Workers at two more
Bookstore employees at an Indigo in
He said more stores could be joining the union drive in the coming months.
"We have been signing cards in other stores and there’s definitely interest from other employees," Shimmin said. "But we haven’t gotten to an application yet."
Shimmin said the company has responded to the unionization efforts with promises to improve wages and working conditions at stores across the country.
"They've announced a whole pile of improvements — I'm sure to try and stop unionization at other stores," he said. "They've promised wage increases, opportunities for promotions and the closure of the customer washrooms."
He said some of those promises have already been broken, such as continuing to require workers to clean customer washrooms at some locations.
Indeed, Shimmin said cleaning customer washrooms emerged as a major issue for some Indigo workers during the pandemic, and propelled employees at the
He said employees at the store have elected their negotiating committee, and are preparing for negotiations with the company on the first collective agreement.
Shimmin said the key issues include wages and benefits, consistent scheduling, getting enough hours and health and safety during a pandemic.
The longtime union organizer said he finds the efforts by Indigo staff to unionize exciting.
"It's a really kind of beautiful new style of organizing where the campaign itself was driven by the workers, who are quite young, through social media," he said. "They've managed to get support from some big-name authors and politicians."
Indigo did not respond to a request for comment.
The unionization drive comes as Indigo has been severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The
Indigo's same-store sales for online and retail stores, a key metric in the retail sector, fell 7.9 per cent in the quarter.
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