Worker Wins: Pay Workers A Living Wage
Our latest roundup of worker wins includes numerous examples of working people organizing, bargaining and mobilizing for a better life.
AFSCME Members Add Worker Protections to City of Austin’s AI Policy: Members of AFSCME Local 1624 are celebrating the Austin City Council’s passage of Item 55, which institutes strong ethical guardrails and worker protections as Texas’ capital city adopts artificial intelligence (AI) into its work. Local 1624 represents public sector workers who are employed by the city of Austin and Travis County. Members worked closely with City Council members to shape the AI policy to ensure that working people won’t have their jobs displaced by this emergent new technology. The resolution also protects against AI-based productivity scoring, allows for workers to appeal decisions made by algorithmic tools and requires AFSCME members to be consulted as new technologies are introduced. “We support innovation—but it must come with safeguards,” said Local 1624 President Brydan Summers, who spoke at the city council meeting in support of the resolution. “This resolution ensures AI is used to support—not replace—public workers. By requiring human oversight, banning continuous surveillance, and protecting workers from AI-only decisions, Item 55 puts the safety and dignity of the workforce first.”
Sunberry Beverages Union Members Ratify New Contract: United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 951 members who work at Sunberry Beverages in Paw Paw, Michigan, voted on Tuesday to overwhelmingly ratify a powerful new contract. Before ratification, the approximately 60 UFCW members at the plant had been working under an agreement that was signed before Sunberry bought the facility from previous owner Knouse Foods. The beverage manufacturer honored their existing contract, but as day-to-day production shifted, members needed new provisions to reflect changes to their work. Highlights of the new agreement include wage increases, expansion of full-time status and benefits eligibility to all workers, improvements to paid time off policy, increases to the 401(k) match, and more. “After the change in ownership, job duties and responsibilities at the plant changed significantly for the union members,” said John Cakmakci, Local 951 president and chief negotiator. “I am proud of the members who served on the bargaining committee and worked together to achieve contract gains that improve the lives of their fellow members. It’s important for the company to recognize how valuable the Sunberry workers are and reward their hard work and loyalty with a strong contract.”
University of Minnesota Resident Physicians Union Certified by State Labor Board: The Minnesota Bureau of Mediation Services officially certified on Friday that a majority of resident physicians at the University of Minnesota have signed cards to join the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR/SEIU). A supermajority of the nearly 1,000-person bargaining unit filed for union recognition late last month. Their exciting organizing campaign was made possible by the reform of Minnesota’s Public Employment Labor Relations Act, which was passed in 2024. “We went into medicine because we want to take care of people, but at the heart of it, we just don’t think that great patient care should have to come at the expense of our well-being,” said Dr. Sofia Haile, a family medicine resident, in a press release. “In fact, we believe our health and our patients’ health are actually intertwined. Creating a system where physicians can be our best for patients and be our best for ourselves is what we’re hoping to achieve as a union.”
SEIU Member Abducted by ICE Released from Detention: After a federal judge issued an order for Rümeysa Öztürk’s release from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 509 mem ber and Tufts University graduate student returned to Massachusetts on Saturday evening. Öztürk—a Turkish citizen on a student visa—was held in federal custody at a detention facility in Louisiana for six weeks after plainclothes officers arrested her in late March. The only evidence the Trump administration has cited as grounds for her arrest is an op-ed criticizing Tuft’s response to the war in Gaza that she co-authored in the student newspaper. Judge William K. Sessions III ordered Öztürk to be released with no travel restrictions and warned that her detention had the potential to cause a chilling effect on free speech. Union members and community allies rallied behind Öztürk after she was detained, holding nationwide protests decrying her arrest. “Rümeysa is free – and she is free because workers stood up and demanded justice,” said SEIU President April Verrett in a video statement posted to social media. “We are so excited for her, she gets to return home to her friends and her family and her studies at Tufts University. But our work is far from over. Rümeysa is free, but millions of other immigrants are not. They are still in the shadows. Our work is not done until everyone who calls this country home gets to live with freedom and dignity and respect.”
Overwatch Developers Form Union with CWA: Game developers behind Activision Blizzard’s popular franchise Overwatch have become the latest video industry workers to join the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and have secured voluntary recognition from parent company Microsoft. The Overwatch Gamemakers Guild-CWA (OWGG-CWA) is a wall-to-wall union that covers a wide range of roles, including art, quality assurance, engineering, design and more. The nearly 200-person bargaining unit formed its union with the help of CWA’s tech industry organizing project, Campaign to Organize Digital Employees (CODE-CWA), which has helped 6,000 workers in the United States and Canada form unions over the past five years. OWGG-CWA members cite concerns around job security, wages and layoff protections as core motivators for organizing. “After a long history of layoffs, crunch, and subpar working conditions in the global video game industry, my coworkers and I are thrilled to be joining the broader union effort to organize our industry for the better, which has been long overdue,” said Foster Elmendorf, senior test analyst II and organizing committee member. “Workers organizing themselves and striving for better conditions as a group allows us to present initiatives that would not only improve our workplace but video games overall.”
Arizona Agricultural Workers Make Cannabis Industry History with New Contract: United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 99 members who work at Trulieve’s production facility in central Phoenix ratified their first union contract this past Wednesday, becoming the first cannabis cultivators in state history to do so. While retail cannabis workers have been securing collective bargaining contracts around the country in recent years, this agreement is a landmark deal for agricultural workers in the industry. In January 2024 Trulieve Magnolia staff voted to join UFCW, in only the second union election ever administered by the Arizona Agricultural Employment Relations Board. “I’m telling you, if you ever read them bumper stickers on the street that say, ‘Work union, live better,’ that’s a true statement,” said Larry Terrell, a former union airline worker who is now a Trulieve cultivator. “It was an eye-opener coming to the cannabis industry from the airline industry. I just felt like the workers’ rights weren’t all there. I feel like they didn’t treat their employees very well….For what these companies make, they can afford to pay their workers a livable wage.”
Striking University of Oregon Student Workers Reach Tentative Agreement: After more than a week on strike, the University of Oregon Student Workers (UOSW) union—an affiliate of the UAW—announced Thursday that their bargaining team has reached a tentative agreement with administrators. If ratified, this agreement would be the first contract covering a wall-to-wall undergraduate student worker unit at a public university. Members perform essential roles in dining halls, dormitories, academic departments, recruitment, cultural spaces, student life and research labs. Student workers initially walked off the job on April 28, after 11 months of negotiations with the university, to fight for better wages and improved protections against harassment in the workplace. “This is a historic and amazing contract whatever way you slice it,” said Ryan Campbell, a member of UOSW’s bargaining team. “[UO administration] can’t push some of this stuff out of the way now….Going through this experience, now we can help other people, so it’s a very very cool thing.”
REI Union Blocks Corporate-Backed Co-Op Candidates in Board Election: Last week, REI confirmed that thousands of their Co-op members voted to reject corporate-backed candidates in their board of directors election after REI Union members launched a massive “Vote No” campaign in response to the retailer’s union-busting. The union is affiliated with the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) and the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU-UFCW). Since 2022, 11 storefronts have voted to organize and none have been able to reach a fair contract so far. After years of bad faith bargaining from the nominally progressive corporation, workers urged Co-op members to vote “withhold” on all three of REI’s proposed candidates, including two incumbent board members, to demand the corporation live up to its values. Now, REI members are demanding that pro-worker candidates Tefere Gebre—former executive vice president of the AFL-CIO and current chief program officer at Greenpeace USA—and Shemona Moreno—executive director of nonprofit 350 Seattle—fill the vacant seats on the board of directors. “This victory was only possible because REI members and REI workers stood together to send a resounding message that it is time for the co-op to return to its core values,” the union said in a press statement. “We are optimistic that Mary Beth Laughton will take this opportunity to listen to everyone who voted for workers and members to have a voice in the company’s future. Moving forward, REI should stop union busting, negotiate a fair contract with organized workers, and fill the vacancies on the board with the candidates that members backed initially.”
NowThis Staff Ratify New Union Contract: Writers Guild of America East (WGAE) members at short-form video news outlet NowThis have unanimously ratified a new collective bargaining agreement. The three-year deal increases the minimum salary floor for the nine current unit members to $80,000, as well as increases the overall contract minimum with an additional $1,000 increase in the second and third years of the contract. Other highlights include a longevity bonus on every four-year anniversary and strong guardrails against the use of generative artificial intelligence. “The Mighty 9 remaining members of the NowThis Union are thrilled to celebrate our successful contract negotiation,” the NowThis bargaining unit said. “We’re very thankful to those who supported us by writing letters to the CEOs of NowThis and Accelerate Change and encouraging them to help us reach a deal. We look forward to working with management and continuing to grow NowThis into the success we know it is.”
Kenneth Quinnell
Thu, 05/15/2025 – 15:53
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Organizing