'Old-school union busting': how US corporations are quashing the new wave of organizing
US corporations have mounted a fierce counterattack against the union drives at Starbucks, Amazon and other companies, and in response, federal officials are working overtime to crack down on those corporations illegal anti-union tactics maneuvers that labor leaders fear could significantly drain the momentum behind todays surge of unionization.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), the federal agency that polices labor-management relations, has accused Starbucks and Amazon of a slew of illegal anti-union practices, among them firing many workers in retaliation for backing a union. Nonetheless, many workplace experts question whether the NLRBs efforts, no matter how vigorous, can assure that workers have a fair shot at unionizing.
Were seeing the same situation over and over workers going up against billionaires and billion-dollar companies with an endless amount of resources while our labor laws are far too weak, said Michelle Eisen, a barista in Buffalo who helped lead the early unionization efforts of Starbucks in that city. Were all fighting for the same thing against different companies. Were all in the same boat. No one denies that there are a lot of obstacles to overcome.
The labor board is doing its job with the limited resources it has, she added. But Starbucks continues to break the law flagrantly. The union asserts that Starbucks has engaged in illegal retaliation by firing 150 pro-union baristas and closing a dozen recently unionized stores.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/old-school-union-busting-how-us-corporations-are-quashing-the-new-wave-of-organizing/ar-AA17W4Pe