NYSUT is now accepting gifts for its members from Amazon, an anti-worker, anti-union company. This is a bit strange to me.
From the UK:
Amazon
warehouse workers are forced to pee in bottles or forego their bathroom breaks
entirely because fulfillment demands are too high, according to journalist
James Bloodworth, who went undercover as an Amazon worker for his book, Hired: Six Months Undercover in Low-Wage Britain. Targets
have reportedly increased exponentially, workers say in a new
survey revealed over the weekend, and as result, they feel pressured
and stressed to meet the new goals.
Workers who
pick up products for delivery at a warehouse in Staffordshire, UK use bottles
instead of the actual toilet, which is located too far away, Bloodworth
reported.
Here is an excerpt from a story from the Atlantic of a driver who worked Flex delivery for Amazon in the US.
There I was,
wearing a bright-yellow safety vest and working for Amazon Flex, a program in
which the e-commerce giant pays regular people to deliver packages from their
own vehicles for $18 to $25 an hour, before expenses. I was racing to make the
deliveries before I got a ticket—there are few places for drivers without
commercial vehicles to park in downtown San Francisco during the day—and also
battling a growing rage as I lugged parcels to offices of tech companies that
offered free food and impressive salaries to their employees, who seemed to
spend their days ordering stuff online. Technology was allowing these people a
good life, but it was just making me stressed and cranky.
“NOT. A.
GOOD. DEAL,” I scrawled in my notebook, after having walked down nine flights
of stairs, sick of waiting for a freight elevator that may or may not have been
broken, and returned to my car for another armful of packages.
Welcome to
the future of package delivery. As people shop more online, companies like
Amazon are turning to independent contractors—essentially anyone with a car—to
drop parcels at homes and businesses. Flex is necessary because Amazon is
growing so quickly—the company shipped 5 billion Prime items last year—that it
can’t just rely on FedEx, UPS, and the Postal Service. Flex takes care of “last
mile” deliveries, the most complicated part of getting goods from where they’re
made to your doorstep. It also allows Amazon to meet increases in demand during
the holiday season, Prime Day, and other busy times of the year, a spokeswoman
told me in an email.
But Flex
operates year-round, not just during the holiday season, which suggests there’s
another reason for it: It’s cheap. As the larger trucking industry has discovered over
the past decade, using independent contractors rather than unionized drivers
saves money, because so many expenses are borne by the drivers, rather than the
company.
Amazon has
rolled out Flex in more than 50 cities, including New York; Indianapolis,
Indiana; and Memphis, Tennessee. The company doesn’t share information about
how many drivers it has, but one Seattle economist calculated that 11,262
individuals drove for Flex in California between October 2016 and March 2017,
based on information Amazon shared with him to help the company defend a
lawsuit about Flex drivers.
On the
surface, these jobs, like many others in the gig economy, seem like a good
deal. But Flex workers get no health insurance or pension, and are not
guaranteed a certain number of hours or shifts a week. They are not covered by
basic labor protections like minimum wage and overtime pay, and they don’t get
unemployment benefits if they suddenly can’t work anymore. And when workers
calculate how much they’re pulling in on a daily basis, they often don’t
account for the expenses that they’ll incur doing these jobs. “A lot of these
gig-type services essentially rely on people not doing the math on what it
actually costs you,” Sucharita Kodali, a Forrester analyst who covers
e-commerce, told me.
One Amazon
Flex driver in Cleveland, Chris Miller, 63, told me that though he makes $18 an
hour, he spends about 40 cents per mile he drives on expenses like gas and car
repairs. He bought his car, used, with 40,000 miles on it. It now has 140,000,
after driving for Flex for seven months, and Uber and Lyft before that. That
means he’s incurred about $40,000 in expenses—things he didn’t think about
initially, like changing the oil more frequently and replacing headlights and
taillights. He made slightly less than $10 an hour driving for Uber, he told
me, once he factored in these expenses; Flex pays a bit better.
A little of Amazon's anti-union record from 2014 is here.
Currently, Amazon's tactics are a big issue in the debate over the UPS unionized worker contract proposal which would create a lower tiered classification of UPS drivers in part due to competition from Amazon's new Flex delivery service.
Here is an excerpt from a piece from Huff Post on the discussion within the UPS Teamsters who are debating their contract proposal from UPS:
As parcel
delivery booms, plenty of delivery companies are willing to undercut
traditional operators like UPS and FedEx. Amazon, for one, relies on
little-known, non-union couriers that require drivers to deliver
out of their own vans for low wages and no benefits. The company is also
expanding its use of Amazon Flex, a delivery service that, like Uber, relies
on independent contractors with personal vehicles. These drivers take on
all the costs of doing business that an employer would normally bear.
In other
words, our thirst for next-day and same-day delivery is already devaluing the
job of a driver. The question is how long the Teamsters can maintain the
relatively high industry standards they’ve set for decades through UPS
contracts.
Here is part of a story on the white collar workers at Amazon.
While shopping on Amazon may be a warm and amiable breeze, working for Amazon is an endless and excruciating violent tempest, according to a New York Times report on conditions among the company’s beleaguered white-collar employees. The Times investigation, based on interviews with scores of professional-level workers, depicts a totalizing, overbearing workplace in which members of every department are under constant surveillance and evaluation, pitted against one another in an endless lethal endurance match.
Amazon’s demands are brutal even by tech industry standards. Where working hours are concerned, 80 is the new 40. The emails roll in well past midnight, followed by the texts asking why the emails haven’t been answered. Employees are required to make constant sacrifices to the needs of the company, with weekends and vacations regularly demanded as offerings. The company shows no mercy even in extreme cases: an employee with breast cancer was told she would be fired because her “personal life” was interfering with her duties, and another who had just given birth to a stillborn child was put on a “performance improvement plan” for her insufficient job devotion. The end result has been a state of almost-universal trauma, with one person sadly relaying that “nearly every person I worked with, I saw cry at their desk.”
But one word is noticeably absent from the whole of the Times’s inquiry into the company’s insidious practices: union. None of the workers speak of the possibility of unionization, and the Times reporters don’t appear to have asked about it. While there are near-universal reports of misery and exploitation, quitting is the only remedy anyone can seem to come up with.
But one word is noticeably absent from the whole of the Times’s inquiry into the company’s insidious practices: union. None of the workers speak of the possibility of unionization, and the Times reporters don’t appear to have asked about it. While there are near-universal reports of misery and exploitation, quitting is the only remedy anyone can seem to come up with.
Maybe I would be better off not looking this gift horse in the mouth but shouldn't we be looking to do promotions with companies that are pro-union? There must be some out there.
Are NYSUT Walmart gift cards next?
I’m sending mine back. As an ATR I know what it’s like to climb nine flights of stairs, pee in a bottle and be treated like slave labor.
ReplyDelete8:13 beat me to it, though since I'm not an ATR I noticed this:
ReplyDelete" a totalizing, overbearing workplace in which members of every department are under constant surveillance and evaluation, pitted against one another in an endless lethal endurance match."
This is our white-collar job under Danielson! As someone else mentioned in the previous thread, 4 official obs, several more unofficial obs and "walkthroughs", etc.
And we don't have a union either with the UFT and NYSUT.
ReplyDeleteSo how many have dropped out?
ReplyDeleteAccording to NYSUT, 9 and they all read this blog.
ReplyDeleteThey sent this “gift” to 600,000 members, but read the fine print. Only the first 10,000 get it-NYSUT sucks at negotiating too! Amazon got the addresses and names of 600,000 NYSUT members for $250,000, less than .50 a name(that’s including the cost to mail the card).
ReplyDeleteI love Amazon, use it everyday and I bought a bunch of shares in 2005 or so under $100(though only have 25 left). I read the company reports and “wisper” blogs. Amazon knows the need to expand margins on their warehouses and delivery and have invested billions in current technologies and billions to develop technologies to cutout the human factor. The people who will suffer are the people you’re supposedly campaigning for.
I go into McDonalds now, order my meal on a screen and pick it up from one of the 5 employees working there now.
In 28 states the top employer is trucking, imagine what happens when the trucks are automated. This technology is here, my friend has an Audi A8, with sonar, auto driving, lane change, and can even move it on his phone. I didn’t know this stuff was mainstream already, I thought only Tesla had it, but we will all have it soon.
Teaching is another job facing the evolution of technology. I watch many YouTube channels on homeschooling and it has come a long way, in many ways it’s far better than what I can provide to 33 students for 45 minutes a day.
The future of low-skill, low-education jobs is never going to be good again, a union won’t save them, it will speed their decline. Look what happened to car manufacturers in America. Don’t blame Amazon for someone who probably didn’t pay attention in school, didn’t value their teachers and don’t have options.
I value anyone who works a full time job and therefore deserves a living wage. Strong unions can fight the excesses of the capitalist system. They are the one of the best ways to battle those excesses. The point about the fine print is very well taken.
ReplyDeleteJames taking about capitalism -- moving into the socialist camp?
ReplyDeleteI am okay with a tightly regulated private sector. I am disgusted with how working people are treated in too many workplaces including many NYC schools. If one works, one deserves decent conditions and a living wage. Bathroom breaks in a working toilet (not a bottle) should be a given. I believe most would agree on these points. That makes us decent human beings.
DeleteIve tried so hard, open market, good record, excellent attendance, never a bad observation, ask for very little, ignored by uft. I had to drop dues. What do I really lose?
ReplyDeleteLabor solidarity, forever....
ReplyDeleteWith member consciousness this abysmal what do we hope for?
It’s no longer a question of ‘business unionism’ but of discounts on floor tiles, accident and dismemberment insurance and Amazon gift cards.
This is how the UFT/NYSUT intend to survive Janus. And, evidently, they’re quite right to do it this way.
I didn’t get the offer but I read that NYSUT got $250,000 for doing nothing but violating the privacy of 600,000 customers, er, ‘members’ but gained sone serious “brand loyalty’ doing it.
What do we do: marvel at the ingenuity and cynicism of our leaders or cry?
I ended my dues. I don’t think I’ll lose anything and I can always rejoin if they start being a union I want to pay for.
ReplyDeleteWhen will you actually not be paying? When did you actually opt out? I read it was only a few day window in June to stop paying.
ReplyDeleteOff topic, but my ATR assignment is up on SESIS as of Sunday afternoon
ReplyDeleteWe have been abused and driven into the ground, that is why I am abysmal and dropped out.
ReplyDeleteAt 1:13 pm can you please share the website (SESIS) you accessed to retrieve your ATR assignment? I'm not having success
ReplyDeleteNote to those dropping out and thinking they can rejoin anytime:
ReplyDeleteWhen we lost dues checkoff after one of our early strikes I neglected to pay for a while and when I rejoined I had to pay back dues. So don't count on it.
Why would one want to rejoin? Serious question.
ReplyDeleteBecause we need a union.
ReplyDeleteWaiting for support
ReplyDelete- https://sesis.nycenet.edu/userlogin.aspx
Directions on on the page for SESIS
You're the best! Thank you.
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