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DESCRIPTION:2/20/21  SF Solidarity Action: Victory To Bessemer Amazon Workers-Stop 
 Bezos Union Busting\nRally & Speak Out at San Francisco 24th St. Whole 
 Foods at 12 noon pm pst.\n\nThe Amazon corporation owned by Jeff Bezos is 
 now engaged in a union busting effort to prevent the Amazon workers\nin 
 Bessemer, Alabama from voting for a union during a representation election. 
 A national day of action\nhas been called on Februrary 20, 2021 to show 
 solidarity and support for all Amazon and Whole Foods workers.\nThey have a 
 right to a union without a massive effort to coerce them against the 
 union.\nPlease join us.\n\nSaturday February 20, 2021\nPicketing from 10AM 
 to 2PM PST at Whole Foods store & Rally at 12:00 PM noon\n\nWhole Foods 
 24th St. Store\n3950 24th St.\nSan Francisco\n\nInitiated By \nUnited Front 
 Committee For Labor Party 
 UFCLP\ncommitteeforlaborparty@gmail.com\nWorkWeek\n\nNational Day Of Action 
 For Bessemer Amazon 
 Workers\nhttps://supportamazonworkers.org/feb20/...\nOrganizing Meeting 
 Support Alabama Amazon 
 Workers\n\nhttps://supportamazonworkers.org/feb20/?fbclid=IwAR3xkY50iRbKaMnGx7cId43SiiJIrkxPNFAM-ls9D5eLrLJFC-9FiV6aly4\n 
 #UnionYes #OrganizeTheSouth\nAmazon workers are exposing what's happening 
 in 
 Alabama.\nhttps://twitter.com/MorePerfectUS/status/1357796064670212098\nAlabama 
 Amazon Organizers & Workers Speak Out On The Valley Labor 
 Report\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-F7kIhQP9UY&feature=youtu.be\n\nFebruary 
 20: National Day of Solidarity with Alabama Amazon Workers building 
 BAmazonUnion \nSouthern Workers Assembly\nFebruary 9 at 4:12 PM  · 
 \nFebruary 20: National Day of Solidarity with Alabama Amazon Workers 
 building BAmazonUnion with Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union 
 (RWDSU)! \nFind an action near you at southernworker.org/amazon, or email 
 info@southernworker.org to list one. Now is the time to mobilize solidarity 
 with this heroic struggle! #UnionYes #OrganizeTheSouth\n\n\nStop Bezos 
 Union Busting! February 20: National Day of Solidarity With Alabama Amazon 
 Workers\nhttps://supportamazonworkers.org/feb20/?fbclid=IwAR0oDN7AR_AGi0D8z6iynm1xKilW93EmgR3gs8t6rvCXSd3GxDJSntUbVoo\n\nBetween 
 Feb 8, and March 29, approximately 6,000 Amazon warehouse workers in 
 Bessemer, Alabama will begin voting by mail on whether to be represented by 
 the Retail, Wholesale Department Store Workers Union (RWDSU). The harsh 
 working conditions at Amazon warehouses, along with Amazon’s refusal to 
 adopt measures that protect workers from COVID 19, have pushed Amazon and 
 Whole Foods workers every- where to step up organizing and fighting 
 back.\nThese predominantly Black workers who have in recent months formed 
 the BAmazon Workers Union, are on the cusp of launching a history-changing 
 workers organization against one of the biggest and most powerful 
 transnational corporations in the world, and its super rich union busting 
 owner, Jeff Bezos. In addition, these workers are standing up to the 
 racist, anti-union laws that suppress labor across the South.\nSolidarity 
 from every corner of the labor and progressive movements is needed now to 
 show the workers in Bessemer that they are not alone, that all eyes are on 
 the historic struggle that they are leading. This is especially needed as 
 Amazon ramps up their union-busting tactics.\nThe Southern Workers Assembly 
 has issued a call for a National Day of Solidarity with Alabama Amazon 
 Workers on Saturday, February 20. Actions are being planned across the 
 South and the U.S. on that day at Amazon facilities (warehouses, 
 distribution centers, Whole Foods, etc.). \nSee below for an initial 
 listing of actions planned. If you would like to organize an action in your 
 area, please use this form to submit details of what you are 
 planning.\nPowerful Amazon Organizing Call Builds Towards February 20 Day 
 of Action\n\nOrganizing Meeting Support Alabama Amazon 
 Workers\n\n\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?v=461776385192382&ref=watch_permalink\n\n\nSupport 
 Amazon Workers banner\nPowerful Organizing Call Builds Towards February 20 
 Day of Action\nMany thanks to all of you who joined the incredibly powerful 
 organizing call last night to send solidarity to Bessemer, Alabama Amazon 
 workers organizing their union and to build momentum leading into the 
 National Day of Action set for February 20. The day of action was initiated 
 by the Southern Workers Assembly, and has quickly grown to over 2 dozen 
 (and counting!) actions in many different states.\n\nSeveral hundred people 
 from coast to coast (along with others from countries around the world) 
 joined the call to hear from the frontlines of the struggle in Bessemer and 
 to share reports and updates on actions they are planning on February 
 20.\n\nSpecial thanks to Big Mike & Josh Brewer (BAmazon Union/RWDSU), 
 Chris Smalls (former Amazon worker, Congress of Essential Workers), and the 
 many other workers, labor and community activists who participated in the 
 meeting.\n\nIf you weren't able to attend, you can watch a full recording 
 of the meeting here.\n\nWith only a week to go until February 20, there's 
 no time to waste to mobilize solidarity for the Bessemer Amazon workers. 
 Here are some things you can do today:\n\nSend info on actions planned in 
 your area - Planning a solidarity action on February 20 and don't see it 
 listed below? Send in details as soon as possible via this form so we can 
 list it on the website and help spread the word. \nInterested in planning 
 an action but not sure what to do? - Reach out to 
 info@supportamazonworkers.org. \nFind & submit resources - We've posted 
 social media graphics, leaflets, and other materials to the website (and 
 plan to add more in the coming days, so check back often!) for you to use 
 before and during February 20. If you have other graphics, placards, 
 artwork, or other materials to share, please submit them to 
 info@supportamazonworkers.org so they can be posted on the site.\nOnwards 
 to build for the National Day of Solidarity on February 20!\n\nIn 
 solidarity,\n\nSupport Alabama Amazon Workers campaign\nFebruary 20 
 National Day of Solidarity\nCurrent listing of actions planned for February 
 20 below. Don't see an action you're planning listed? Send in your info 
 using this form. And be sure to check the website for the most up to date 
 information on planned demonstrations: 
 https://supportamazonworkers.org/feb20\n\nMeet Amazon's 
 Unionbusters\nAmazon hired a former Teamster official to break the union in 
 Alabama\nhttps://ucommblog.com/.../meet-amazons-unionbusters...\nby Kris 
 LaGrange on \nFeb 10, 2021\nFacebookTwitterLinkedInemail\nOn February 8th a 
 historic election at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama started. Due to 
 COVID-19, the election is being held by mail and votes are being accepted 
 until the end of March. UCOMM has previously reported on union-busting 
 efforts at the warehouse and now The Intercept is shining new light on who 
 the union busters are.\nAccording to a report from The Intercept, Amazon 
 has contracted with union-buster Russell Brown to prevent the Alabama 
 warehouse from going union. Brown is being paid $3,200 a day, plus 
 expenses, for his evil work.\nBrown heads RWP Labor, which according to 
 their website is one of the nation’s leading labor experts in working 
 with companies to maintain a union-free workplace. Brown also serves as the 
 President of the Center for Independent Employees, a Koch-brothers backed 
 think tank that lobbies to weaken the political power of unions. They 
 received $18,000 from the anti-union Koch Brothers in 2017\nRWP Labor also 
 includes a traitor to the union ranks in Rebecca Smith, who claims to have 
 worked for 20 years in the labor movement including working for the 
 Teamsters as the Executive Director of Training for Southern Nevada. Since 
 leaving the Teamsters she has become anti-union, even writing a book 
 entitled “Union Hypocrisy.” She claims to have a winning record-busting 
 union and has worked on anti-union campaigns for governments, non-profits, 
 and companies in the airline, transportation, healthcare, hospitality, 
 energy, and retail sectors. According to the CWA, Smith left the Teamsters 
 after a petition was circulated to have her removed because of her gross 
 incompetence.\nAccording to client testimonials, Smith uses her experience 
 working for a union to advocate against them.\n“Your frank discussions 
 about your personal experiences, the collective bargaining process, and 
 Teamster methods and tactics helped us achieve the overwhelming victories 
 at our Dallas and Garland terminals,” said W.C. a director of HR at a 
 company that defeated an organizing drive by Teamsters Local 745 in 
 Dallas.\nAccording to Wired and RWDSU, the union organizing the workers, 
 Amazon workers in Alabama have been forced to sit in “classes” where 
 instructors lie to them about the dangers of unionization, including 
 telling them their wages will go down. When workers challenge these claims 
 they are brought to the front of the room and their ID badges are 
 photographed.\nBrown has worked as a union-buster for several decades. Some 
 of his clients include UPS, General Electric, Krispy Kreme, Kumho Tire, 
 ProPacific Fresh, and the St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Hospitals. 
 Considering that at least a few of these employers are now union employers, 
 Brown may not be worth his retainer.\nBeyond union-busting, Brown has been 
 active in high profile anti-union lobbying, including lobbying against the 
 PRO Act. His name can also be found on many high-profile coalition letters 
 supporting Republican causes.\n\nOne Amazon Warehouse Worker In Alabama Has 
 'No Doubt' Her Coworkers Will Vote To 
 Unionize\nhttps://www.wbur.org/.../11/amazon-union-warehouse-alabama\nFebruary 
 11, 2021\nTonya MosleySamantha Raphelson\nA woman works at a packing 
 station in Amazon's fulfillment center in Staten Island. (Johannes 
 Eisele/AFP via Getty Images)\nAmazon employees in Alabama began voting this 
 week on whether they want to form the first union of Amazon warehouse 
 workers in the U.S.\nPast efforts at organizing Amazon warehouse workers 
 have failed, but workers in Bessemer, Alabama, think this time will be 
 different, despite efforts by the company to dissuade them from voting to 
 join the union.\nJennifer Bates, an employee at the Bessemer Amazon 
 facility who has been helping organize the union drive, says unionizing 
 will help warehouse workers advocate for better pay and benefits, and it 
 will give them “an opportunity to speak” directly to and be heard by 
 management.\nThere are about 6,000 full-time workers at this 1-year-old 
 fulfillment center and additional seasonal workers. Bates says a lot of her 
 coworkers are “very excited” about unionizing because their complaints 
 have been ignored for so long. Some people even ended up quitting because 
 they were in so much physical pain from working long 10-hour shifts with 
 two 30-minute breaks.\nSometimes their managers will force them to work 
 overtime without an extra break, she says. The rules change every 
 day.\n“You can tell that the people are tired,” she says, “that 
 they're slow walking out or either limping walking out, and for the pay 
 that we're receiving for the workload, it doesn't balance out.”\nBates 
 says she doesn’t know if Amazon’s practices violate labor laws, but 
 what she does know is “that the workload is too much on the human 
 body.”\nWorkers at the giant Bessemer facility are required to walk up 
 and down flights of stairs and lug heavy boxes off of trucks, she says. By 
 the time they cross the facility and go downstairs to reach the break room, 
 workers have barely had much time to rest before their 30 minutes is 
 up.\n“Some of the boxes are really heavy, so it's a lot of walking and 
 standing, walking and standing [at] this fast pace,” she says.\nAmazon 
 workers at the Bessemer facility are voting to be a part of the Retail, 
 Wholesale and Department Store Union [RWDSU]. President Stuart Appelbaum 
 told Here & Now last month that the Bessemer workers’ experiences are 
 similar to what other Amazon employees at fulfillment centers have 
 faced.\n“I believe the workers at the facility in Bessemer, Alabama, were 
 experiencing what Amazon workers all over the world have been experiencing, 
 and that has been a disrespect for them as workers, as people who make 
 Amazon profitable,” he says. “They want to know that their health and 
 safety is going to be respected, that they're going to be treated as human 
 beings.”\nPart of the reason why it’s been so difficult for Amazon 
 workers to unionize is because they fear retaliation from the company, 
 Appelbaum says.\n“People are afraid of Amazon,” he says. “Even if 
 Amazon says it's not pressuring people, it's creating the impression that 
 people should be afraid.”\nAmazon has tried to stop the organizing 
 efforts in Bessemer. The company has brought in a union-busting law firm 
 and posted signs around the facility discouraging workers from unionizing, 
 Appelbaum says. Workers were told that joining the union will cost them 
 money for little benefit, Appelbaum and Bates say, even though Alabama is a 
 right-to-work state, which means workers can opt out of the union if they 
 choose.\n"We don’t believe the RWDSU represents the majority of our 
 employees’ views,” Amazon spokesperson Heather Knox told Here & Now in 
 a statement. “Our employees choose to work at Amazon because we offer 
 some of the best jobs available everywhere we hire, and we encourage anyone 
 to compare our total compensation package, health benefits, and workplace 
 environment to any other company with similar jobs."\nBates says there is 
 strong support for the union, especially from younger workers who she says 
 have talked to their parents about the benefits of joining. Appelbaum says 
 that’s likely due to Bessemer’s history as “a strong union 
 town.”\n“Decades ago, that's where the steel mills were located,” he 
 says. “People could speak to their parents or grandparents and hear about 
 the difference unions made in their lives.”\nRace is also playing a key 
 role in this union drive. Many of the employees at this warehouse are 
 Black, and union organizers are building their campaign around Black Lives 
 Matter, Appelbaum says.\n“It's time for these workers to be treated with 
 respect,” he says. “We see this as both a labor struggle and as a civil 
 rights struggle, which has often been the story of the labor movement in 
 the South.”\nDespite the backlash from management, Bates says she’s 
 confident that this time Amazon workers will form a union.\n“I believe it 
 with all my heart,” she says. “I have no doubt that we'll be 
 successful.”\nRead the full statement from Amazon on the Bessemer, 
 Alabama, facility, from Heather Knox:\n"We opened this site in March and 
 since that time have created more than 5,000 full-time jobs in Bessemer, 
 with starting pay of $15.30 per hour, including full healthcare, vision and 
 dental insurance, 50% 401(K) match from the first day on the job in safe, 
 innovative, inclusive environments, with training, continuing education, 
 and long-term career growth. We work hard to support our teams and more 
 than 90% of associates at our Bessemer site say they would recommend Amazon 
 as a good place to work to their friends.\n"We don’t believe the RWDSU 
 represents the majority of our employees’ views. Our employees choose to 
 work at Amazon because we offer some of the best jobs available everywhere 
 we hire, and we encourage anyone to compare our total compensation package, 
 health benefits, and workplace environment to any other company with 
 similar jobs."\nChris Bentley produced and edited this interview for 
 broadcast with Tinku Ray. Samantha Raphelson adapted it for the web.\nThis 
 segment aired on February 11, 2021.\n\n'We Won't Be Intimidated,' Says NY 
 AG After Amazon Files Preemptive Suit Over Covid-19 Worker Safety\n"This 
 action by Amazon is nothing more than a sad attempt to distract from the 
 facts and shirk accountability for its failures to protect hardworking 
 employees from a deadly 
 virus.”\nhttps://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/02/12/we-wont-be-intimidated-says-ny-ag-after-amazon-files-preemptive-suit-over-covid-19\nPublished 
 on \nFriday, February 12, 2021\nbyCommon Dreams\nbyJessica Corbett, staff 
 writer\n 9 Comments\nAmazon workers and community allies demonstrate during 
 a protest organized by New York Communities for Change and Make the Road 
 New York in front of the Jeff Bezos' Manhattan residence in New York on 
 December 2, 2020. (Photo by Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images)\nAmazon 
 workers and community allies demonstrate during a protest organized by New 
 York Communities for Change and Make the Road New York in front of the Jeff 
 Bezos' Manhattan residence in New York on December 2, 2020. (Photo by Kena 
 Betancur/AFP via Getty Images)\nNew York Attorney General Letitia James 
 responded forcefully on Friday to Amazon's preemptive lawsuit intended to 
 block her from taking legal action against the behemoth corporation over 
 workplace safety during the coronavirus pandemic and the firing of 
 warehouse workers involved in a walkout last spring.\n\n"We remain 
 undeterred in our efforts to protect workers from exploitation."\n—New 
 York Attorney General Letitia James\n"Throughout this pandemic, Amazon 
 employees have been forced to work in unsafe conditions, all while the 
 company and its CEO made billions off of their backs," James said in a 
 statement about the suit. "This action by Amazon is nothing more than a sad 
 attempt to distract from the facts and shirk accountability for its 
 failures to protect hardworking employees from a deadly virus."\n\n"Let me 
 be clear: We will not be intimidated by anyone, especially corporate 
 bullies that put profits over the health and safety of working people," the 
 state attorney general added. "We remain undeterred in our efforts to 
 protect workers from exploitation and will continue to review all of our 
 legal options."\n\nAmazon on Friday filed a federal suit in the Eastern 
 District Court of New York. The complaint, according to Bloomberg, says 
 James' office "has threatened to sue if the retail giant doesn't comply 
 with a list of demands, which include subsidizing public bus service and 
 reducing production targets required of workers in its warehouses."\n\n\nAs 
 Bloomberg reports:\n\nThe company's complaint also amounts to a lengthy and 
 detailed defense of its actions to protect employees, including a 
 day-by-day chronicle of safety measures it rolled out as the respiratory 
 virus spread around the U.S. in March and April.\n\n"Amazon has been 
 intensely focused on Covid-19 safety and has taken extraordinary, 
 industry-leading measures grounded in science, above and beyond government 
 guidance and requirements, to protect its associates from Covid-19," the 
 company said in its complaint.\n\nJames launched an investigation into 
 Amazon after workers—including organizer Chris Smalls, who was later 
 fired—protested conditions at a Staten Island warehouse. The state AG 
 said at the time that "it is disgraceful that Amazon would terminate an 
 employee who bravely stood up to protect himself and his 
 colleagues."\n\nReporting on the company's move Friday, the New York Daily 
 News noted that "Smalls says that he and another employee, Derrick Palmer, 
 were terminated in retaliation for starting the protests. Amazon has argued 
 that the two employees were terminated for their own failure to comply with 
 health regulations."\n\nThe Seattle-based company was founded by the 
 world's richest person, Jeff Bezos, whose wealth has surged during the 
 pandemic. Bezos, who announced this month that he will step down as 
 Amazon's CEO later this year and transition to the role of executive chair, 
 had a net worth of $189.5 billion as of Friday, according to Forbes.\n\nIn 
 December 2020, shortly after a global coalition of workers and activists 
 took to the streets on Black Friday to launch the #MakeAmazonPay campaign, 
 401 lawmakers from 34 countries endorsed the effort with an open letter to 
 Bezos, putting him "on notice that Amazon's days of impunity are over."\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/02/14/18840048.php
SUMMARY:SF Solidarity Action: Victory To Bessemer Amazon Workers-Stop Bezos Union Busting
LOCATION:Whole Foods 24th St. Store\n3950 24th St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/02/14/18840048.php
DTSTART:20210220T180000Z
DTEND:20210220T220000Z
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