For the past year, contractors associated with Google’s YouTube Music Content Operations Team have been attempting to collectively bargain with the tech giant. Those workers won the right to unionize last April in a historic victory and, since that time, have been trying to get Google to come to the bargaining table. On Friday, amidst yet another effort to spur negotiations, Google simply laid off many of the workers associated with those efforts.
The moment that workers found out they’d been laid off was captured in video from a City Council meeting in Austin, Texas. At the meeting, councilors were debating whether to pass a resolution that would have called on Google to bargain with its workers. Some of the impacted contractors were speaking at the meeting when one delivered the news that they had all been laid off.
The Austin City Council ultimately passed the resolution calling on Google to bargain with its workers, though it was too late.
The workers in question were contracted to YouTube through IT talent firm Cognizant. The end of Google’s contract with Cognizant spurred last week’s layoffs. In a statement to local news, Cognizant said that the laid-off workers would now become part of a “deployable talent pool” and would be given “seven weeks of dedicated, paid time to explore other roles within the organization and build new skills through our training ecosystem.”
Alphabet Workers Union-CWA put out a statement Thursday condemning Google’s layoffs. “This is devastating. We have been fighting for years now to get Google, one of the most powerful and well-resourced companies in the world, to negotiate with us so that we could make a living in exchange for the work we do to make their products better,” said Jack Benedict, Music Generalist, and member of AWU-CWA, as part of the statement.
Some of the workers in question are paid as low as $19 an hour and “receive minimal benefits,” the Alphabet Workers Union-CWA says.
The National Labor Review Board has declared that Google is legally obligated to bargain with unionized workers. Google is breaking the law by refusing to come to the table. Of course, in this country, it doesn’t matter if you’re a criminal as long as you have lots and lots of money. You can just go on breaking the law, sometimes indefinitely, if you’re worth a certain amount. Google, like other large companies, has apparently decided that its market cap is just too damn high for it to have to abide by federal labor laws.
Gizmodo reached out to Google for comment on this development and will update this story when we receive a response.