| VANCE,    Ala. – A supermajority of Mercedes-Benz workers have filed a petition with    the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) for a vote to join the UAW. The over    5,000 workers at the Mercedes plant outside Tuscaloosa, Ala., are the second    group of Southern autoworkers to call for a union election in less than three    weeks. Volkswagen workers in Chattanooga, Tenn., filed for their election in mid-March and will have their vote to join the UAW April    17–19.   A new    video announcing the election filing at Mercedes features the Alabama    autoworkers at a recent rally with UAW President Shawn Fain. In the video,    Mercedes workers speak out on why they’re voting yes to join the UAW. (The    media is invited to use footage from the video.)  In a    statement today, Jeremy Kimbrell, a measurement machine operator at Mercedes,    said, “We are standing up for every worker in Alabama. At Mercedes, at    Hyundai and at hundreds of other companies, Alabama workers have made    billions of dollars for executives and shareholders, but we haven’t gotten    our fair share. We’re going to turn things around with this vote. We’re going    to end the Alabama discount.”  “We are    voting for safer jobs at Mercedes,” said Moesha Chandler, an assembly team    member at Mercedes. “I’m still young, but I’m already having serious problems    with my shoulders and hands. When you’re still in your twenties and your body    is breaking down, that’s not right. By winning our union, we’ll have the    power to make the work safer and more sustainable.”  Mercedes    management is running an aggressive anti-union    campaign, but that has not blunted the workers’ momentum. By late    February, less than two months after Mercedes workers went    public with their drive to join the UAW, a    majority of them had signed union cards. The Mercedes workers hope to be    voting in their union election by early May. The NLRB is expected to quickly    set the date for the election.   The UAW    has filed    federal labor charges against Mercedes for illegal union busting, as well    as charges    in a German court for labor violations that could net billions in    penalties for the German automaker.  “We’re going    to make Mercedes better with this vote,” said Jacob Ryan, a KVP team member    at Mercedes. “Right now, the company keeps losing good people because they    force them to work Saturdays at the last second, to take shifts that mess    with their family lives. And the only choice people have is to take it or    quit. With the union, we’ll have a voice for fair schedules that keep workers    at Mercedes.”  The    Mercedes workers are part of the national movement of non-union autoworkers    organizing to join the UAW in the wake of the historic Stand Up Strike    victory at the Big Three auto companies. Over 10,000 non-union autoworkers    have signed union cards in recent months, with public campaigns launched at    Mercedes, Volkswagen, Hyundai in Montgomery, Ala., and Toyota in Troy, Mo.    Workers at over two dozen other facilities are also actively organizing. For    more information, visit uaw.org/join.  |