KEY POINTS
  • The NLRB on Monday rejected Amazon's motion asking the agency to install a camera that would watch the ballot boxes containing the votes submitted by workers at its Alabama facility.
  • The union election will kick into high gear on Tuesday as the agency begins to count votes.
  • An outcome is unlikely to be reached for several days.
Rally organized by Workers Assembly Against Racism in support of Amazon workers of warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama rights to unionize at Union Square across of Whole Foods Market owned by Amazon.

The National Labor Relations Board has rejected Amazon's request to install a video camera to keep an eye on boxes containing thousands of ballots key to a high-stakes union election in Alabama.

The closely watched vote in Bessemer, Alabama, concluded Monday. Approximately 5,800 workers at the facility in Bessemer were eligible to vote to join the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU). Vote counting was slated to begin at 11 a.m. ET on Tuesday, but the final tally may be days or weeks away, as Amazon and the RWDSU can contest ballots.