Apple retail union organizers want to be paid at least $30 per hour

Apple retail union organizers want to be paid at least  per hour


Customers walk past an Apple logo inside of an Apple store at Grand Central Station in New York.

Lucas Jackson | Reuters

Workers who hope to organize a union at Apple’s Grand Central Terminal store want to be paid a minimum of $30 per hour, according to a website for the group, Fruit Stand Workers United, that was updated on Monday.

Employees at Apple’s high-profile store in New York City started to take steps to unionize earlier this year, posting the first public-facing website announcing their effort over the weekend.

The request for increased wages shows Apple’s wage workers believe they’re more valuable in a tight labor market.

“For pay, we seek a minimum $30 for all workers, built up on a matrix based on role, tenure, and performance,” the organizers said on their website. “For benefits, we seek more robust changes, like increased tuition reimbursement, faster accrued and more vacation time, and better retirement options, including higher match rates for 401(k) and enrollment into pension plans. For health and safety, we look to conduct research into security protocols with customer interactions, and research into track dust, health effects from building materials, and noise pollution at Grand Central.”

Apple employees can make from $17 to more than $30 per hour, depending on their market and experience, The Washington Post reported on Saturday. On Monday, Verizon, a retail competitor in the market for phones, said it would raise its minimum wage to $20 per hour.

“We are pleased to offer very strong compensation and benefits for full time and part time employees, including health care, tuition reimbursement, new parental leave, paid family leave, annual stock grants and many other benefits,” an Apple spokesperson said in a statement.

An employee-led organizing committee is collecting authorization cards that will determine the level of unionization support at the store. The union needs 30% of about 270 eligible employees at the Grand Central location in order to file with NLRB, a key step before filing a union petition.

If organizers get 30% of eligible employees to sign cards, then more than 50% of employees have to vote to officially certify the union.

It’s the latest sign that workplace activism is rising across the country during an inflationary environment and as the Covid-19 pandemic has forced frontline workers to re-examine the risks and benefits of their jobs.

Amazon workers voted to form a union at a Staten Island warehouse earlier this month. Starbucks locations across the country also voted to unionize. Apple’s Grand Central store employees are seeking representation with Workers United, an affiliate of the Service Employees International Union, which has overseen some successful Starbucks unionization drives.

“Hourly wage workers across the country have come to the realization that without organizing for a collective voice, employers will continue to ignore their concerns in the workplace,” said Workers United in a statement.

Apple has 154,000 employees around the world, according to a financial filing, and 270 U.S. stores. Apple reported over $365 billion in sales around the world in its fiscal 2021.



Source

The Tech Download: Reputational damage, supply chain issues and local investment. What’s next for Middle East tech?
Technology

The Tech Download: Reputational damage, supply chain issues and local investment. What’s next for Middle East tech?

This report is from this week’s The Tech Download newsletter. Like what you see? You can subscribe here. The past week has seen some progress, albeit uneasy and stilted, being made towards ending the Iran war. A two-week ceasefire was agreed on Wednesday, and while it looks fragile, hopes of the conflict approaching a close are […]

Read More
Alibaba just revealed it’s behind a viral AI video model dominating leaderboards
Technology

Alibaba just revealed it’s behind a viral AI video model dominating leaderboards

The Alibaba logo is pictured during a tour at the Alibaba office in Beijing on April 1, 2026. Wang Zhao | Afp | Getty Images A mysterious AI video model that has ascended global leaderboards has been confirmed as a project from Chinese tech giant Alibaba, in a development that could boost the company’s artificial […]

Read More
The Trump administration is getting angry as EU Big Tech fines top  billion in 2 years
Technology

The Trump administration is getting angry as EU Big Tech fines top $7 billion in 2 years

The Trump administration is increasingly on a collision course with the European Union over Big Tech fines. Google, Apple and Meta are contesting fines from the EU over violations of the bloc’s antitrust and competition laws, which total over 6 billion euros, or $7 billion, since the start of 2024. They’re an increasing bone of […]

Read More