Well, the NLRB has filed a complaint against them for firing union organizers.
Considering the fact that this is the Trump National Labor Relations Board, the ironically named No Evil Foods (I wrote about them previously here) had to be pretty egregiously over the line:
Earlier this year, the vegan meat company No Evil Foods—which sells socialist-branded products at 5,500 grocery stores nationwide, including Whole Foods—fired two production workers at its Weaverville, North Carolina production plant who led a union drive at the company and circulated a petition asking for hazard pay during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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This week, the National Labor Review Board (NLRB) found merit that the company illegally terminated the two workers, an NLRB spokesperson confirmed to Motherboard. According to a federal complaint issued Wednesday and obtained by Motherboard, the company violated the law by firing workers because they "assisted a union" and "circulat[ed] a petition seeking hazard pay...for the purposes of mutual aid and protection."
Under the 1935 National Labor Relations Act, it is illegal for employers to discriminate or retaliate against workers for organizing coworkers to improve their working conditions or for attempting to form unions.
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On Wednesday, the NLRB issued a federal complaint against No Evil Foods, alleging the company violated the NLRA by "interfering with, restraining, and coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed." According to the complaint, on April 1, 2020, a No Evil Foods HR manager interrogated employees about their union organizing and the petition for hazard pay, creating the impression management was "surveilling employees" by telling them they knew who had circulated the petition in the parking lot outside the production plant.
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The firing of the two union organizers fits within an ongoing trend of ostensibly progressive companies like Kickstarter and Whole Foods taking anti-union stances when employees seek to improve their working conditions.
Jon Reynolds, the other fired No Evil Foods production worker, told Motherboard, "part of what helped us is that we kept notes, and documented and recorded everything. Throughout the unionization process, we amassed as much evidence as possible [that No Evil Foods was against our union]."
Note to would be labor organizers: DOCUMENT EVERYTHING.
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Following a series of compulsory anti-union meetings led by management, workers voted against joining the United Food and Commercial Workers union in a landslide 43-15 vote in February.
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A spokesperson for the National Labor Review Board says that a trial for No Evil Foods has been scheduled for December 7.
"The finding that our case had merit is a cause for any worker anywhere to see that there is an actual law that allows people to organize without fear of retaliation," said Roche, the fired No Evil Foods worker. "Companies that fire people who organize aren't on the right side of history. "
I really hope that the hypocrites at No Evil Foods get what's coming to them.
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