Organizing Update
YouTube
Workers at YouTube’s Music Content Operations in Austin, Texas, unanimously voted to join CWA this week. The workers, who are members of Alphabet Workers Union (AWU-CWA), are employed by Cognizant Technology Solutions, a subcontractor of Alphabet. This is a major milestone in the fight to prevent companies from avoiding responsibility by subcontracting work. In March, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that both Alphabet and Cognizant must negotiate with the YouTube Music workers on any collective bargaining agreement because Alphabet exercises direct and indirect control over their work.
Since forming their union in October 2022, the workers have been faced with aggressive union busting from their employer, including a retaliatory Return-To-Office (RTO) mandate which would have forced dozens of workers to “voluntarily terminate” from their jobs. The workers have been fighting back by building solidarity and support for their union and holding workplace actions, including the first known strike at Alphabet, which also owns Google. For months, they stood out on the picket line, held major rallies, engaged their communities, and garnered support from other workers, union members, and elected officials.
“No one working for a multi-billion dollar platform should have to juggle three jobs to make ends meet, and no one should have to give up their livelihoods due to a retaliatory Return-To-Office mandate,” said Maxwell Longfield, a YouTube Music worker and member of AWU-CWA. “We have shown our power as workers on the picket line, and now in our union election.”
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SEGA of America
On Monday, workers at video game company SEGA’s U.S. headquarters announced that they have formed a union, Allied Employees Guild Improving SEGA (AEGIS), with CWA Local 9510. They are seeking voluntary recognition from the company and have filed for a representation election with the National Labor Relations Board.
The union, which consists of approximately 150 workers in the quality assurance, localization, live service, marketing, and product development departments, is demanding higher base pay, improved benefits, opportunities for advancement, balanced workloads, and adequate staffing. Read more here.
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