Jason Vazquez is a staff attorney at the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 2023. His writing on this blog reflects his personal views and should not be attributed to the Teamsters.
In an article published yesterday, the New York Times aims to expose “the human cost of Amazon’s employment machine.” Based on interviews with hundreds of current and former Amazon warehouse workers, the piece describes the company’s intense fixation on productivity and efficiency and spotlights its dystopian reliance on robotics, metrics, and algorithmic systems to carefully monitor and track nearly every facet of its employees’ work lives.
The piece details that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos devised a business model that relies systematically on employee churn — while Amazon has hired hundreds of thousands of employees in recent years, most have been cycled out of its warehouses nearly as quickly as their replacements can be supplied. In fact, the article reveals that Amazon depletes labor markets with such intensity that its management team has begun expressing concern that it may struggle to secure enough labor to continue to sustain its sprawling operations in wide swaths of the country.
In more uplifting news, the organizing surge spurred by the precarity and dislocation the pandemic unleashed continues to metastasize across a wide range of industries. Hundreds of staffers at Oxford University Press in New York City announced this morning that they have joined the NewsGuild. Dozens of workers at software firm Mapbox announced yesterday that nearly two-thirds of the company’s U.S. employees have signed cards to join the CWA. And the country’s first Black-owned distillery, located in Minneapolis, voluntarily recognized its employees’ independent union on Monday.
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March 5
Colorado judge grants AFSCME’s motion to intervene to defend Colorado’s county employee collective bargaining law; Arizona proposes constitutional amendment to ban teachers unions’ use public resources; NLRB unlikely to use rulemaking to overturn precedent.
March 4
The NLRB and Ex-Cell-O; top aides to Labor Secretary resign; attacks on the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service
March 3
Texas dismantles contracting program for minorities; NextEra settles ERISA lawsuit; Chipotle beats an age discrimination suit.
March 2
Block lays off over 4,000 workers; H-1B fee data is revealed.
March 1
The NLRB officially rescinds the Biden-era standard for determining joint-employer status; the DOL proposes a rule that would rescind the Biden-era standard for determining independent contractor status; and Walmart pays $100 million for deceiving delivery drivers regarding wages and tips.
February 27
The Ninth Circuit allows Trump to dismantle certain government unions based on national security concerns; and the DOL set to focus enforcement on firms with “outsized market power.”