Our Perspective 
 Amazon Workers  
 Demand  
 Historic Change 
 By Stuart Appelbaum, President 
 Retail, Wholesale and Department  
 Store Union, UFCW 
 Twitter: @sappelbaum 
 In Bessemer, Alabama, a historic, worker-driven  
 grassroots union organizing campaign is underway at  
 the Amazon warehouse there. The votes are being cast  
 and will be counted, and the campaign could drastically  
 change the lives of over 5,800 workers at the facility, who are demanding better  
 treatment and a voice on the job. 
 The Amazon campaign is so important because it represents the story of  
 working men and women in the pandemic era. Americans depend now more than  
 ever on working people: workers at supermarkets, pharmacies, food processing  
 and health care facilities – many of them RWDSU members – and of course, at  
 Amazon. From daily necessities to luxury items, Americans depend every day on  
 the work done by these Amazon employees. 
 This sprawling facility opened in March of last year, just as the world was  
 coming to grips with COVID-19. And workers there had the same health and safety  
 concerns of all frontline workers, which were exacerbated by Amazon’s workplace  
 conditions and grueling productivity quotas. Workers perform their jobs close  
 together, and short and infrequent breaks often don’t allow for adequate  
 handwashing and sanitizing. Workers say Amazon monitors their productivity so  
 closely that they are afraid to take bathroom breaks. 
 The concerns of workers in Bessemer reflect those of Amazon workers across  
 the world. Thousands of Amazon workers have signed a petition calling for better  
 health and safety policies. Amazon workers at facilities in Germany, Spain, Italy,  
 Poland, and the United Kingdom have held strikes or other worker actions to  
 demand safer workplaces. Here in New York, the Attorney General’s office has filed  
 a lawsuit against Amazon for failing to provide adequate health and safety  
 measures and for firing and disciplining employees that objected to Amazon’s  
 unsafe work conditions. Even amidst the Alabama workers’ organizing drive,  
 Amazon continues to disregard safety, having insisted upon an in-person union  
 election despite the COVID-19 pandemic. That move was shot down by the NLRB,  
 which instead called for a mail-in vote. With at least 13 deaths at Amazon facilities  
 – even before the pandemic – Amazon made the National Council for Occupational  
 Safety and Health’s “Dirty Dozen” list of dangerous employers two years running. 
 The Alabama Amazon workers approached the RWDSU because they saw the  
 difference the union was making in Alabama. The RWDSU was at the forefront  
 fighting for frontline workers in the early days of the pandemic, bringing swift  
 attention to the unsafe working conditions at poultry plants. In the wake of the  
 RWDSU’s efforts, poultry plants improved their social distancing policies, erected  
 barriers between workers, provided PPE and sanitizer for workers, implemented  
 COVID testing, and increased pay for workers who were risking their lives to feed  
 America while also providing pay for workers who were under quarantine.  
 Bessemer Amazon workers took notice, and by December of last year, thousands  
 of them had signed union cards. 
 The Amazon organizing drive is more than just about one campaign; it’s a  
 moment working people are seizing to demand change, and to be treated as  
 human beings. Regardless of the outcome of their campaign, the Amazon workers  
 in Bessemer, Alabama, have already made history. They’ve brought renewed  
 attention to the labor practices of the world’s largest retailer, and  
 shown that when workers stand together, they can stand up  
 against any employer in the world. Their inspiring  
 campaign has already changed the landscape, and is  
 resonating with working people everywhere who now  
 know they can demand safer workplaces and the  
 dignity and respect of union membership. 
 www.rwdsu.org 
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