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US labour unions scramble to contain AI disruption, threats

US labour unions scramble to contain AI disruption, threats

Qatar Tribune2 days ago

Agencies
As artificial intelligence carries a threat to upend entire sectors of the economy, American labor unions are questioning the rapid change and are scrambling to protect workers, demand corporate transparency and
rally political support in their battle.
'As laborers, the ability to withhold our labor is one of our only tools to improve our lives,' explained Aaron Novik, a key organizer with Amazon's ALU union.
'What happens when that disappears (to AI)? It's a real existential issue,' he added.
Automation has already transformed most industries since the 1960s, typically reducing workforce numbers in the process.
But the emergence of advanced 'physical AI' promises a new generation of intelligent robots that won't be limited to repetitive tasks – potentially displacing far more blue-collar workers than ever before.
The threat extends beyond manufacturing.
The CEO of Anthropic, which created Claude as a competitor to ChatGPT, warned last week that generative AI could eliminate half of all low-skilled white-collar jobs, potentially driving unemployment rates up to between 10% and 20%.
'The potential displacement of workers and elimination of jobs is a significant concern not just for our members, but for the public in general,' said Peter Finn of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, America's largest union.
The Teamsters have focused their efforts on passing legislation limiting the spread of automation, but face significant political obstacles.
California's governor has twice vetoed bills that would ban autonomous trucks from public roads, despite intense lobbying from the state's hundreds of thousands of union members.
Colorado's governor followed suit last week, and similar battles are playing out in Indiana, Maryland and other states.
At the federal level, the landscape shifted dramatically with the change in the White House.
Under former president Joe Biden, the Department of Labor issued guidelines encouraging companies to be transparent about AI use, involve workers in strategic decisions, and support employees whose jobs face elimination.
But U.S. President Donald Trump canceled the protections within hours of taking office in January.
'Now it's clear. They want to fully open up AI without the safeguards that are necessary to ensure workers' rights and protections at work,' said HeeWon Brindle-Khym of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), which represents workers in the retail sector.
Meanwhile, companies are racing to implement AI technologies, often with poor results.
'By fear of missing out on innovations, there's been a real push (to release AI products),' observed Dan Reynolds of the Communications Workers of America (CWA).
The CWA has taken a proactive approach, publishing a comprehensive guide for members that urges negotiators to include AI provisions in all collective bargaining agreements.
The union is also developing educational toolkits to help workers understand and negotiate around AI implementation.
A handful of unions have successfully negotiated AI protections into their contracts.
Notable examples include agreements with media company Ziff Davis (which owns Mashable) and video game publisher ZeniMax Studios, a Microsoft subsidiary.
The most significant victories belong to two powerful unions: the International Longshoremen's Association, representing dock workers, secured a moratorium on full automation of certain port operations, while the Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) won guarantees that actors must be consulted and compensated whenever their AI likeness is created.

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