KEY POINTS
  • The votes on whether to form a union at Amazon's sprawling Alabama fulfillment center are set to be reviewed starting on Tuesday.
  • Tallying votes might not begin until later this week or next, after both Amazon and the union check the eligibility of ballots cast.
  • Amazon has aggressively discouraged attempts by the RWDSU to become the first ever to organize one of the online retail giant's facilities in the United States.

In this article

An RWDSU union rep holds a sign outside the Amazon fulfillment warehouse at the center of a unionization drive on March 29, 2021 in Bessemer, Alabama.

The votes on whether to form a union at Amazon's sprawling Alabama fulfillment center are set to be reviewed starting on Tuesday, with momentum for future labor organizing at America's second-largest private employer hanging in the balance.

An agent from the U.S. National Labor Relations Board will sift through ballots sent to more than 5,800 workers at Amazon's Bessemer, Alabama-based warehouse as part of a prolonged process expected to last days and spark legal challenges.

In this article