{"id":9204,"date":"2022-12-15T14:19:41","date_gmt":"2022-12-15T13:19:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uniglobalunion.org\/?post_type=news&p=9204"},"modified":"2022-12-15T14:20:11","modified_gmt":"2022-12-15T13:20:11","slug":"uni-commerce-unions-adopt-ambitious-global-action-plan-to-meet-challenges-of-our-time","status":"publish","type":"news","link":"https:\/\/uniglobalunion.org\/news\/uni-commerce-unions-adopt-ambitious-global-action-plan-to-meet-challenges-of-our-time\/","title":{"rendered":"UNI Commerce unions adopt ambitious global action plan to meet challenges of our time"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hundreds of union leaders from nearly three dozen countries converged in Atlanta this month for UNI Commerce\u2019s world conference themed \u201cCommerce workers rise! A global movement for our time<\/a>.\u201d During the gathering, held 7-10 December, UNI\u2019s Commerce sector elected its leadership for the next four years and adopted a bold action plan to grow union power for commerce workers across the globe.<\/p>\r\n Reporting on past victories and acknowledging the challenges ahead, Mathias Bolton, Head of UNI Commerce<\/strong>, highlighted UNI\u2019s role in securing better conditions, rights and pay for workers across the globe, saying, \u201cWe\u2019re in a new moment, where this generation is seeing challenges to unionization that we\u2019ve never seen before. But the people of the world finally realize how important retail workers are, and we need to rise to meet this moment.\u201d<\/p>\r\n To meet the moment for workers, the sector focused on a strategy with five pillars: building union power; raising e-commerce standards; improving health and safety; building a sustainable future of retail; and forging responsible value and supply chains.<\/p>\r\n Building union power<\/strong><\/p>\r\n Participants learned lessons about increasing worker power and strengthening collective bargaining from across the globe\u2014including in Dominican Republic, Hungary, the Netherlands, Peru<\/a>, South Africa<\/a>, South Korea<\/a>, Turkey<\/a>, the United States. The conference backed a resolution that will on building union power and influence in the sector, in part, by mandating UNI Commerce to organize global alliances by retail market segments. This will allow the sector\u2014and affiliated unions\u2014to better channel energy into addressing issues that touch workers across not just across national borders but throughout segments, such as food retail and fast fashion.<\/p>\r\n \u201cEssential workers\u2019 sacrifices during the pandemic were the world\u2019s biggest act of labour solidarity,\u201d said Ruben Cortina, UNI Global Union President<\/strong>, \u201cOur great challenge is how we continue building union power after the pandemic so they will have greater protections in a crisis. Union organizing must always be on the top of the list.\u201d<\/p>\r\n Starbucks workers also joined the UNI Commerce Global Conference, and the Conference adopted a solidarity statement that supports Starbucks workers\u2019 dedicated fight<\/a> to win their union.<\/p>\r\n Declaring e-commerce is commerce<\/strong><\/p>\r\n The action plan adopted at the conference also has a strong response to the massive growth of e-commerce. Participants heard about successful union initiatives for e-commerce workers in different countries including Argentina, France, Sweden and the United States; and they used lessons learned to formulate a resolution declaring that \u201cE-commerce is commerce.\u201d UNI Commerce will invest more in organizing e-commerce workers including those employed by platform companies to make sure that they have the same rights as traditional commerce workers and to ensure that e-commerce platforms do not undercut existing worker standards in retail.<\/p>\r\n Perhaps nowhere is the need to improve conditions in e-commerce more needed than at Amazon. UNI hosted a session on the e-commerce giant with Amazon workers and trade union leaders from Brazil, Germany and the United States that culminated with a solidarity action<\/a> to support Amazon workers across the globe.<\/p>\r\n \u201cNo matter where we come from or the language we speak, we are a movement that cannot be contained by borders\u201d said Marc Perrone, President of<\/strong> the<\/strong> UFCW<\/strong>, \u201cThe people in this room will not rest until equality and justice for working people is achieved. This bond will never be broken.”<\/p>\r\n Improving health and safety <\/strong><\/p>\r\n UNI Commerce affiliates reaffirmed their commitment to stop violence and harassment in commerce\u2014a growing problem in the sector. From Chile<\/a> to Australia<\/a>, from Japan<\/a> to Finland<\/a>, from Italy to Denmark, the conference put a spotlight on the massive union difference for making work safe. \u00a0Welcoming the designation of occupational health and safety as a fundamental right by the ILO, the Conference resolved to identify and address the new and growing health and safety risks for commerce workers.<\/p>\r\n Building a sustainable future of retail<\/strong><\/p>\r\n Using case studies from Argentina, Belgium, Germany<\/a>, Japan<\/a>, Spain and Sweden<\/a>, UNI Commerce affiliates discussed the trade union response to the challenges posed by digitalization, new technologies and climate change . They introduced\u2014and passed\u2014a ground-breaking resolution on \u201cJust, Responsible and Inclusive Transition for Decent Work and Climate Justice\u201d as part of the sector\u2019s action plan.<\/p>\r\n Underlining the importance of the work of UNI Commerce in his region, Marcio Monzane, the <\/strong>Regional <\/strong>Secretary of UNI Americas<\/strong>, said, \u201cWe face many great challenges to growing union power and the best way to overcome these challenges is to keep working together to win better conditions for our workers.\u201d<\/p>\r\n Forging responsible value and supply chains<\/strong><\/p>\r\n Welcoming the new model for supply chain governance set in Bangladesh through the International Accord<\/a>, UNI Commerce supported the expansion of the Accord\u2019s binding arbitration model to other garment sourcing countries and committed to operationalize due diligence to grow union power in the retail supply and value chain for social and environmental sustainability.<\/p>\r\n \u201cIf we are going to change the rules of globalization, we have to do it right. That includes mandatory human rights due diligence\u201d said Christy Hoffman, General Secretary of UNI<\/strong>, \u201cWe must push for strong laws to involve unions in due diligence, support our affiliates and work with them to enforce due diligence requirements.\u201d \u00a0<\/p>\r\n