Iman Masmoudi is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s labor news, Microsoft and the CWA announce an historic labor neutrality agreement, Dollar General workers are raising their voices, and workers at two midwest Starbucks locations have joined the CMRJB.
CWA announced yesterday that it had reached a labor neutrality agreement with Microsoft as it seeks to close its acquisition of Activision Blizzard. In return for neutrality towards unionizing, open communication among employees, a technology-supported process for choosing whether to join a union, and confidentiality and privacy, the CWA now openly supports the Microsoft-Activision acquisition, promises to facilitate union communication in a way that avoids businesses disruptions, and agrees to disagreement resolution and arbitration. Microsoft President Brad Smith said that the agreement means the company will not “put a thumb on the scale to influence or pressure” employees’ informed choices about unionization. This comes as a small group of workers at the video game company won a unionization vote just last month. They are represented by CWA. CWA has been in significant disputes at the NLRB with Activision Blizzard over the last year. Many see Microsoft’s agreement as a recognition that companies’ best interests are aligned with smooth and thriving labor relations, and hope to see more such neutrality agreements.
Dollar General, meanwhile, has maintained its stance of antagonism, as More Perfect Union Reports. Workers recently were given proxy by shareholders to attend a shareholder meeting, but the workers were not permitted to enter. The CEO reportedly “boasted” at the meeting about how well the company treats employees and how much it had invested in its workforce. Meanwhile workers protested outside that they can barely survive on Dollar General wages, with the median employee salary at $17,773. They also complain that Dollar General intentionally understaffs stores, leaving workers overworked and vulnerable to violent crime incidents. Dollar General workers have been organizing for the past several months.
Finally, Workers United CMRJB announced that two Starbucks stores joined as members yesterday, a “strong start to election week.” The stores, in St. Louis County, MO, and Denver, CO, voted to unionize 12-3 and 8-5 respectively. They were among over 100 Starbucks stores over the past weeks and months that have successfully petitioned to hold union elections. Starbucks has continued to strongly oppose the unionization movement.
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May 19
Amazon urges 11th Circuit to overturn captive-audience meeting ban; DOL scraps Biden overtime rule; SCOTUS to decide on Title IX private right of action for school employees
May 18
California Department of Justice finds conditions at ICE facilities inhumane; Second Circuit rejects race bias claim from Black and Hispanic social workers; FAA cuts air traffic controller staffing target.
May 17
UC workers avoid striking with an 11th-hour agreement; Governor Spanberger vetoes public employee collective bargaining protections; Samsung workers prepare for an 18-day strike.
May 15
SEIU 32BJ pioneers new health insurance model; LIRR unions approach a strike; and Starbucks prevails against NRLB in Fifth Circuit.
May 14
MLB begins negotiating; Westchester passes a new wage act; USDA employees sue the Agriculture Secretary.
May 13
House Republicans push for vote on the SCORE Act; Wells Fargo wins 401(k) forfeiture appeal; Georgia passes portable benefits bill.