Alphabet Workers Union Forms
January 4, 2021
Today,
workers at Google and other Alphabet companies created the
Alphabet Workers Union with support from the Communications
Workers of America (CWA)—the first of its kind in the
company’s history. It will be the first union open to all
employees and contractors at any Alphabet company, with
dues-paying members, an elected board of directors, and paid
organizing staff.
“This union builds upon years of courageous organizing by
Google workers,” said Nicki Anselmo, Program Manager. “From
fighting the ‘real names’ policy, to opposing Project Maven,
to protesting the egregious, multi-million dollar payouts
that have been given to executives who’ve committed sexual
harassment, we’ve seen first-hand that Alphabet responds
when we act collectively. Our new union provides a
sustainable structure to ensure that our shared values as
Alphabet employees are respected even after the headlines
fade.”
The new union is part of CWA’s CODE-CWA (Coalition to
Organize Digital Employees) project, and the workers will be
members of CWA Local 1400. It follows successful union
drives by other Google workers—like HCL contract workers in
Pittsburgh and cafeteria workers now with UNITE HERE! in the
Bay Area—as well as unions formed by workers at other tech
companies like Kickstarter and Glitch.
The Alphabet Workers Union, however, will be the first open
to all employees of Alphabet, regardless of their role or
classification.
“This is historic—the first union at a major tech company by
and for all tech workers,” said Dylan Baker, Software
Engineer. “We will elect representatives, we will make
decisions democratically, we will pay dues, and we will hire
skilled organizers to ensure all workers at Google know they
can work with us if they actually want to see their company
reflect their values.”
“We are glad to welcome the Alphabet Workers Union as
members of CWA Local 1400,” said CWA Local President Don
Trementozzi. “We are a democratic, member-driven union, with
experience building and sustaining worker power at some of
America’s largest corporations. This is an historic step
toward making lasting improvements for workers at Google and
other Alphabet companies.”
Google began as a small tech company with a “Don’t Be Evil”
mantra, but has quickly become one of the most influential
companies in the world. Alphabet, Google’s parent company,
now has more than 120,000 workers. It’s responsible for vast
swaths of the internet, controlling tools used by billions
of people across the world, with subsidiaries as varied as
Waymo, Verily, Fitbit, and Wing.
Yet half of Google workers at Alphabet companies are hired
as TVCs—temps, vendors, or contractors—without the benefits
afforded to full-time employees. Executives have been
awarded tens of millions of dollars in exit packages after
documented sexual harassment against fellow Googlers. And
the company has taken on unethical government contracts,
like drone targeting for the military, yet kept the nature
of that technology secret even to the Googlers working on
those projects. It has removed its past motto from its
mission statement.
Most recently, the company fired Dr. Timnit Gebru, a leading
artificial intelligence researcher, for no reason
whatsoever. The firing has caused outrage from thousands of
us, including Black and Brown workers who are heartbroken by
the company’s actions and unsure of their future at Google.
Workers
who have organized to stop these trends have been met by
intimidation, suppression, and blatantly illegal firings, as
recently confirmed by the National Labor Relations Board.
Instead of listening to workers, Google hired IRI, a
notorious anti-union firm, to suppress their organizing.
This is how Google’s executives have chosen to interact with
workers.
The only tactic that has ensured workers are respected and
heard is collective action. Project Maven was cancelled when
thousands of Googlers pledged they would not work on
unethical tech. Forced arbitration was ended when Googlers
walked out across the globe.
The Alphabet Workers Union will be the structure that
ensures Google workers can actively push for real changes at
the company, from the kinds of contracts Google accepts to
employee classification to wage and compensation issues. All
issues relevant to Google as a workplace will be the purview
of the union and its members.