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Also Joining a Silicon Valley Union: Waymo's Food Service Employees (nbcnews.com) 89

"Food service employees at the autonomous driving company Waymo are forming a union," reports NBC News, calling it "the latest push by support workers to organize at Silicon Valley's most prominent companies." The cafeteria workers at the Mountain View-based company cite the high cost of living in the Bay Area and the lack of strong benefits while working for one of the world's most valuable companies. Waymo is owned by Google parent company, Alphabet.

The workers are employed by Sodexo, which contracts service work for Google and other companies. Organizers say they have a majority of union cards signed from the roughly two dozen-person bargaining unit....

Workers say the $24 an hour they make from the company is not enough to live adequately in the Bay Area. They also cite the prohibitive cost of the company's health plan, which has a $5,000 deductible. The living wage in the San Jose-Sunnyvale area is $27.74 for a single adult, and $52.74 for a single adult with a child, according to MIT's living wage calculator.... The workers are part of Silicon Valley's ranks of contractors who support and supplement the work at tech companies. Union campaigns have coursed through the industry as tech company profits — and the cost of living in the Bay Area — have escalated steeply in recent years.

At Google, more than 4,000 of these workers have joined unions since 2018, including 2,300 cafeteria workers at its headquarters and satellite offices in the Bay Area in 2019, according to Unite Here.... "[Workers] see all the money around tech," said D. Taylor, the president of Unite Here. "And that's great. But they want to have a piece of the American dream."

Ironically, one of the workers said they were inspired by Hasan Piker, who NBC News describes as "a leftist Twitch streamer and political commentator" with large followings on Twitter — and on Google-owned YouTube.
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Also Joining a Silicon Valley Union: Waymo's Food Service Employees

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  • I got the best plan available at my company and it has an $8k deductible. Wtf? I understand their complaint about pay rate (my answer: move away), but there's nothing horrible about that health plan compared to others.

    • Fuckin hell, why even work for them if it's that much? My out of pocket maximum at my previous job was only $4,000, and that was with a company most of you have never even heard of. If they told me there was a $5,000 deductible, I'd decline the job offer. If they said $8,000 I'd laugh and say "seriously though, how much is it?"

    • For the average person they will never hit $8k without a hospital stay. Cheaper to not pay the insurance. But then if you get sick or T-boned in a car accident you’re fucked.

      • by Aczlan ( 636310 )

        Depends on the person, I have coworkers who hit their max every year and others who never see their doctor.

        Aaron Z

        • Depends on the person, I have coworkers who hit their max every year and others who never see their doctor.

          Aaron Z

          It's easy to do in the US.. On the there hand, In a different country I had a stent put in, spent the night in the ICU, and the total cost was $5000. And that's the cash, non-subsidized price. In a facility more modern than the average US hospital.

    • Our family deductible is something like $400/$600 - it's a trifle ambiguous because of how prescription drugs are covered. The family max out-of-pocket (the point after which everything is 100% covered) is $4000, I believe.

      Of course we live in Washington state, which is a bit more worker-friendly than some other locations.

  • The non-union members over their lifetime. If we assume $1,500 a year in Union dues you're going to probably spend about 60k over your lifetime (that's a little high to say the least but I'm high balling it on purpose).

    Which would you rather have? 1.3 million or 60k?

    I bring this up because on every Union adjacent thread somebody comes in here and says there's no point to unions because you have to pay dues. We now have studies that show that's bullshit in addition to just common sense.

    Your dues pay for professional negotiators. You want that because you want someone well versed in contract law and negotiation because your boss is going to try to pull one over on you.

    Tucker Carlson has a negotiator. He called it an agent instead of a union but he still got one. It's a guy telling you you don't need a professional negotiator hires a professional negotiator for himself you know something ain't right
    • Sorry not my new study, it was supposed to read a new study. This is what I get for using Google's text to speech. How it got the word mine out of the word a is beyond me.
      • And curiously you haven't linked it. Union staff like to claim shit like this to get job security for themselves. I wouldn't be surprised in the slightest if you were part of union staff yourself. Interestingly, there doesn't appear to be any robust research to suggest that unions actually do you any favors at all.

        https://www.forbes.com/sites/e... [forbes.com]

        All we really have to go off of is what unions themselves have published or funded, which presents an obvious conflict of interest.

        • And then you provide a link to an opinion piece on Forbes (of all places) and think you're making some kind of point.
          • Yes, and a very valid one at that. rsilvergun is claiming 1.3 million increase over your lifetime. Do the math on what that would mean over a 40 year career. No union anywhere ever is going to give you that much of a pay increase. That's the kind of sales pitch a union will give you to get your money. Basically worse than a used car salesman.

            Disagree with the piece I linked? Ok, explain why. While you're at it, here's another one that cites numerous high quality studies:

            https://projectionsinc.com/uni... [projectionsinc.com]

            • Come on now.
              That company literally has a page on their site with the title: "UNION PREVENTION STRATEGIES"
                • The posts you think are making a point for you are not arguing in good faith.

                  So I'm off to enjoy some of the 4 weeks annual leave I get. Have a nice weekend!

                  • Bad faith how?

                    As for your lame attempt at bragging about your union benefits...well...let's just say that you shouldn't start a dick measuring contest with a micropenis.

                    • Bad faith how?

                      ...well...let's just say that you shouldn't start a dick measuring contest with a micropenis.

                      That is hilarious. You don't do irony, do you?

                    • Ok, let's play your little game. My previous job that I just left, which is also non-union, paid $92k/year, and gave 6 weeks of paid vacation. No joke, I could take two weeks off every four months. If I had been there another two years it would have gone up to 7 weeks.

                      My current job, also non-union, is only 3 weeks, though increases to 4 after some time. But I guarantee you that I have better benefits than you do beyond that. For one, free health insurance, free vision insurance, and free dental insurance.

                    • Please stop explaining yourself. You're still not making the point you think you are.

                      It is kind of funny though.

                    • I made it pretty clear whether you comprehended it or not

                    • No, you did make yourself entirely clear.
                      Your employer pays you what you think you're worth, and you get the same holiday entitlements that every person in my country gets by right, so therefore unions are bad.

                      Oh no, hang on, I re-read your latest comment, and it turns out you get half the holidays I do.

                      Also, this little boast:

                      For one, free health insurance, free vision insurance, and free dental insurance. All of them top shelf coverage as well. To give you an idea, laser eye surgery also covered. No joke, my only payroll deductions are for taxes.

                      is hilarious, because like everyone else in the world I get all that stuff paid for out of my taxes which means my employers has no control over my healthcare.

      • There are a bunch of comments just above yours where people are discussing $8,000 deductibles and co-pays (whatever the hell that means) as if those are entirely reasonable things.
        They're not going to think very hard about the point you're making.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      1.3 million dollars over a 40 year career is an average of $32,500 per year -- but then, which union jobs expect somebody to stick around that long? If you think a union can sustainably extract that much value from an employer, you are as insane as all your other comments suggest.

      • Oh for Pete's sakes you're really stretching for it. Posts like this are what happens when people work backwards from their conclusion.

        It's 1.3 million lifetime earnings. It doesn't matter if you stick around you're just going to go to another Union shop. That's because it's lifetime earnings. The place you work isn't what matters what matters is that you work in a field that's unionized.

        As for doing it sustainably we gave 50 trillion dollars to the top 1% in the last 40 years. Productivity has shot
        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          what matters is that you work in a field that's unionized.

          You were comparing people working in different fields and pretending that earnings differences are due entirely to union representation?

          I think you're the one who is working backwards from your desired conclusion.

    • The average worker works 2,000 hrs/yr, over a 40 year career, adding up to 80,000 hours/career.

      If we believe your study, union membership adds $16.25/hr EVERY HOUR - that seems fantastical, and in no way seems relevant to the "roughly two dozen" cafeteria workers in this story currently making $24/hr.

      The vast, vast majority of union jobs are for skilled workers (construction, teachers, telecom, gov't, etc) and not jobs where you are responsible for putting a scoop of mashed potatoes on a cafeteria tray

      • Yeah, it does. And if minimum wage had kept pace with productivity it would be $27 an hour right now.

        Look maybe you're a lot younger than me but when I was a kid we were supposed to be working 10 to 20 hours a week by now. Instead we work more hours than the japanese. Back in my day when people talked about those short work weeks due to increased productivity that wasn't science fiction pulled out of somebody's butt it was based on projections of where productivity was going to go. Those projections wer
        • by kenh ( 9056 )

          Yeah, it does. And if minimum wage had kept pace with productivity it would be $27 an hour right now.

          What could that possibly have to do with the fantastical benefits you claim by merely being a union member?

          Look maybe you're a lot younger than me but when I was a kid we were supposed to be working 10 to 20 hours a week by now. Instead we work more hours than the japanese. Back in my day when people talked about those short work weeks due to increased productivity that wasn't science fiction pulled out of somebody's butt it was based on projections of where productivity was going to go. Those projections were right but instead we all worked harder to see who could build the most yachts for the 1%

          I've been walking this planet for well beyond a half-century, and I never, ever, heard anyone ever promise/suggest/wish we'd all be working 10 to 20 hours/week, and again, what does this have to do with the $1.3 Million in increased waged over a worker's career for being a union member?

          What I don't understand is why you go out of your way to repeat talking points fed to you by people thousands of times more wealthy than you'll ever be. Especially when odds are good you're not doing all that well economically. Or if you are odds are good it won't last. Like everyone else posting here you're one recession away or one minor medical problem away from bankruptcy...

          I have no earthly idea what you're talking about - my post regarded your number ($1.3M) and the idea that workers work

    • So you think the average union worker pays $30/week in union dues? I'd like to see an a actual citation to support such a number - I honestly have no idea what union dues are, but I find it hard to believe that $100K/yr union workers pay $1,500 in annual union dues.

      • by Entrope ( 68843 )

        $1500/year seems within the norm for a $100k/year job. Various pages found by a DDG search for "average union dues" say 1-2% of salary, 2 hours per month, 1 hour per 2 weeks, and 1.3-1.5% of salary.

        Employees dues can be cheaper because a union contract typically requires the employer to pay for the time that a union steward spends doing their union work -- that doesn't come out of the employees' nominal pay.

    • You'd think you'd have at least linked to this study. I'm not even sure it passes the smell test though, so not that it matters. Assuming that a person works for 50 years, that's $26,000 per year. Sounds a bit too good to be true, so I'm guessing this study has made some bad assumptions or some egregious abuses of mathematics to arrive at this figure.

      Perhaps you should stop and think for yourself if what you're posting is right. $26,000 per year is about 40% of the median household income. No one hates u
      • Dude you could literally just Google it. The dollar amount is very specific if you just search for 1.3 million dollar Union lifetime earnings you're going to find it on the first hit.

        I didn't like it because I figured everyone here on slashdot had enough wear with all to use Google. Come on you're better than this.
        • by kenh ( 9056 )

          And still, you spew all that garbage, rather than supply a link to the study YOU cited, what a piece of work.

          This is how you do it - Example [googlethatforyou.com]

          It appears to be a Cornell study that compared ALL men that work in unions versus those that do not.

          There was (apparently) no effort made to compare like to like - they compared everyone that identifies as male, and segregated union workers from non-union workers.

          This is like those studies that compare every working woman against every working man and determine that wom

          • by Entrope ( 68843 )

            There was (apparently) no effort made to compare like to like - they compared everyone that identifies as male, and segregated union workers from non-union workers.

            Almost. According to NPR [npr.org]:

            Inversely, people with college degrees who have been in a union for more than half their careers made less ($2.16 million) than those with college degrees who have never been in a union ($2.67 million), "likely because of the association of union membership and occupations worked," the study says.

            rsilvergun sure isn't covering himself in glory here.

            • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )

              Inversely, people with college degrees who have been in a union for more than half their careers made less ($2.16 million) than those with college degrees who have never been in a union ($2.67 million), "likely because of the association of union membership and occupations worked," the study says.

              rsilvergun sure isn't covering himself in glory here.

              I suppose that's why rsilv never posted the link...

  • If $25/hour isn't enough to live, how much more will they need to make to make up for the cost of the union? Unions do not work for free. Especially when representing so few people.

    • Define "live". There's living and living within your means.

    • A lot less than the increased wages. There's a study that shows union membership adds 1.3 million dollars to your income over your lifetime. Most union dues are under $100 a month. Honestly most of them are in the 30 to $40 range. But even if the absolute top end you're looking at about 60,000 over the course of your lifetime versus 1.3 million dollars. I don't think anyone will have any trouble doing that math

      Anyone who brings up dues is doing so to lie to you. Unions work. Which is hardly a surprise, th
      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        A lot less than the increased wages. There's a study that shows union membership adds 1.3 million dollars to your income over your lifetime. Most union dues are under $100 a month. Honestly most of them are in the 30 to $40 range.

        Union dues are a percentage of your wages — typically about one to two percent. If you are paying $40 a month, you're likely only earning $2,000 per month, which isn't remotely a living wage in the Bay Area. The reason tech workers don't want to unionize is because, assuming it is based on total compensation, their wages would be more like $500 a month, and they are unlikely to gain that much through collective bargaining, realistically speaking.

        But even if the absolute top end you're looking at about 60,000 over the course of your lifetime versus 1.3 million dollars. I don't think anyone will have any trouble doing that math

        It might average out to $1.3 million, but does that fi

        • I have not been fortunate enough to be in an industry with a union but I have friends that have and their dues were a fixed amount. $34 a month the ones I knew. One of them was a Teamster and the other was a teacher. I think the teacher actually paid 40 a month.

          But I still highballed it for just that reason. My figures assume $1,500 a year or $125 a month. Assuming you're one to two percent that's not half bad.

          But the percentage is don't matter and you're just using them as a distraction and straw m
          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            What I don't understand is, what's in it for you to constantly shit on unions? Do you own a business or you employ cheap labor? It's not going to be a very big one or you wouldn't be wasting your time here. Cheap labor is nice until there's nobody to patronize your business.

            Oh, don't make me laugh. If I owned a big business, you can bet your a** I would never have heard of Slashdot, much less be on here. And I don't "constantly s**t on unions". I just think that they were a lot more relevant fifty years ago than they are now.

            IMO, unions are largely an artifact of failed government. If the government were doing its job properly — enforcing reasonable wage standards, maximum work hours, safety standards, health insurance coverage, etc. — then unions would be larg

    • If their current wages are truly "unlivable", why aren't the workers quitting or dying? I'm being facetious, but seriously, these workers have likely "suffered" with these unlivable wages, why? Because as bad as they claim it is, it is likely the best they could find.

      I wonder what Waymo will do if Sodexo's "roughly two dozen" cafeteria workers get a significant raise? A $5/hr raise across 12 people comes out to $120K/yr - I suspect a competing food service company might come in, undercut the Sodexo contract

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Apparently, if they have a single child, their "living wage" shoots up to $57/hour, anything less is, apparently, unlivable.

  • "Ironically, one of the workers said they were inspired by Hasan Piker, who NBC News describes as "a leftist Twitch streamer and political commentator" with large followings on Twitter — and on Google-owned YouTube."

    How is that "ironic"? I mean, even with the wrong ways people use the term - where is there any irony at all?

    • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )

      How is that "ironic"? I mean, even with the wrong ways people use the term - where is there any irony at all?

      It's the favored "valley girl" lingo of the sudo-intellectuals.

  • The workers are employed by Sodexo, which contracts service work for Google and other companies. Organizers say they have a majority of union cards signed from the roughly two dozen-person bargaining unit....

    Two dozen cafeteria workers? That what we're talking about?

    Workers say the $24 an hour they make from the company is not enough to live adequately in the Bay Area.

    Perhaps, maybe, cafeteria worker is a transitionary job, not a career? Must every job provide for every workers needs in any job market?

    They also cite the prohibitive cost of the company's health plan, which has a $5,000 deductible.

    That's comparable to the federal government's "affordable" health care planes.

    The living wage in the San Jose-Sunnyvale area is $27.74 for a single adult, and $52.74 for a single adult with a child, according to MIT's living wage calculator....

    That makes no sense, why does having a child increase your cost of living by $50K/yr? Are these dozen or so cafeteria workers saying (with a straight face) that they deserve six-figure salaries to serve Waymo employees lunch (and breakfast

  • If that was my company I would not worry, they can unionize all they like, I would *lower* their pay to the minimum that anyone of them makes and if they decided to strike I wouldn't worry, just outsource the food preparation to local restaurants. What sort of leverage do they think they would have, seriously? I wouldn't care if they went on a strike for a year, I would cover the food preparation in a different manner and wait for them all to quit and to dissolve that stupid union.

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      If that was my company I would not worry, they can unionize all they like, I would *lower* their pay to the minimum that anyone of them makes and if they decided to strike I wouldn't worry, just outsource the food preparation to local restaurants. What sort of leverage do they think they would have, seriously? I wouldn't care if they went on a strike for a year, I would cover the food preparation in a different manner and wait for them all to quit and to dissolve that stupid union.

      Maybe you missed the part where they already are outsourced. They work for Sodexo, a company that provides food services to other companies. Those companies pay a fixed cost to Sodexo. When a location unionizes, Sodexo presumably has to absorb the cost of their demands until contract renegotiation time, at which point either the company hiring them pays a higher cost or switches providers (in which case they all lose their jobs, and are probably unlikely to be considered for future employment with Sodexo

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      These workers work for Sodexo, not Waymo, and if the employees unionize and raise the cost of cafeteria service, Waymo may cancel the contract and hire another cafeteria service which may or may not retain the expensive union laborers.

      Waymo is free to cancel the contract, and once cancelled, Sodexo can calim there's no more work and the union workers are out on the curb.

      Legally.

  • When a company is 80% automated it makes sense that the 20% remaining workers would make more. Otherwise the benefit of automation is just going to the owners/shareholders. If owners/shareholders are the only people benefitting from automation than that's a huge problem. We are not headed towards the days when people can work less while the machines do the work. Instead we will end up with 80% of society having no way to support themselves while the machines create profit for the wealthiest 10%.
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      When a company is 80% automated it makes sense that the 20% remaining workers would make more. Otherwise the benefit of automation is just going to the owners/shareholders.

      The benefit of INVESTING in automation should fall to the business owners/shareholders. Why do workers deserve to benefit from the investment made by the owners/shareholders?

      If owners/shareholders are the only people benefitting from automation than that's a huge problem.

      No, it isn't. The benefits to society are typically lower prices, higher-quality products (imagine the price/design if an iPhone had to be assembled by hand manually).

      We are not headed towards the days when people can work less while the machines do the work. Instead we will end up with 80% of society having no way to support themselves while the machines create profit for the wealthiest 10%.

      Machines create profit/benefit their owners, not the people they displace, why would you expect otherwise?

  • If you can't find a job that will pay you enough to afford an apartment, then what is the point of working? There is nowhere in the US where a person can afford a 2 bedroom apartment on full time minimum wage.
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Apparently, it is beneath minimum wage earners to expect them to have room mates?

      Is every minimum wage worker, capable of only the most trivial of tasks and thus paid the legally minimum hourly wage, supposed to be able to afford their own apartment? That doesn't seem right.

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