U.S.: Worker says Amazon hung anti-union signs in bathroom stalls

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“No place was off limits,” said warehouse employee Jennifer Bates, who testified at a Washington hearing on income inequality

When Amazon found out that its workers were trying to form a union, the company put up signs across the warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, including in bathroom stalls, a worker said.

“No place was off limits,” said warehouse employee Jennifer Bates, who testified at a Washington hearing on income inequality.

Ms. Bates, who supports the unionising effort, described on March 17 how Amazon is pushing back against the biggest unionisation efforts at the company since its founding as an online bookstore in 1995.

Besides signs, she said Amazon sends messages to workers’ phones and forces employees to attend meetings a couple of times a week that can go on for nearly an hour.

“The company would just hammer on different reasons why the union was bad for us,” Ms. Bates said. “If someone spoke up and disagreed with what the company was saying, they would just shut the meeting down.” The stakes are high for Amazon. If organisers succeed in Bessemer, it could set off a chain reaction across Amazon’s operations nationwide, with more workers rising up and demanding better working conditions.

Meanwhile, labour advocates are hoping a win at the Alabama facility could help push the labour movement in the South, which hasn’t been hospitable to organised labour.

But organisers face an uphill battle. Amazon, the second-largest private employer in the country, has a history of crushing unionising efforts at its warehouses and its Whole Foods grocery stores.

On March 17, Amazon.com Inc. didn’t deny that it hung signs in bathrooms or that it held mandatory meetings. Instead it said in a statement that it is following all National Labour Relations Board rules and guidelines in Alabama and that it respects employees’ right to form, join or not join a labour union.

The Seattle-based company also said it takes Ms. Bates’s feedback seriously, but doesn’t believe her comments represent other employees.

“We encourage people to speak with the hundreds of thousands of Amazon employees who love their jobs, earn at least $15 an hour, receive comprehensive healthcare and paid leave benefits,” the company said in a statement.

The nearly 6,000 workers at the Bessemer warehouse have until the end of March to vote on whether they want to unionise.

Big names have come out in support of the unionisation efforts, including Sen. Bernie Sanders, the independent from Vermont, and Stacey Abrams, the one-time Democratic candidate for Georgia governor who has become a leading voice on voting rights. Last week, Sen. Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, backed organisers as did Black Lives Matter. Most of the workers in the warehouse are Black, according to organisers.

Earlier this month, President Joe Biden released a two-minute video saying workers in Alabama and around the country had the right to unionise without intimidation from their companies, but he didn’t mention Amazon directly.

Ms. Bates, who testified virtually in the hearing on March 17 before the Senate Budget Committee, called working at the warehouse “gruelling” because of all the walking she has to do in the facility, which is the size of 14 football fields. Ms. Bates said she hoped the union would set more break times, force Amazon to treat workers with respect and pay more than the $15 an hour minimum the company currently pays.

“All we want is to make Amazon a better place to work. Yet Amazon is acting like they are under attack,” Ms. Bates said. “Maybe if they spent less time and money trying to stop the union they would hear what we are saying.”

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Joe Biden Hopes America to Be Back to Normal by This Time Next Year

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President Joe Biden on Tuesday said he hopes that the United States, the country hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic, would be normal by the same time next year. “When do I think things will get back to normal? I’ve been cautioned not to give an answer to that because we don’t know for sure. But my hope is, by this time next year, we’re going to be back to normal,” Biden told reporters at the White House.

But a lot is yet to be done, he said. “But again, it depends upon if people continue to be smart and understand that we still can have significant losses. There’s a lot we have to do yet,” Biden said.

The United States has lost 511,839 lives so far due to COVID-19. Biden on Tuesday announced measures to increase the production of COVID-19 vaccines and accelerate process of vaccinating Americans.

“We’re increasing the places where people can get vaccinated. We’ve sent millions of vaccines to over 7,000 pharmacies to make it easier for folks to get their COVID-19 vaccine shot like they would their flu shot,” he said. “The federal government is also working with states to set up hundreds of mass vaccination centres in places like stadiums, community centres, parking lots that vaccinate thousands of people per day. My wife Jill and I just visited one in Houston last week. It’s incredible,” Biden said.

So far three vaccines have received emergency use authorization. “With this increased production of three safe and effective vaccines, we have an opportunity to help address the urgent national need more quickly and getting our schools back open safely.

“We should all be encouraged by this news of a third safe and highly effective COVID-19 vaccine. The more people who get vaccinated, the faster we’re going to overcome this virus and get back to our loved ones, get our economy back on track, and start to move back to normal,” he said. “One of my first goals when I got into office was to say that there will be 100 million vaccination shots administered in my first 100 days in office. We’ve got halfway to that goal in 37 days, and I feel confident we’ll make it all the way,” he said.

“We have a long way to go, but, we’re going to use every resource of the federal government to make it happen,” he added. Biden said this is a national imperative that they get the kids back into the classroom safely and as soon as possible.

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Joe Biden Moves to Reengage With Palestinians After Israel Focus

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The Biden administration is moving slowly but surely toward reengaging with the Palestinians after a near total absence of official contact during former President Donald Trumps four years in office.

As American officials plan steps to restore direct ties with the Palestinian leadership, Bidens national security team is taking steps to restore relations that had been severed while Trump pursued a Mideast policy focused largely around Israel, America’s closest partner in the region.

On Tuesday, for the second time in two days, Biden’s administration categorically embraced a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, something that Trump had been purposefully vague about while slashing aid to the Palestinians and taking steps to support Israels claims to land that the Palestinians want for an independent state.

The State Department said Tuesday that a U.S. delegation attended a meeting of a Norwegian-run committee that serves as a clearinghouse for assistance to the Palestinians. Although little-known outside foreign policy circles, the so-called Ad Hoc Liaison Committee has been influential in the peace process since Israel and the Palestinians signed the Oslo Accords in 1993.

During the discussion, the United States reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to advancing prosperity, security, and freedom for both Israelis and Palestinians and to preserve the prospects of a negotiated two-state solution in which Israel lives in peace and security alongside a viable Palestinian state, the State Department said in a statement.

The United States underscored the commitment to supporting economic and humanitarian assistance and the need to see progress on outstanding projects that will improve the lives of the Palestinian people, while urging all parties to avoid unilateral steps that make a two-state solution more difficult to achieve, it said.

U.S. participation in the meeting followed a Monday call between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Israels foreign minister in which Blinken stressed that the new U.S. administration unambiguously supports a two-state solution. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is close to Trump, has eschewed the two-state solution.

Biden spoke to Netanyahu last week for the first time as president after a delay that many found suspicious and suggestive of a major realignment in U.S. policy. Blinken, however, has spoken to Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi twice amid ongoing concern in Israel about Biden’s intentions in the region, particularly his desire to reenter the Iran nuclear deal.

In Monday’s call, Blinken emphasized the Biden administrations belief that the two-state solution is the best way to ensure Israels future as a Jewish and democratic state, living in peace alongside a viable and democratic Palestinian state, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said.

The Trump administration had presented its own version of a two-state peace plan, though it would have required significant Palestinian concessions on territory and sovereignty.

The Palestinians, however, rejected it out of hand and accused the U.S. of no longer being an honest peace broker after Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, moved the U.S. embassy to the city from Tel Aviv, cut off aid to the Palestinian Authority, closed the Palestinian diplomatic mission in Washington and rescinded a long-standing legal opinion that Israeli settlement activity is illegitimate under international law.



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