By Alexa Spencer | Word In Black

(WIB) – When news broke on Friday, April 1, 2022 that Amazon workers in Staten Island, N.Y. had managed to organize the first union in the notoriously anti-union companyโs 27-year history, a common refrain across social media went something like this: This is not an April Foolโs Day joke.
The news was so noteworthy that the name of Christian Smalls, a 33-year-old Black former Amazon employee and the interim president of the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) who led the walk-out, even trended on Twitter.
Did Smalls and the other employees want better pay and benefits? Absolutely. But what many people may not realize is that the drive to unionize at Amazon and elsewhere is being driven by employee concerns about health and safety at work.
Despite employees at companies like Amazon being called โessential workersโ due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Smalls says he saw people getting sick and the company wasnโt enforcing health and safety measures.
โEvery day I noticed somebody in my department was becoming ill, whether it was dizziness, fatigue, vomiting,โ Smalls told Democracy Now.
โSomething was wrong. It was a very eerie situation in the building. We didnโt have any PPE. We didnโt have any cleaning supplies. We didnโt have any social distancing. Amazon wasnโt really enforcing any guidelines. Everything was just hearsay.โ
As a result, an employee protest started in March 2020 at the โJFK8โ warehouse when workers held a walk-out due to concerns about lacking COVID-19 safety precautions.
We just unionized Amazon. And if we can do that, you can unionize anywhere.
CHRISIAN SMALLS, INTERIM PRESIDENT, AMAZON LABOR UNION
Smalls said before the walk-out, he and other workers voiced their grievances to the general manager daily, but nothing was done. After one week of this and without a positive COVID-19 diagnosis, he was told to quarantine by management โ but no one else was told to do the same.
Smalls took this as a sign that they were attempting to prevent him from organizing workers. But he didnโt stop. He led the walk-out and was fired a few hours later.
That walk-out led to the formation of the ALU, which triumphed over Amazon on April 1, when employees at the warehouse voted to form a union; with 2,654 for the union and 2,131 against it.
BREAKING: AMAZON LABOR UNION WINS HISTORIC FIGHT FOR THE FIRST AMAZON UNION IN THE ENTIRE USโผ๏ธ pic.twitter.com/GvUDLiw0Yuโ Amazon Labor Union (@amazonlabor) April 1, 2022
Amazon filed objections against the election on April 8.
โWeโve always said that we want our employees to have their voices heard, and in this case, that didnโt happen โ fewer than a third of the employees at the site voted for the union, and overall turnout was unusually low,โ an Amazon spokesperson said in a statement.
โBased on the evidence weโve seen so far, as set out in our objections, we believe that the actions of the NLRB and the ALU improperly suppressed and influenced the vote, and we think the election should be conducted again so that a fair and broadly representative vote can be had.โ
Records filed by Amazon, the second largest private employer behind Walmart, with the U.S. Department of Labor show the company spent $4.3 million on union-busting efforts at its warehouses.
While coronavirus sparked the ongoing protests at JFK8, workers at the facility had pre-existing safety and health concerns.
In 2019, the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health (NYCOSH) published a report detailing the notoriously unsafe work conditions at JFK8 and other Amazon facilities.
After speaking with 145 workers, NYCOSH found 80% of workers were pressured to work harder or faster; 66% expressed experiencing physical pain while performing work duties, and 42% continued to experience pain after work.

โWorkersโ safety and health can be seriously affected by pressure to perform strenuous activities faster,โ NYCOSH said in the report. โMuscles, joints, and bones can be severely impacted by physical demand and postural stress from performing tasks in an Amazon distribution center.โ
Repetitive back-bending while lifting objects, picking, selecting, storing and packing are stressful and awkward positions make workers more likely to suffer from musculoskeletal disorders than workers who are less exposed to these tasks.
Derrick Palmer, 33, who is vice president of organizing at ALU and a current Amazon employee, dedicated himself to organizing workers on the inside after his best friend, Smalls, was fired.
Now that workers have a say in the conditions at JFK8, he told Democracy Now heโs advocating for โbetter benefits, better pay, you know, like sick time.โ
โThose are the basic things,โ Palmer said. โAlso job security. You know, Amazon has a 150% turnover ratio at JFK alone. So, people that come and commute from all these different boroughs, their jobs should be secure. It shouldnโt take them three hours to get to work, and then, when they get there, they could possibly be fired.โ
Black employees made up the second largest demographic in the Amazonโs workforce in 2020
According to the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees โ the largest trade union of public employees in the United States โ workers who are part of a union are more likely to receive higher pay than workers who arenโt involved.
Union members earn 26.2% more than non-union workers. For women and Black people, theyโre likely to earn between 29.7% and 33.1% more than non-union workers.
Union members are also more likely to access health insurance and pension benefits. 95% of union members have health insurance and a pension plan compared to 68% of non-union workers having health insurance and 63% having a pension.
Data released by Amazon showed Black employees made up the second largest demographic in the companyโs workforce in 2020, totaling 26.5%; right behind white employees who account for 32.1%.

Amazon workers arenโt alone in their efforts to organize. Around the nation, 17 Starbucks locations have also voted to form a union. Over the coming months, an estimated 170 locations are expected to vote; according to recode.
For three years, Laila Dalton, 19, says she worked up against challenges with management, poor training, and being overworked at Starbucks locations in Scottsdale, Arizona.
At her first location, she was thrown onto a register with little training. She eventually transferred to a new store, which she helped open, but started to feel that it was going in the wrong direction. So, she and co-workers started to organize a union.
โItโs the only thing that I thought could actually make a difference,โ Dalton tells Word In Black.
After a change in managers, Dalton says she and other employees were having a hard time getting time off requests approved. This affected her because she was having health issues and needed to work less.
Ultimately, after requesting to work three days a week instead of four, she said she was told sheโd need to be demoted from her supervisor position to work less hours.
Dalton was fired from Starbucks on April 4. The company and Dalton dispute the reason for her termination.
Meanwhile, Dalton is trying to move on with her life. โItโs sad I got fired right now, but itโs a blessing in disguise, is how I see it,โ she says. โI was struggling with school majorly. Itโs really hard, but I now can really focus on school more.โ
While at Starbucks, she was enrolled in the companyโs College Achievement Plan that allowed her to attend Arizona State University online for free. Now that the mass media and communications student is unemployed, sheโs raising funds to pay for her education.
Dalton says she was wrongfully terminated due as retaliation for her union efforts. She believes the store also targeted her because sheโs a woman of color.
According to data released by Starbucks, 7.7% of its workforce is Black, 28.5% is Hispanic or Latinx, and 51.8% is white.
โWhile theyโre after union people, it feels like theyโre really also after minorities,โ she said.
In an email, a spokesperson from Starbucks told Word In Black that โany claims of anti-union activity are categorically false.โ
โFrom the beginning, weโve been clear in our belief that we are better together as partners, without a union between us, and that conviction has not changed,โ the spokesperson said.
Even though Dalton no longer works at Starbucks, she said sheโs continuing to support the unionization of her former store.
โThey want this union and theyโre ready, not just to get me back but to get their old workplace back,โ Dalton says about her former co-workers. โAnd to also feel like they could actually have a voice and theyโre not just looked at as a body.โ
The store is in the process of sending in their ballots.
โBy the end of day, April 19, thatโs when ballots are due,โ Dalton explains. โAnd itโs sad because we still havenโt gotten a ballot count day. It feels like theyโre missing with it because we donโt even know the day that theyโre going to count the ballots.โ
Dalton says their union efforts are not just for their personal health and safety โ there are necessary ripple effects.
โWeโre risking so much just to give our all, not just to have a better workplace for my workers, but for future generations and for the rest of the food industry,โ Dalton said.
Since she started organizing, Dalton has connected with Smalls.
โThis feels like an awakening right now,โ Dalton says. โYou canโt just do this on your own.โ
Smalls offered a word of encouragement to workers around the world.
โI think we proved that itโs possible, no matter what industry you work in, what corporation you work for,โ he told Democracy Now. โWe just unionized Amazon. And if we can do that, you can unionize anywhere.โ
Support for this Sacramento OBSERVER article was provided to Word In Black (WIB) by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. WIB is a collaborative of 10 Black-owned media that includes print and digital partners.
