Back in August of this year, it was announced that Sega of America employees would be —the Allied Employees Guild Improving Sega (AEGIS-CWA)—alongside the (CODE-CWA).
Then in July, after Sega of America decided not to recognise it, that same union won a via the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). In short, that means Sega of America has to recognise the union [[link]] now, or—legally speaking—it could constitute an .
An internal letter sent by the company's leadership said it would respect its commitments to the [[link]] NLRB (thanks, ): "While we believe that a direct relationship promotes a supportive environment, responsiveness, and a shared [[link]] commitment, we respect our employees’ rights and maintain our legal commitment to the NLRB process."
The proposal was delivered November 6 to the bargaining committee, stating the company would be phasing out its temporary employees—"offshored
to Japan and Europe" as the report states. Bluntly, that's a terrible deal for the union, considering around 40% of its members (around 80 employees total) would be targeted by such layoffs.
This has the union angry for a few reasons. Firstly, the AEGIS-CWA should—in theory—be recognised by the company according to those NLRB commitments. Secondly, it's the largest multi-discipline video game union in the country, represented by around 200 employees. Thirdly, you're ideally meant to actually negotiate your proposals with a union, rather than announcing them to your employees directly.
The union itself says these are union-busting practices, meant to intimidate its workers. "We’re disappointed that Sega management has not yet ceased their union busting, even after we’ve won our union election back in July," it wrote in a statement on its November 16. "We hoped that Sega management would bargain in good faith, but instead they've shown disregard to the status quo and are threatening to outsource the jobs of a majority of the workforce in our QA and Localization departments, which is up to 40% of our unit."
In response, the union has filed an Unfair Labour Practice charge—and made further demands that those temporary workers be made permanent as reparations, as Senior QA Tester Temp—a job title which, in itself, highlights the issue—Elise Willacker wrote in a statement: "We call on the company to make all temporary employees permanent and return to the bargaining table in good faith. There is no other just alternative."
The charge will head to the National Labour Relations board, but it's entirely possible for Sega of America to action those layoffs in the meantime. Which isn't an ideal scenario for anybody involved—but if Sega of America has started as it means to go on, anything can happen.