TRADE WARS
Unionized US Apple store votes to authorize strike
Unionized US Apple store votes to authorize strike
by AFP Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) May 12, 2024
Unionized workers at a Maryland Apple store voted on Saturday to authorize a strike, which would mark the first such labor action against the retailer in the United States if it goes forward.

Employees at the Apple store in the town of Towson, outside of Baltimore, voted to unionize in 2022 -- another first for the iPhone maker's US stores.

But a contract has yet to be agreed upon.

"Following over a year of negotiations with Apple management that yielded unsatisfactory outcomes," union members are "signaling their collective demand for meaningful change," a union statement said.

"The issues at the forefront of this action include concerns over work-life balance, unpredictable scheduling practices disrupting personal lives, and wages failing to align with the area's cost of living."

The Towson store has about 100 employees. A majority of them were required to vote for the result to be valid.

The next negotiation meeting is scheduled for May 21, though a strike could come before that.

Meanwhile, employees at another of the California-based company's stores, in New Jersey, voted down a unionization effort over the weekend.

Apple did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment. In a statement to CNN it said it would "engage with the union representing our team in Towson respectfully and in good faith."

The National Labor Relations Board, the federal labor regulator, has received numerous complaints against Apple accusing it of trying to discourage staff from unionizing.

US tech companies in general are seen as hostile toward unionization efforts -- notably Amazon.

In September, nearly a quarter of Apple store employees in France went on strike the day the iPhone 15 launched, demanding a pay raise at least equal to inflation.

Related Links
Global Trade News

Tweet

TRADE WARS
China trade beats expectations in April
Beijing (AFP) May 9, 2024
Chinese exports returned to growth last month while imports smashed expectations, data showed Thursday, providing a much-needed boost to the country's leadership as it tries to steer the economy out of a long-running slump. Overseas shipments expanded 1.5 percent on-year in April, slightly beating forecasts in a Bloomberg survey and a strong turnaround after a shock 7.5 percent plunge in March. Meanwhile, imports surged 8.4 percent, far better than the 4.7 percent estimated in the Bloomberg surv ... read more

TRADE WARS
Rescue operations continue in flooded southern Brazil despite new rain

In south Brazil, race to deliver aid ahead of new storms

2023 'year of record climatic hazards' in Latin America: UN

UK's Cameron calls for Israel to produce 'clear plan' for Rafah

TRADE WARS
Microsoft, Amazon to invest billions in French tech

Transforming iron-based alloys into advanced thermoelectric materials with brief heat treatment

High-throughput device streamlines advanced material synthesis

NASA Grants Licenses for Advanced 3D-Printable Superalloy to American Firms

TRADE WARS
Manta Ray UUV moves closer to operational readiness after successful tests

Costa Rica to ration electricity as drought bites

Famed Thai holiday isles suffer water shortages after heatwave

Flood-hit Kenya pays tribute to victims of dam burst

TRADE WARS
Ritacuba Blanco: death of a Colombian glacier

Emperor penguins perish as ice melts to new lows: study

West Antarctic ice shelf stability threatened by feedback loop

New geological map redefines understanding of Greenland's subterranean rocks

TRADE WARS
Polish farmers protest 'harmful' EU environmental rules

Brazil floods strike blow to powerful agriculture sector

Scientists win World Food Prize for work on Global Seed Vault

Mongolia's wildlife at risk from overgrazing

TRADE WARS
'They drowned together': Lives swept away by Afghanistan floods

More than 300 dead in Afghanistan flash floods: WFP

Fresh rains pound Brazil's flood-hit south as evacuations double

Volcano in eastern Indonesia erupts, alert level raised

TRADE WARS
EU not renewing Mali military training mission

Kenya sanctuaries toil to save birds of prey from extinction

Niger receives new Russian advisors, equipment

Russian troops deploy to Niger base housing US soldiers: Pentagon

TRADE WARS
Chimps learn and improve tool-using skills even as adults

Exploring the Socioeconomic Drivers Behind Plummeting Fertility Rates

A world with fewer children? Addressing the despair behind declining fertility

Artist graffitis famous painting by French master