Kickstarter is first major tech firm to unionise


Kickstarter workers will be affiliated with the New York City chapter of the Office and Professional Employees International Union. – Screenshot, February 20, 2020.

EMPLOYEES of crowdfunding platform Kickstarter showed up to a freshly unionised workplace yesterday after a historic vote establishing a “beachhead” for organised labour in the tech sector.

Workers at the Brooklyn-based firm voted 46 to 37 to unionise in a first for major internet firms long known for providing generous pay and perks to employees.

“We are a union,” Kickstarter United, which was a voice for the union effort, tweeted on Tuesday.

“And to all tech and creative workers looking to fight for your rights, this is only just the beginning.”

Kickstarter workers will be affiliated with the New York City chapter of the Office and Professional Employees International Union (OPEIU).

“I congratulate the workers of Kickstarter, the first major tech company to vote for a union,” tweeted Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist who is vying to be the Democratic Party contender in November’s US presidential election.

“These workers are setting an example for the entire industry.”

OPEIU last year adopted a resolution to organise tech workers, citing an “astronomical increase” in interest in unionising.

The union noted protests or petitions by employees at Amazon, Google and video-game studio Riot Games as signs that tech employees are uniting to challenge decisions or conditions at their workplace that they find unacceptable.

According to US government statistics, 10.3% of American workers belonged to unions last year, down from 20.1% in 1983. – AFP, February 20, 2020.


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