Wall Street Journal - January 2, 2001

Unions Gain in Popularity
Among Dot-Com Workers

By NICK WINGFIELD and YOCHI J. DREAZEN
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Disenchantment among dot-com workers has given one of the most 
venerable fixtures of the Old Economy -- the labor union -- its first 
fighting chance for a foothold in the New Economy.

Enticing the unions is a corps of disaffected workers who want higher 
wages to make up for worthless options. But the wholesale collapse of 
Internet stocks has complicated matters by leaving many dot-coms 
teetering, making some of them less rewarding targets for 
organization.

An ongoing union campaign at Internet grocer Webvan Group Inc. 
illustrates the forces at work. For the past several months, the 
Foster City, Calif., company has been grappling with union efforts to 
organize delivery and warehouse workers at several of its 
distribution centers. Last year, for example, Local 1105 of the 
United Food and Commercial Workers Union tried to organize grocery 
workers at the Renton, Wash., warehouse of HomeGrocer, an Internet 
grocery company owned by Webvan. But the union gave up when it didn't 
find enough interested workers, though the Teamsters are continuing 
drives at other Webvan locations.

Now, Local 1105 says it plans to wait at least a year before taking 
another pass, since it's not sure whether unionizing Webvan, whose 
stock now trades around 47 cents amid mounting concerns about the 
viability of its business, is worth the effort. "We don't know who is 
going to be here and who is not going to be here," says Paul 
Quaintance, an organizer with Local 1105.

Bud Grebey, a Webvan spokesman, dismisses questions about the 
company's prospects, as well as the need for unions at Webvan. "Our 
employees in these facilities are well compensated and have excellent 
benefits programs," he says.

One attractive union target is Amazon.com Inc. At its home base in 
Seattle, the Internet retailer faces a drive by the Washington 
Alliance of Technology Workers, familiarly called WashTech, to 
organize 400 Amazon customer-service agents. The 1.4 million-member 
United Food and Commercial Workers, or UFCW, has also spent months 
leafleting Amazon's distribution centers, though no formal 
union-certification vote has been scheduled.

Employees and union organizers say that growing unease about job 
security, benefits, forced overtime and low pay are behind the Amazon 
campaigns. Jeremy Puma, a 25-year-old customer-service representative 
at Amazon, says stock options attracted him to the company. But with 
the decline in Amazon's share price, he says the $10 to $14 an hour 
most Amazon customer-service agents make isn't enough.

When he was hired by Amazon a year and a half ago, "everyone was 
starry-eyed" at the promise of stock-market riches, Mr. Puma says. 
"That's just not the case anymore," he adds.

Amazon executives insist that their customer-service workers are paid 
competitive wages and that their stock options give them a means to 
profit over the long term. "I think unions have an important role to 
play in society," Jeffrey Bezos, Amazon's chief executive, said 
recently. "I thinkthey're not needed at Amazon. All our employees are 
owners."

The two campaigns underscore a little-known fact: Behind the New 
Economy patina of many Internet companies are thousands of Old 
Economy workers. Exact figures are unavailable, but some labor 
experts estimate that there may be as many as 35,000 workers 
unloading trucks, assembling and packing shipments for customers at 
companies such as Amazon, Peapod Inc. and the online subsidiaries of 
giant retailers including Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and J.C. Penney Co.

"There is absolutely no difference between a warehouse or shipping 
worker for Amazon or Webvan and their counterparts at traditional 
companies," says Brian Rainville, a spokesman in Washington for the 
Teamsters. "When you look past the glamour of the Internet, you find 
that the New Economy is actually full of Old Economy jobs."

Organizing thousands of Amazon employees would be a huge symbolic 
victory for the nation's unions, sending a message that the labor 
movement has a place in the New Economy. But based on recent 
experience, such a victory may be hard to come by.

As an example, WashTech's efforts to organize Microsoft employees 
haven't gotten off of the ground yet, though the union, an affiliate 
of the Communications Workers of America, was involved in a 
class-action lawsuit on behalf of longtime temporary workers that the 
company settled recently for $97 million.

More encouraging for labor, the UFCW has had some success organizing 
dot-com workers. Four years ago, the union organized workers at a 
now-defunct online grocer in the Northeast that was subsequently 
taken over by Peapod, and the UFCW now represents some 1,500 workers 
at Peapod and Albertsons.com, the online arm of the Albertsons 
grocery chain. The union recently finalized a contract for a group of 
Peapod employees in the Mid-Atlantic region.

As they make their moves in the New Economy, the unions are running 
into a staple of Old Economy labor relations: Some of the companies 
they have targeted are counterattacking with old-fashioned, and 
controversial, antiunion tactics.

Take the situation at eTown.com (www.etown.com), a San 
Francisco-based consumer-electronics information site owned by 
Collaborative Media Inc. Recently, a group of customer-service 
employees at the company filed a petition with the National Labor 
Relations Board for a formal vote on union representation by the 
Newspaper Guild, a union affiliated with the CWA. A few days later, 
eTown.com eliminated 28 jobs, or nearly a quarter of its staff.

Customer service was among the areas hardest hit by the cuts, a fact 
that immediately sparked complaints of retaliation. "I will always 
have my suspicions," says Eric Anderson, a senior customer-service 
representative at eTown.com, who says workers are fighting for a 
stronger voice in job scheduling and other matters.

Lew Brown, president and chief operating officer of eTown.com, denies 
the department was targeted because of its union activities, 
stressing that eTown.com had to pare spending in other areas as well. 
"We're not a profitable company," he says.

Webvan, meanwhile, has relocated some jobs from its Irvine, Calif., 
distribution center to a facility in nearby Fullerton. Patrick D. 
Kelly, an official of Teamsters Local 952, alleges the move was 
intended to dilute the organizing work the union had done in Irvine, 
where it had gotten support from a majority of delivery workers.

The Teamsters recently filed a complaint with the NLRB accusing a 
Webvan manager of "interfering with, restraining, and coercing 
employees" who have sought to organize the Irvine facility. A hearing 
on the complaint is scheduled for April in Los Angeles. In the 
meantime, organizers with local 120 of the UFCW have begun 
distributing union pamphlets outside Webvan's Oakland, Calif., 
warehouse.

Webvan's Mr. Grebey confirms that the company moved 32 jobs to 
Fullerton from Irvine, but says the changes were related to economic 
considerations and the decision to make the changes predated the 
union activity in Irvine. He declined to comment on the specific 
allegations in the NLRB complaint but said Webvan "won't tolerate any 
unlawful activity by any employee."

Unions have accused Amazon of heavy-handed tactics, too. Recently, 
four customer-service workers who were distributing union fliers in 
the company cafeteria were asked to leave the premises by an Amazon 
manager, according to WashTech. Last week, WashTech accused Amazon of 
publishing misleading antiunion material aimed at customer-service 
workers on an internal Amazon Web site.

Amazon has denied that it asked the employees to leave the cafeteria, 
saying they packed up on their own. Patty Smith, an Amazon 
spokeswoman, said the Web-site material was a straightforward attempt 
by Amazon to answer employee questions about unions. "Any effort the 
company makes to communicate with people will be labeled 
union-busting," Ms. Smith said.

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