Amazon workers in NC vote against joining union

Nearly 75% of workers in Garner who cast ballots chose no on union representation

Workers at an Amazon fulfillment center in Garner, N.C., voted against joining the labor organization Carolina Amazonians United for Solidarity and Empowerment. (Richard Drew / AP Photo)

Workers at an Amazon warehouse in North Carolina rejected a proposal to unionize, becoming the latest group of the company’s employees to side against union representation.

About three-quarters of employees at an Amazon fulfillment center in Garner in Wake County voted against joining a grassroots labor organization called Carolina Amazonians United for Solidarity and Empowerment, the National Labor Relations Board announced Saturday.

The federal labor agency said 2,447 workers cast ballots against union representation, while 829 voted in favor of joining the independent union, which is made up of former and current Amazon workers. The NLRB had said 4,300 Amazon workers were eligible to cast ballots in the election, which took place Monday through Saturday.

The Rev. Ryan Brown, a former Amazon worker who co-founded the group, said Saturday, “We had already braced ourselves for a loss.”

“We knew that historically the tide was against us to have a win for several reasons,” Brown said. “One, we’re in the South. Two, the average worker that’s in North Carolina knows nothing about a union and the benefits of a union and what a union could do for them.”

The outcome came just weeks after workers at a Whole Foods Market store in Pennsylvania voted to unionize, leading to the first successful entry of organized labor into the grocery chain, which Amazon owns. Following the union win, Whole Foods asked the NLRB to toss out the election results, arguing the voting process was tainted.

In 2022, workers at an Amazon warehouse in the New York City borough of Staten Island unionized with the Amazon Labor Union, which joined forces with the Teamsters last year. However, Amazon objected to the election result and refused to negotiate a contract.

The company has also been able to successfully fend off union victories at a second warehouse on Staten Island, as well as at facilities near Albany, New York, and in Bessemer, Alabama.

In November, an NLRB administrative law judge ordered a third union election for Amazon warehouse workers in Bessemer after determining that the company committed six violations leading up to a rerun election in March 2022. That rerun was held after the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, which is seeking to represent Amazon workers in Bessemer, filed objections to the first election, which resulted in a union loss.

Workers affiliated with Carolina Amazonians United for Solidarity and Empowerment, or CAUSE, have been organizing at the North Carolina warehouse since January 2022. Brown said in an interview last month he started organizing because he felt Amazon was not providing workers with adequate protections against COVID-19.

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