Subject: The Contagious New Toolbox Of Union Organizing Strategies: LRI INK

April 14, 2022

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The Contagious New Toolbox Of Union Organizing Strategies

One only needs to witness the all-time low level of union membership in 2021, including the falling membership of the Teamsters, to know that incoming president Sean O’Brien will work hard to drum up organizing drives. In 2022 and beyond, he and other union chiefs continue to dig into a brand new arsenal of strategies, which have (according to the NLRB) led to a 57% increase in election petitions within six months.

 

Employers should be aware, too, that this increased union activity is landing in some unexpected places. The CODE-CWA initiative, for example, recently launched an aggressive new mission to organize tech workers of all stripes, as opposed to an old-school union focus on manufacturing and the like. The food and retail industries also continue to see worker organization, proving that no industry is immune to infiltration.

 

This includes the previously invulnerable Starbucks, which sprung a leak in the dike that’s now a flood. The coffeehouse giant has seen more than 100 cafes organize with a total of 16 voting to unionize so far. Other coffeehouse workers (including Collectivo) followed suit, and Heine Brothers’ workers (at 15 out of 18 cafes) wish to organize, too. And the targeting of Starbucks isn’t happening on an island: these tactics are spreading to other industries, where they’re motivating workers to climb onboard.

 

When a Seattle cafe voted to organize, for example, employees at a nearby thrift store (Crossroads Trading Co.) followed suit. And over at Amazon, workers at Staten Island warehouse JFK8 voted to organize (although they’re not NLRB-certified yet) with an Alabama warehouse vote still to be determined. The organization of these seemingly impervious giants can likely be attributed to the following organizing strategies, which are aided by the Biden administration’s union-friendly NLRB:

  • Unions edged into targeting so-called “progressive” employers with more inherently “woke” policies. That includes younger workers at Starbucks (which already, pre-organizing, handed out free college tuition to employees) and media outlets like the New York Times (which recently saw tech workers vote in favor of a union) that are overall more liberal and predisposed to be union-friendly;

  • An alleged weed-for-votes scheme certainly didn’t hurt the union cause when it came to organizing a warehouse for one ecommerce juggernaut. Doling out cannabis is a wild strategy if there ever was one, but one union lawyer likened it to “distributing free t-shirts” while questioning how this could have possibly affected election results. The company duly questioned the union’s methods;

  • Pandemic times and social distancing also caused remote work to flourish, which led unions to take to the Internet (with handy hashtags) to reach an audience;

  • Unions take full advantage of social media, given that it’s a cheaper, stealthier, more accessible, and an almost instantaneous mode of spreading the word compared to, say, bulletin board flyers or chatting at the water cooler;

As we’ve already mentioned, geographical proximity to union-activity breakouts (as is the case with the Seattle thrift store near an organized Starbucks) can be a motivating factor in allowing union contagion to spread. LRI can help you find out where union activity surfaces near your company’s U.S. locations. For information on this subject, reach out to Erin Lormer at 1-800-888-9115.

Links

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Union Bailout

 

NLRB GC To Change Employer Right To Speak About Unionization https://lri.link/3LYK6kZ

 

A Top Federal Labor Official Declares War On Employer 'Captive Audience' Meetings

https://lri.link/3KuUAYZ

 

Employers Should Take Note Of Recent Union Organizing Activities

https://lri.link/3urmfnW

 

The Employee Rights Act Puts American Workers, Not Union Bosses, in the Driver’s Seat

https://lri.link/3E6UYKD

 

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Organizing

 

Union Election Petitions Surge As U.S. workers Organize

https://lri.link/3JnJyTP

 

Union Election Petitions In U.S. Up 57% In Last Six Months, NLRB Says

https://lri.link/3JAm1zq

 

Amazon Wants Do Over Of Union Vote After Accusing NLRB Of Bungling Election

https://lri.link/38HS0AT

 

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Union Corruption

 

Chicago-Area Firefighters Kick Out Unwanted SEIU Officials 

https://lri.link/3KyDlGi

 

Feds Must Face Constitutional Suit Over Teamsters Pension Cut

https://lri.link/37ErCqO

 

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Manufacturing

 

If The UAW Doesn’t Change, It’s Toast

https://lri.link/3E12Bm7

 

Concrete Deliveries Resume To West Seattle Bridge As Worker Strike Continues

https://lri.link/3xinvMe

 

Teamsters Say They Will End Seattle-Area Concrete Strike, But Still No Deal With Employers

https://lri.link/3O1tTgr

 

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Healthcare

 

Over 4,000 Stanford, Packard Nurses Greenlight Strike

https://lri.link/3O2rPVF

 

Workers At Cedars-Sinai, Stanford Health And Sutter Health Eye Labor Strikes

https://lri.link/3E2AeE3

 

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Minimum Rising

 

Airport Workers Ramp Up Pressure For A Living Wage And Union Rights

https://lri.link/3E3IUKb


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Labor Around The World

 

Significant Labour Friendly Changes Announced in British Columbia

https://lri.link/3rhwNE8

 

Mexico Labor Reform In Progress But Needs ‘Tremendous’ Work, U.S. Official Says

https://lri.link/3uxCno9


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About Labor Relations Institute

LRI exists to help our clients thrive and become extraordinary workplaces. We improve the lives of working people by strengthening relationships with their leaders and each other. For over 41 years LRI has led the labor and employee relations industry, driven by our core values and our proven process, the LRI Way.

 

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