Business

Thousands of Amazon drivers have gone on strike in the thick of the holiday package season

Image : Amazon driver on strike

As the holiday season approaches, Amazon drivers in four states have gone on strike, creating a wave of tension with the company. The strike, organized by the Teamsters union, began with less than a week before Christmas, with workers at seven facilities across the country walking off the job. Despite the Teamsters claiming to represent 7,000 workers, Amazon asserts that this group represents less than 1% of its U.S. workforce.

The union’s grievances center around low wages, inadequate benefits, and working conditions. However, there is an additional issue that has sparked further conflict: Amazon’s refusal to recognize the strikers as actual Amazon employees. Although these workers wear Amazon-branded vests, drive Amazon vans, and deliver Amazon packages, Amazon insists that they do not qualify as its direct employees, but are instead employed by independent contractors.

Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien was vocal in his criticism of Amazon’s approach. “If your package is delayed during the holidays, you can blame Amazon’s insatiable greed,” O’Brien said. “We gave Amazon a clear deadline to come to the table and do right by our members. They ignored it.” He stressed that many of the drivers were struggling to make ends meet, with some not even able to afford Christmas presents for their families. “The wages and hours we get working for Amazon simply aren’t enough to get by in today’s economy,” said Luke Cianciotto, a driver speaking outside the Skokie, Illinois facility.

Amazon, however, maintains that the strike will not impact deliveries during the holiday season. Spokesperson Kelly Nantel reiterated that the Teamsters do not represent Amazon employees, pointing to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) certification of only one unionized group at Amazon’s Staten Island facility. Amazon has also dismissed claims that the striking workers are Amazon employees, stating that many of the individuals on the picket lines are Teamsters from other industries.

“There are a lot of nuances here, but I want to be clear: the Teamsters don’t represent any Amazon employees despite their claims to the contrary,” Nantel remarked, framing the strike as a public relations move by the union. Amazon even suggested that the involvement of non-Amazon Teamsters on the picket lines was a sign of intimidation, calling it “inappropriate and dangerous.”

The strike, which began in Queens, New York, has since spread to other locations, including Skokie, Illinois, Atlanta, San Francisco, Victorville, and City of Industry in California. The Teamsters have highlighted Amazon’s massive profits in recent years, arguing that despite the company’s substantial earnings — including a reported $39.2 billion in net income for 2023 — the workers who drive Amazon’s operations are not being compensated fairly.

Ash’shura Brooks, a driver in Skokie, put the union’s stance simply: “It’s no longer going to be packages over people, profit over people. It’s people over packages, people over profits.” He and Cianciotto criticized Amazon’s claim that they are not Amazon employees, even though their immediate employers are independent contractors. “These third-party contractors don’t exist without Amazon,” Cianciotto stated.

The Teamsters are leveraging the timing of the strike to put additional pressure on Amazon during the critical holiday shopping season, hoping to draw attention to their demands and persuade consumers to shop elsewhere for their last-minute gifts. The union is also hoping to use the NLRB’s joint employer rule to press for better conditions, but Amazon is challenging this rule, and the future of this legal framework is uncertain.

While the strike is unlikely to last long, given that it is not open-ended like traditional labor stoppages, its timing is strategically designed to maximize the disruption during the busy holiday period. The Teamsters are aiming to secure more recognition from Amazon, which has repeatedly refused to engage in direct negotiations or recognize the union, despite claims that many Amazon workers have signed union cards.

In contrast, Amazon maintains that it offers its employees the freedom to work directly with the company without union intervention. “Our employees have a choice of whether or not to join a union,” said Nantel. “We favor opportunities for each person to be respected and valued as an individual.”

Though the Teamsters have not yet announced a strike at Amazon’s Staten Island facility, which previously authorized a strike, the growing conflict between the company and its workers is far from over, with the future of labor relations at Amazon hanging in the balance.


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