- by foxnews
- 16 Nov 2024
Amazon workers at a warehouse in Coventry have announced seven more days of strike action as they continue their push for better pay.
More than 310 staff at a giant fulfilment centre in the West Midlands city will strike on 28 February, 2 March and from 13 to 17 March, according to the GMB union.
The workers became the first ever employees of the online retailer in the UK to take strike action on 25 January. They are asking for higher pay and have also complained of overbearing management practices and long hours.
Amazon has not recognised the union, continuing a pattern of hostility towards organised labour across the world. The company has consistently argued that its employees should not unionise.
The striking Coventry workers, a minority of the 1,400 staff working at the warehouse, are seeking £15 an hour, a 43% increase from the £10.50 rate they are paid. Amazon had offered a 5% rise, 50p more an hour. The national living wage, the legal minimum, is £10.42 an hour for workers over 23.
Amazon has previously said it gave staff a £500 cost of living payment at Christmas.
Amazon has also faced a push for increased unionisation in the US. In November a US judge ruled that the company cease and desist from retaliating against workers for organising in the workplace at a warehouse in Staten Island, New Jersey. Workers at the warehouse were the first Amazon employees to win a union vote in the US, although the compnay has defeated other attempts to unionise in the US.
An Amazon spokesperson said the workers going on strike represented only a small proportion of its Coventry workforce.
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