Costco workers in Norfolk have unionised and Costco are seething.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    1 year ago

    There will always be an underlying adversarial relationship between employers and employees in a traditional capitalist framework.

    Unions help even the playing field and are very important, but if you truly are interested in supporting the rights of your workers as much as possible, you must accept the fact that they cannot remain “your” workers.

    What does that mean for you and your business? You should talk to your employees and the relevant orgs in your state/city about beginning the transition into a worker-owned co-op.

    Depending on the business structure, state and local laws, and the industry you serve, the pathway to that is complicated. Look up worker cooperatives in your state and find organizations that specialize in helping businesses navigate that transition. There are legal, monetary, ethical, logistical, and emotional concerns that are all critical to address and understand, but it can be done. Businesses far larger than yours have successfully made the transition.

    That would be my advice. But aside from that ultimate goal, unionize your workplace and place as much power in the hands of your employees as possible. Let them decide how they want to structure pay, dues, etc, that’s the whole point of worker empowerment.

    • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Hey, thanks! Hadn’t heard of the worker coop idea, will look into it.

      Will also continue to look at unionizing the workplace. I think we’d be the first in our industry in our area, so it could at the very least pave new ground.