Tuesday, March 30, 2021

DOCUMENTS SHOW AMAZON IS AWARE DRIVERS PEE IN BOTTLES AND EVEN DEFECATE EN ROUTE, DESPITE COMPANY DENIAL

 



If employees actually had to pee in bottles, Amazon said, “nobody would work for us.” That’s a lie.


March 25 2021, 1:54 p.m.


IN ANTICIPATION OF Sen. Bernie Sanders’s scheduled trip to Bessemer, Alabama, to support the unionization drive by Amazon workers there, Amazon executive Dave Clark cast the $1 trillion behemoth as “the Bernie Sanders of employers” and taunted: “So if you want to hear about $15 an hour and health care, Senator Sanders will be speaking downtown. But if you would like to make at least $15 an hour and have good health care, Amazon is hiring.”

Rep. Mark Pocan replied via tweet: “Paying workers $15/hr doesn’t make you a progressive workplace when you union-bust & make workers urinate in water bottles,” echoing reports from 2018 that Amazon workers were forced to skip bathroom breaks and pee in bottles. Amazon’s denial was swift: “You don’t really believe the peeing in bottles thing, do you? If that were true, nobody would work for us.”

But Amazon workers with whom I spoke said that the practice was so widespread due to pressure to meet quotas that managers frequently referenced it during meetings and in formal policy documents and emails, which were provided to The Intercept. The practice, these documents show, was known to management, which identified it as a recurring infraction but did nothing to ease the pressure that caused it. In some cases, employees even defecated in bags.

Amazon did not provide a statement to The Intercept before publication.

One document from January, marked “Amazon Confidential,” details various infractions by Amazon employees, including “public urination” and “public defecation.” The document was provided to The Intercept by an Amazon employee in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who, like most of the employees I talked to, was granted anonymity to avoid professional reprisal.

The employee also provided an email sent by an Amazon logistics area manager last May that chastised employees for defecating into bags. “This evening, an associate discovered human feces in an Amazon bag that was returned to station by a driver. This is the 3rd occasion in the last 2 months when bags have been returned to station with poop inside. We understand that DA’s [driver associates] may have emergencies while on-road, and especially during Covid, DAs have struggled to find bathrooms while delivering.”

“We’ve noticed an uptick recently of all kinds of unsanitary garbage being left inside bags: used masks, gloves, bottles of urine,” the email continues. “By scanning the QR code on the bag, we can easily identify the DA who was in possession of the bag last. These behaviors are unacceptable, and will result in Tier 1 Infractions going forward. Please communicate this message to your drivers. I know if may seem obvious, or like something you shouldn’t need to coach, but please be explicit when communicating the message that they CANNOT poop, or leave bottles of urine inside bags.”

Halie Marie Brown, a 26-year-old resident of Manteca, California, who worked as a delivery driver for an Amazon delivery contractor, Soon Express, until quitting on March 12, told The Intercept that the practice “happens because we are literally implicitly forced to do so, otherwise we will end up losing our jobs for too many ‘undelivered packages.’”

An email that Brown received from her manager this past August has a section titled “Urine bottle” and states: “In the morning, you must check your van thoroughly for garbage and urine bottle. If you find urine bottle (s) please report to your lead, supporting staff or me. Vans will be inspected by Amazon during debrief, if urine bottle (s) are found, you will be issue an infraction tier 1 for immediate offboarding.”

While Amazon technically prohibits the practice — documents characterize it as a “Tier 1” infraction, which employees say can lead to termination — drivers said that this was disingenuous since they can’t meet their quotas otherwise. “They give us 30 minutes of paid breaks, but you will not finish your work if you take it, no matter how fast you are,” one Amazon delivery employee based in Massachusetts told me.

Asked if management eased up on the quotas in light of the practice, Brown said, “Not at all. In fact, over the course of my time there, our package and stop counts actually increased substantially.”

This has gotten even more intense, employees say, as Amazon has seen an enormous boom in package orders during the coronavirus pandemic. Amazon employees said their performance is monitored so closely by the firm’s vast employee surveillance arsenal that they are constantly in fear of falling short of their productivity quotas.

One email, provided to The Intercept by a Houston-based driver associate who works for an Amazon contractor, alludes to company cameras that can find workers who leave urine bottles behind in the vans. “Data from these cameras can be sent to Amazon in the event of any incident on the road. (We have had several bad accidents, a stolen van, drivers leaving piss bottles etc in the vans).”

The employee said, “Every single day of my shift, I have to use the restroom in a bottle to finish my route on time. This is so common that you’ll often find bottles from other drivers located under seats in the vans. … The fact that Amazon would tweet that is hilarious.”

Public reports that Amazon employees skipped bathroom breaks originated in a 2018 book by the British journalist James Bloodworth. That book, “Hired: Six Months Undercover in Low-Wage Britain,” alleged that Amazon workers at a warehouse in Staffordshire, U.K., resorted to urinating in bottles in order to meet production quotas. While most of the employees I spoke to were drivers who delivered products, workers said the practice was commonplace in factories as well.

The vote by Amazon warehouse workers in Alabama on whether to unionize has become a flashpoint for organized labor. While Amazon has publicly criticized Sanders, he is far from the only prominent politician to voice support for the employees’ right to form a union. Last month, President Joe Biden released a video statement saying, “Every worker should have a free and fair choice to join a union,” which “should be made without intimidation or threats by employers.”

The election, which ends on March 29, would determine if the more than 5,000 warehouse workers will join the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. None of Amazon’s 800,000 employees in the U.S. are currently unionized.

Join us at 7pm ET on Wednesday March 31 APWU Live with President Dimondstein

 



Next Wednesday, March 31, we are coming together as APWU members to discuss the many important issues we are facing today. We hope you can join us.

 

Yesterday, the Postmaster General released his 10 year plan for the U.S. Postal Service. You can read our statement here.

 

This livestream will be one of our first opportunities to come together and talk about the plan and our response.

 

But, as you know, there is a lot more happening than the Postmaster General's plan. After months of work, we have secured Federal leave for COVID-related absences at the Postal Service, the COVID MOUs have been renewed, Congress is considering important legislation for the Post Office, and the countdown continues for bargaining on our national Collective Bargaining Agreement. 

 

Join us next Wednesday.

 

There's a lot to discuss - you can submit your questions and get a reminder for the stream here.

 

In union solidarity,

 

The American Postal Workers Union

ATU Local 689 Joins Other Groups at Rally to Support Amazon Workers in Alabama Fighting for a Union

 



Mike Golash put out the call for ATU members to join other groups holding a rally outside of the P Street Whole Foods in DC in support of Amazon workers fighting for a union in Bessemer, Alabama. Local 689 members joined the picket line in solidarity.

 

Amazon workers at the Bessemer facility have until the end of the month to return their ballots. Amazon was recently caught red-handed breaking labor laws by placing a post office box to collect mail on the property. The National Labor Relations Board previously ruled that doing so could force workers to feel pressured to vote a certain way and that the bosses might know how they were voting. The Board ruled against Amazon's request for a postal box only to have them immediately ignore the order and go to the USPS and install one anyways. This is just another example of why we need the PRO Act to help strengthen the NLRB's ability to punish companies that break labor laws.

 

Senator Bernie Sanders partnered with the AFL-CIO and RWDSU to hold a rally in Alabama supporting the campaign. To watch that video click on this link.

 

If workers in Alabama win, it may spark a wave of unionizing campaigns at Amazon facilities across the country. We need to be ready either way!  

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Thanks to everyone who supported the campaign for a recall conference of the Labour Party

 


Thanks to everyone who supported the campaign for a recall conference of the Labour Party. Unfortunately the right-wing dominated Labour NEC refused to even discuss this matter, showing their contempt for the membership and for party democracy.

Nevertheless, the campaign served to rally and inspire members - particularly the fiery contribution by Labour4Clause4 campaign coordinator Rob Sewell at the Reclaim Democracy rally earlier this month. You can see Rob's speech, and those of all the other great speakers, in this video.

Moving forwards, we are now looking towards the Labour annual conference in September, where there will be a fight to defend the left-wing programme and policies brought in under Jeremy Corbyn's leadership.

In this respect, Momentum are currently organising 'policy primaries', giving members the chance to decide what radical policies Momentum will campaign for at this year's Labour conference.

Along with two local Momentum groups in London and the North East, Labour4Clause4 have submitted a motion calling on Labour to Save Our NHS with Socialist Policies!

If you're a Momentum member, please visit my.peoplesmomentum.com right away, and vote for our motion committing Labour to:
  • Reverse all privatisation and outsourcing
  • Nationalise Big Pharma
  • Bring in a socialist economic plan to fund proper lifelong healthcare for all
The battle for socialist policies also continues on the trade union front. Motions calling on Labour to bring in a socialist Clause 4 are on the agenda at the upcoming trade union conferences for USDAW (25-26 April) and Unite (in July).

If you're a delegate to either of these online conferences and would like to help support the campaign for a socialist Clause 4, please get in touch.

---------------------------------------------------------

E-mail: contact@labour4clause4.com
Phone: 07803 007 758

Facebook: Labour4Clause4
Twitter: Labour4Clause4
Website: labour4clause4.com

Saturday, March 20, 2021

Request for Public Comment on the Draft Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Study Goals & Priorities

 



LOS ANGELES – On March 18, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health’s Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Research Study team released a set of draft Health Study Goals and Priorities for public review and comment. As required by the Court settlement with the Southern California Gas Company, the draft Goals and Priorities were determined by the Health Study’s Scientific Oversight Committee (SOC) and reflect input gathered from a series of community engagements with people who lived near and experienced the Aliso Canyon disaster.

 

Independent third-party researchers will conduct the Health Study. Study types and research methods will be proposed by independent third-party researchers through a competitive bid process following the release of a Request for Proposals (RFP) later this year.

 

The public comment period will be open for 30 days and close on Friday, April 16, 2021, at 5:00 p.m. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (Public Health) and the SOC requests and encourages the public, especially people living and working in the San Fernando Valley’s northwestern neighborhoods, to review and provide comments on the detailed goals and priorities. All public comments will be considered when finalizing the Health Study Goals and Priorities.

 

Interested members of the public may submit their comments on the draft Health Study Goals and Priorities no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 16, 2021. Comments may be submitted through an online form or by email.

 

The draft Health Study Goals and Priorities and instructions for submitting comments are available for download and review at

http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/eh/docs/healthresearch/goal-priorities-draft-public-review.pdf.

 

Background

In October 2015, the largest gas blowout in the history of the United States began at the Southern California Gas (SoCal Gas) Company’s Aliso Canyon gas storage facility. An estimated total of 109,000 metric tons of methane flowed uncontrolled from Aliso Canyon Well SS-25. It was successfully sealed, on February 15, 2016. Many residents experienced physical and emotional symptoms during the blowout and after the well was sealed, and some continue to report symptoms to this day.

 

In February 2019, a legal settlement was approved by a Los Angeles County Superior Court requiring SoCal Gas to pay $25 million for a study of short- and long-term health impacts. A competitive Request for Proposals (RFP) process will be launched in late Spring/Early Summer of 2021 to recruit an independent research team to lead the Health Study.

 

The SOC, a group of independent national and subject matter experts and public agency representatives lending expertise to the Health Study program, will be developing important components of the RFP. One of the key elements of the RFP will be the final Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Study Goals and Priorities. Developed with input received from the affected community through a variety of engagement efforts, these draft Goals and Priorities identify key areas the Health Study should address.

 

Over the past two years, Public Health has engaged extensively with the impacted communities and has collected a wealth of input including: what residents would like to see studied, what their health concerns were and may continue to be, and what the lingering symptoms following the blowout are. The SOC is using this input to shape and inform the Health Study development process, including determining the specific Health Study goals, which are now posted online for public review and comment.

 

For more information on the Health Study, visit http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/eh/healthresearch/.

Friday, March 19, 2021

ATU Local 689 Fights for Transit Workers in Loudoun County!

 



Loudoun County Transit runs a few different transportation services for its residents, including commuter lines into DC and paratransit. The commuter service transit workers are organized with Amalgamated Transit Union and are employees of Transdev. The county had another facility operated by MV Transportation that ran the paratransit program and those workers were unrepresented by a union. 

 

On April 1st, Loudoun County's transportation contracts exchange hands and a new private contractor takes over both services, Keolis Transit. Since winning the $100 million contract, Keolis Transit has threatened to not recognize the union, cut retirement benefits, cut worker hours, and require everyone to re-apply for their jobs. The company then tried to mess with their seniority that the workers there had earned. ATU has a successorship clause at the property but this hasn't stopped Keolis. ATU is working hard to get the workers there organized and ready to take action while also applying pressure on the company from the outside! 

 

Loudoun County Transit workers wrote up a petition demanding that Keolis treat them with respect and respect the collective bargaining agreement they already had in place. They marched on the manager's office and delivered the letter. Workers also banded together and put flyers supporting the union in their cars. Letters of support have come in from elected officials demanding that they be treated with respect. It's clear to Keolis that the transit workers of Loudoun County can't be bossed around.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

CWA Statement on Atlanta Murders and Surge in Anti-Asian Hate Crimes

 



Our entire CWA family is anguished by the horrific murder of eight people in Atlanta, Ga., on Tuesday, including six Asian American women. Our condolences go out to the victims and their families.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, Asian American communities around the country have been targeted by groups and individuals who are driven by white supremacist and misogynistic beliefs and encouraged by right-wing politicians and media figures. The tragedy in Atlanta occurred in a climate of anti-Asian hate and scapegoating.

This is not the first time in our country’s history these communities have been subject to racial and ethnic hatred. From the Chinese Exclusion Act to Japanese Internment to targeted hate crimes, mass shootings and the disproportionate impact of incarcerations and deportations on Asian communities, anti-Asian racism has been a reoccurring injustice in our country’s history.

Despite this, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have continued to believe in the promise of America and have been leaders in movements, including the labor movement, dedicated to realizing that promise. Most recently, Asian American frontline workers have put their lives at risk to serve their communities during the COVID-19 pandemic, even as they faced the additional burden of racist attacks.

We cannot allow these attacks to continue. As union members and activists, we have the responsibility to prevent the spread of violence and hate and stand in solidarity with Asian American communities. As we mourn those who were lost to violence, we continue our efforts to build an anti-racist union so that we can stand united against the true enemies of the working class.

AFL-CIO Report: The PRO Act doesn’t stop anyone from doing freelance work, whether they organize or not.

 





Bottom Line Upfront

The PRO Act doesn’t stop anyone from doing freelance work. It protects freelancers’ rights to organize and collectively bargain, if they choose to.

Hi Joseph,

 

PRO Act opponents are waging a misinformation campaign around freelance work and the ABC test. We’re going to explain what the ABC test is and how the PRO Act affects freelancers.

 

The PRO Act is the most important piece of worker empowerment legislation since the Great Depression. We want to make sure everyone understands what’s in the bill and why we need it. Then you can help us meet opponents’ attacks head-on.

 

In Solidarity,

 

Team AFL-CIO

I hear that the PRO Act is just like California’s A.B. 5 and would cause freelance journalists and creative professionals to lose work. Is this true?

No. The only way the PRO Act affects freelance journalists and creative professionals is allowing them to join a union and collectively bargain.

 

If they don’t want to organize, they don’t have to.

 

The PRO Act doesn’t stop anyone from doing freelance work, whether they organize or not.

 

What is the ABC test?

It’s called the ABC test because it’s a set of three criteria, laid out as Section A, Section B and Section C.

 

The three criteria are:

  1. Is the worker independent from the business’ control?
  2. Is the worker doing work the business doesn’t normally do?
  3. Is the worker a separate business entity from the employer?

 

Why does the PRO Act have the ABC test?

In the PRO Act, the ABC test is used to determine who qualifies for protection under federal law when they choose to organize a union or bargain collectively. If someone meets all three criteria, they’re protected under federal law.

 

It is a critical part of the bill because employers often try to stop their workers from organizing by falsely claiming the workers are independent contractors. The ABC test would protect the rights of those workers.

 

So is it the same as California’s A.B. 5?

No. A.B. 5 in California redefines who is considered an employee under a broad range of state employment laws.

 

The PRO Act does not touch any of those laws. The PRO Act only affects the federal law that governs private sector unions.

 

I’m a freelancer. Will the PRO Act force my clients to hire me as a W-2 employee?

No. The PRO Act does not affect any of the laws that typically determine whether someone is hired as a W-2 employee.

 

It doesn’t affect tax law, minimum wage, overtime, unemployment insurance, workers’ compensation, etc.

 

Does the PRO Act outlaw independent contracting or gig work? Does it make freelancing illegal?

No. Nothing in the PRO Act outlaws any kind of work arrangement.

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Unemployment Grows in Colombia

 

The unemployed population climbed to 4.1 million people, with women being the most affected. 

Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) informed that the unemployment rate stood at 17.3 percent in January, representing an increase of 4.3 percentage points compared to the same month last year. 

Between January 2020 and January 2021, the employed population dropped from 21.5 million to 19.9 million, which represented a reduction of -7.3 percent. 

The active population grew by 1.5 million to 15.9 million while the unemployed population went from 3.2 million to 4.1 million.

Manufacturing, accommodation, food service activities, arts, and entertainment were the hardest hit sectors by job loss.

The gender labor gap deepened, particularly in the 25-54 age range. The unemployment rate for men stood at 13.4 percent and 22.7 percent in the case of women.

The country's 13 major cities concentrated 80 percent of the employment contraction. Bogota experienced a 55.8 percent of job decline with almost one million unemployed people. 

DANE director Juan Oviedo explained that labor force reduction in the period was almost entirely due to company closures and the measures to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Unemployed-Grows-in-Colombia-20210301-0011.html?utm_source=planisys&utm_medium=NewsletterIngles&utm_campaign=NewsletterIngles&utm_content=8