Amazon to close 7 warehouses in the Canadian province of Quebec and
eliminate 1,700 jobs
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[January 23, 2025] Online
retailer Amazon said Wednesday that it's closing all seven of its
warehouses in the Canadian province of Quebec in the next two months.
The e-commerce giant said the move would provide “even more savings to
our customers over the long run." However, a Canadian union that
successfully unionized one warehouse accused the company of closing its
sites to fend off organizing efforts in the region.
The closures will eliminate about 1,700 permanent full-time jobs in the
greater Montreal area, Amazon said. The warehouses also employ 250
temporary employees.
Amazon said it would enlist local, third-party companies to deliver
packages, reverting to a business model it used in Quebec before 2020.
“This decision wasn’t made lightly, and we’re offering impacted
employees a package that includes up to 14 weeks’ pay after facilities
close and transitional benefits, like job placement resources,” Amazon
spokesperson Barbara Agrait said in a statement.
Agrait said the decision was made following a “recent review” of the
company's operations in the province. The closing sites include one
fulfillment center, two sorting centers, three delivery stations and a
facility Amazon dubs AMXL because it aids in the shipment of large goods
such as TVs and furniture.
Canadian Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry François-Philippe
Champagne wrote on the social media platform X that he had contacted the
head of Amazon's operations in Canada to share his objections.
“I expressed our dismay and frustration after learning in the news that
they intend to let go of 1,700 employees and close all seven of their
warehouses in Quebec,” Champagne said. “This is not the way business is
done in Canada.”
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Amazon's DXT4 warehouse is seen in Laval, Quebec, Wednesday, Jan.
22, 2025. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via AP)
About 240 Amazon workers at a
company warehouse in Laval, a Montreal suburb, unionized in May,
becoming the first of the tech company’s Canadian warehouses to do
so. Amazon challenged the union's right to represent the workers but
lost at a provincial labor tribunal in October.
Caroline Senneville, president of the union involved with the
organizing in Laval, said she has “no doubt” that Wednesday’s
closures, which she called “a slap in the face for all Quebec
workers,” were part of an anti-union campaign.
“It’s a move that runs counter to the provisions of the Labour Code,
and one we’ll be taking a firm stand against,” she said in a press
release.
Michael Lynk, a Western University professor emeritus of law, said
he saw Amazon's move as “a labor relations ‘Groundhog Day'" for
Quebec, where a similar situation played out 20 years ago with
Walmart Canada.
Walmart closed a store in Jonquiere, Quebec, citing profitability
troubles just months after workers there received union
certification.
The United Food and Commercial Workers Union decided to fight back
and, in 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada agreed Walmart violated
Quebec labor law.
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