findings calling it “fundamentally flawed”.

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