Amazon Fires More Than Six Managers—Some Involved With Union Efforts—At Staten Island Facility, Report Claims

Topline

Amazon on Thursday fired more than six senior managers at its Staten Island JFK8 warehouse, the New York Times reported on Friday, a month after the fulfillment center voted to unionize in what marked the first major victory for the company’s labor movement.

Key Facts

Citing four anonymous current and former employees, the Times reported managers and others who worked at the warehouse saw the firings as retaliation for the facility’s vote to unionize, noting the layoffs occurred outside the company’s standard employee review cycle.

Amazon told the managers—many of whom were involved in the unionization efforts—they were being fired because of an “organizational change,” despite some of the employees recently receiving positive reviews, sources said, according to the Times.

Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel told Forbes the company decided to make management changes after evaluating “operations and leadership” at the facility, adding Amazon believed it was important to “take time to review” whether it was “doing the best” it could for its team.

The Amazon Labor Union did not respond to a request for comment from Forbes.

Key Background

The news comes a month after Amazon Labor Union—a group founded by former and current Amazon workers pushing for better safety conditions, higher pay and longer breaks, among other demands—scored a major victory when workers voted 2,654 to 2,131 to unionize at Amazon’s largest warehouse in Staten Island called JFK8. Amazon—which has long opposed efforts to unionize—filed an objection to the vote shortly after with the National Labor Relations Board, claiming union organizers forced workers to vote yes and asking for a redo. The union suffered a setback this week when workers at the company’s smaller sorting center across the street voted 618 to 380 against unionization. Amazon reportedly attempted to dissuade workers in the lead up to the vote at both facilities by holding mandatory meetings to try to discourage workers from voting in favor of unionization. Several of the senior managers Amazon fired this week were veterans of the company, the Times reported.

Tangent

Official results are still up in the air from another union election at an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama. The do-over election took place in March, with an initial count showing 53% of eligible workers voting against unionization, though hundreds of contested ballots have yet to be resolved and both Amazon and labor organizers have filed objections.

Further Reading

Amazon Abruptly Fires Senior Managers Tied to Unionized Warehouse (New York Times)

Amazon Workers Reject Union Bid At Second NY Facility (Forbes)

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/madelinehalpert/2022/05/06/amazon-fires-more-than-six-managers-some-involved-with-union-efforts-at-staten-island-facility-report-claims/