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Apple

Apple Store Workers Are Preparing To Unionize (9to5mac.com) 79

According to a report from the Washington Post, Apple Store employees at several retail stores in the US are said are said to be planning to unionize. 9to5Mac reports: Groups at two stores are reportedly preparing paperwork to file with the National Labor Relations Board, with about six more locations at earlier stages of planning. The Post says the main source of unrest is due to wages. Apple pays retail employees in the range of $17-$30 per hour, depending on role and seniority. However, the workers say these rates have not kept up with inflation.

Inspired by recent successful union votes at more than 90 Starbucks stores, the report says that efforts to unionize have recently accelerated. Operations are largely happening in secret in case of retaliation from management. However, the Post says that at one store managers have already began discussing how unions will hurt employee working conditions: "Apple Store employees at one store said managers have already begun pulling employees aside and giving speeches about how unions will hurt employees, lower their wages and force Apple to take away benefits and opportunities, such as the 'career experience' that Herbst described. Managers try to eavesdrop on employees, they said, while pretending to do something else."

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Apple Store Workers Are Preparing To Unionize

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  • $17/hr (Score:1, Funny)

    by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

    to tell people:

    "Did you try turning it off and back on again?"
    "Oh you did? Well, since that didn't fix it, the new model is right over here. What color would you like?"

    Sign me up.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Every worker deserves enough money to pay for shelter, food and retirement. Stop belittling the people that make the most profitable company in the world the most profitable company in the world. If Apple didn't need them they wouldn't hire them at all. If Apple needs them then they should be compensated well and live kick ass lives without worry of financial ruin.
      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

        Entry-level salaries are determined by the value of the work performed, not by the success of the company. How would you feel about a store that set their prices based on how much you earned? If you're a successful high earner, surely you can afford a few bucks more for that frozen pizza than the single mom who is paying with EBT. Chances are, you'd probably think such store is using unfair pricing practices, and that a frozen pizza should be the same price for all customers, regardless of their income.

        W

        • How would you feel about a store that set their prices based on how much you earned?

          Just fine, as I'm not required to shop there. They are free to charge as little or as much as they please.

          Why should labor rates be any different than the laws of supply and demand that govern the price of a frozen pizza?

          Maybe labor rates are more complex than simple supply and demand? What's more capitalist than bargaining over wages?

          • Just fine, as I'm not required to shop there. They are free to charge as little or as much as they please.

            The other stores in your area anticipated that you might decide to take your business elsewhere and all agree to implement similar pricing policies. Only problem is, when businesses do that it's called price fixing and is considered an anti-competitive practice. But when employees get together and attempt to price-fix the cost of labor beyond its fair market value, that's called a union.

            Don't get me wrong, I'm fine with people wanting some form of wage protectionism when it comes to skilled labor. Compan

            • by narcc ( 412956 )

              More anti-union propaganda.

              I hope they're paying you well. You're stepping on your own neck.

      • Every worker deserves enough money to pay for shelter, food and retirement.

        And what of the potential workers who are willing to work for less? People work for lots of reasons, so why should other people's desires dictate what their wage will be?

        Many already-retired people work part-time because they enjoy the socialization. Teenager workers usually don't need to pay for housing. Apple fanboys are probably willing to work for less at an Apple Store compared to working at a Best Buy.

        For the same outlay, Apple can pay:
        - 15 fanboys $20/hr, or
        - 10 unionized workers $30/hr

        As a customer,

        • by narcc ( 412956 )

          Don't be stupid. Apple can pay 20 guys $50 hour and not notice the difference.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Apple can pay a lot more than that.

          This is why having a high minimum wage is important. Some people might be willing to work for less, their personal situation allows them to survive on less money. Problem is it screws the people who need the money to live. Minimum wage is there to prevent a race to the bottom.

          • This is why having a high minimum wage is important.

            Absent price controls on cost of living expenses, minimum wage will always be minimum wage. Remember that "fight for $15" from a few years ago? Yeah, inflation caught up with it and earning minimum wage still feels like earning minimum wage - you just get to see a bigger number on your paycheck (and a proportionally bigger one on your grocery bills).

        • People work for lots of reasons, so why should other people's desires dictate what their wage will be?

          The law cannot permit people to work for less than a living wage because such a law will permit employers to pay less than a living wage.

          We could fix this. With a UBI tied to the cost of living, there is no need to enforce a minimum wage. You also don't need social security, food stamps, AFDC, disability insurance, or frankly most of our other social programs. Although to be fair in order for it to really work we also need a national health system, which the ACA is not. I am required to buy health insurance

      • The unfortunate truth is that not all jobs can provide regardless of unions. Some jobs are entry level and can never support those objectives. Increasing wages where it could achieve those objectives will just result in additional inflation.

        Many argue that companies should reduce profits. That would be challenging for two reasons. First, a reduction in the P/E ratio of the stocks would likely result in a serious adjustment in share prices. I can barely imagine the impact that would have on pension funds--

      • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

        Every worker deserves enough money to pay for shelter, food and retirement

        No, no they don't, no one is forcing these people to work for apple in their retail stores, while earning almost 2x retail labor wages, not to mention that in MOST of the USA cost of living isnt insane.

        For instance my property could easily be paid for by a single income wage of 17$ an hour as my mortgage, insurance and taxes is just under 1000$ a month, leaving 2/3rds income for everything else.

  • Every time I go to the Apple Store, half the employees are standing around chatting with each other. There’s easily 20 to 30 “geniuses” in there, half of them ignoring customers.

    From what I can tell they are already unionized if they are getting paid to stand around and do nothing.

    • They are doing something, they are chatting with friends and fellow employees. Passed an Apple store in a mall a few weeks ago - it looked just like a T-Mobile store or any other phone store: Employees chatting it up with no customers around. I guess they need all those employees on designated OS update days?
    • Getting paid to do nothing is a genius move, if you ask me.

      Based on the times I've been to an Apple Store, I suspect Apple's retail training is just really big on specialization. It's actually kind of annoying when you're attempting to just buy something quickly that's locked up somewhere and all the worker bees who are approved to go in the back and get things are occupied. So of course, if you happen to be standing next to a product with unoccupied specialists, various ones will keep approaching you to

  • The Tech Orchard, because that's where apples usually are. ;-)

  • I suppose it's either unionize or kill themselves for being stupid enough to work for Apple in the first place.
  • Certainly most retail workers, Apple Store employees included, could be earning higher wages. It would be helpful too if they had better access to the administrative controls for Apple's devices. I recently visited The Apple Store for assistance with a disabled iPhone SE, they were unable to remedy the problem, their diagnostic procedure lead to a recommendation for the unnecessary replacement of a hardware component. The Apple Store employees are not even permitted to acknowledge certain problems related t
  • Thanks for sharing this topic here. I didn't know about it. But glad to get it here.
  • That's going to go over well with the customers. People really need to understand what they think they will be getting and what they are actually going to get by joining a union.

  • ... for the success of the UAW! Your future looks like Detroit!

    Hey ... where did everybody go?

  • I put in my time in retail back around Y2K, in one of our retailers who didn't last very far past that year. I went there from a union grocery store, so I saw both sides in a short amount of time.

    It's hard to get retail employees to unionize, and even harder to get management to accept it. Yes we know there are laws that are supposed to require the latter but we know that there are ways around it.

    But even getting employees to unionize in retail is a big challenge. Seniority-based pay - as mentioned
  • Workers will always either actually be or feel abused and enslaved no matter the conditions. Some humans abuse workers, no matter what -- accidentally or deliberately. That's what they do. Some workers will feel abused, no matter what --really or perceptually.

    That only solution is automate everything, using robots that are taxed such that a portion of their "salary" or "paycheck" that comes from their productivity is channeled to humans as universal basic income that can be used to buy groceries and pay for

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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