UPDATED: December 10, 4:15 pmâÂ
The Street Roots board has declined to voluntarily recognize the union. According to the Street Roots Workers Guild, the board notified the NLRB of the decision on December 9, citing their wish to reduce the bargaining unit by two members who they are ineligible for the union due to their supervisory roles. The union disagrees with this assessment.Â
"The NLRB defines 'supervisors' as having the power to hire, fire, discipline, promote, or assign tasks to workers. These two employees do not hold those powers," the Guild stated. "The Street Roots Workers Guild membership remains steadfast in its calls for the board to recognize the Guild and all its members immediately."Â
In a separate statement to the Mercury, the Guild said the board has "failed to engage with the union at all, despite numerous attempts via various avenues."
"[We are] disappointed the board is using Street Roots' time, money, and energy to fight a unanimous unionization effort rather than to support staff and vendors at a time of upheaval and uncertainty at Street Roots," the statement continued.Â
This afternoon, Street Roots Executive Director Kaia Sand announced her departure from the organization as of December 6, after seven years in the role. In a post on Substack, Sand wrote she is leaving to focus on writing, and indicated support for the union on social media.Â
The Street Roots board has not responded to the Mercury's request for comment.Â
Original story:Â
Staff members at Street Roots, the Portland nonprofit that publishes a weekly newspaper focused on homelessness and social justice issues, announced their plan to unionize with Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 7901. According to a union press release, 15 eligible staff members voted unanimously in favor of unionization. Theyâre hoping to avoid an election with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), however, and are seeking voluntary recognition from the Street Roots board.Â
The union will include staff members across Street Rootsâ editorial, development, vendor, and advocacy programs. The announcement makes Street Roots the third Portland news organization to form a union in 2024 alone, joining the Mercury and OPB, whose unions were each voluntarily recognized earlier this year.
A letter from the Street Roots Workers Guild to the organizationâs board of directors states the staff âare motivated to form a union by our shared interest in maintaining a healthy organization.âÂ
âIn its 25 years, Street Roots has been a place to exchange ideas, create lasting solutions to shared challenges, and generate income opportunities alongside people most impacted by social injustices. We deeply believe in that mission,â the letter reads. âWe believe a union will strengthen Street Roots by democratizing processes directly impacting our workplace and community.âÂ
A central component of Street Roots is its vendor program, which allows people experiencing homelessness and poverty to sell Street Roots newspapers directly to readers and earn an income each week. Street Roots works with about 800 vendors every year, who can buy copies of the weekly newspaper for 25 cents and sell them for a dollar each, keeping all profits and tips.Â
The vendors are technically independent contractors, and therefore ineligible for union membership. But the Street Roots Workers Guild wants to advocate for the vendorsâthe companyâs lowest-paid employeesâin its labor contract.Â
âThe newspaper we publish regularly sheds light on root causes and political failures that perpetuate homelessness,â the unionâs letter to the board states. âOur union members resolve to positively impact the vendors who sell that newspaper each weekâfor the good of the entire Street Roots community.âÂ
Staff members are also seeking âpay equity, adequate staffing, and safety measures,â necessary to do their work.Â
âSharing in decision-making will allow us to grow a true, community-driven organization and advocate for real-world solutions,â the letter says. âBased on the factors outlined in this letter, and the boardâs strong commitment to equity and social justice, we are hopeful the board will promptly and voluntarily recognize our union.â
The Mercury didnât immediately hear back from a board representative for comment. The Street Roots Workers Guild is seeking a response from the board by December 4, and will file a request for an election with the NLRB if the union doesnât receive voluntary recognition.Â