June 21st, 2024

Amazon challenging certification of union for workers at its Laval, Que., warehouse

By The Canadian Press on June 14, 2024.

In this April 16, 2020, file photo, the Amazon logo is displayed in Douai, northern France. Online retailer Amazon is challenging the certification of a union representing about 200 employees of its Montreal-area warehouse. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Michel Spingler

MONTREAL – Online retailer Amazon is challenging the certification of a union representing about 200 employees at a Montreal-area warehouse.

The American company says the process by which employees unionized was unlawful because it involved workers signing union cards instead of voting in a secret ballot.

Amazon lawyer Frédéric Massé told a Quebec labour tribunal today that the absence of a secret ballot violated workers’ right to freedom of association.

The company has also filed for the union’s certification to be revoked entirely.

Amazon’s applications have not been debated yet on their merits, and the hearing involved whether the company was an interested party in some of the matters it is bringing before the tribunal.

For example, Amélie Bellerose, a lawyer for the Quebec government, argued that it was the employees or their union, not the employer, who could contest whether the workers’ rights were violated.

Administrative judge Irène Zaïkoff took the case under advisement, saying she would deliver a decision as soon as possible.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2024.

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