Amazon.com Inc. is seeking to postpone a unionization vote at a warehouse in Alabama and is asking federal labor authorities to reconsider a decision to allow mail-in voting due to the pandemic.

The company Thursday filed an appeal to a decision by the National Labor Relations Board, which is allowing a mail-in process due to Covid-19 risks instead of the in-person elections that are typical in such unionization votes.

The ballots are set to be mailed to about 6,000 workers associated with its Bessemer, Ala. facility on Feb. 8. In its petition, Amazon said the board’s decision was flawed in part because it had not adequately defined an outbreak, among other objections.

Workers are seeking representation from the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. A majority of ballots cast would have to choose unionization to gain representation. Hourly Amazon workers have never previously formed or joined a union in the U.S.

A spokeswoman for the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union declined to comment. Amazon declined to comment on its appeal but has said it believes the best approach to an election would be conducting it in person, saying it “provided the NLRB with a safe, confidential and convenient proposal for associates to vote on-site, which is in the best interest of all parties—associate convenience, vote fidelity and timeliness of vote count.”

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Canadian Pacific Declines to Increase Offer for Kansas City Southern

Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. said Thursday it won’t increase its takeover offer…

Coinbase to pay $100 million to resolve New York investigation of due-diligence lapses

Popular cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase announced an agreement Wednesday to pay $50 million…

Biden administration to remove Houthis from terrorist list, reversing another Trump policy

President Joe Biden’s administration will remove the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen…

Sen. Coons announces positive Covid test as Washington confronts omicron surge

WASHINGTON — Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., announced Thursday that he tested positive…

Amazon.com Inc. is seeking to postpone a unionization vote at a warehouse in Alabama and is asking federal labor authorities to reconsider a decision to allow mail-in voting due to the pandemic.

The company Thursday filed an appeal to a decision by the National Labor Relations Board, which is allowing a mail-in process due to Covid-19 risks instead of the in-person elections that are typical in such unionization votes.

The ballots are set to be mailed to about 6,000 workers associated with its Bessemer, Ala. facility on Feb. 8. In its petition, Amazon said the board’s decision was flawed in part because it had not adequately defined an outbreak, among other objections.

Workers are seeking representation from the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. A majority of ballots cast would have to choose unionization to gain representation. Hourly Amazon workers have never previously formed or joined a union in the U.S.

A spokeswoman for the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union declined to comment. Amazon declined to comment on its appeal but has said it believes the best approach to an election would be conducting it in person, saying it “provided the NLRB with a safe, confidential and convenient proposal for associates to vote on-site, which is in the best interest of all parties—associate convenience, vote fidelity and timeliness of vote count.”

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Census settlement: House seat numbers can’t be released before next week

The numbers used for deciding how many congressional seats each state gets…

Kellyanne and George Conway announce divorce

Kellyanne Conway, who served as a top adviser to former President Donald…

Trump is ‘likely’ to attend his civil fraud trial Thursday

Former President Donald Trump will “likely” attend the trial in the $250…

Construction worker accused of being on drugs died of heatstroke while working in hot Texas sun, lawsuit says

A construction worker in Texas, initially accused of being on drugs before…