{"id":107218,"date":"2022-10-25T04:23:00","date_gmt":"2022-10-25T04:23:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/activision-blizzard-hit-with-another-nlrb-unfair-labor-complaint\/"},"modified":"2022-10-25T04:23:00","modified_gmt":"2022-10-25T04:23:00","slug":"activision-blizzard-hit-with-another-nlrb-unfair-labor-complaint","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/activision-blizzard-hit-with-another-nlrb-unfair-labor-complaint\/","title":{"rendered":"Activision Blizzard hit with another NLRB unfair labor complaint"},"content":{"rendered":"
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After Activision Blizzard chief communications officer Lulu Cheng Meservey published an alleged \u201ccompany-wide Slack message disparaging [Activision Blizzard workers\u2019] union,\u201d the Communications Workers of America has filed a new unfair labor complaint with the National Labor Relations Board. <\/p>\n

The charge, filed Monday, alleges that Meservey posted \u201canti-union propaganda\u201d in the #ABK-press Slack room and to an estimated 18,000 workers on Oct. 18. The message was later published to Twitter<\/a>, where Twitter users accused her of \u201cpushing right-wing talking points,\u201d according to Kotaku. In that message, Meservey commented on the NLRB’s decision to allow Blizzard Albany workers to vote on a union.<\/p>\n

In the Slack message, Meservey is said to have claimed that collective bargaining is slow, and that the process would keep workers from receiving bonuses or pay increases, among other things. The complaint says following those comments workers were unable to respond to the message via text, so they communicated their response with emojis; The Washington Post’s Shannon Liao<\/a> said Meservey was \u201cmet with negative emojis,\u201d which Meservey later acknowledged: \u201cI can hear the booing from here! And have registered the disappointed dog emojis.\u201d<\/p>\n

CWA, via its unfair labor charge, said Meservey’s \u201canti-union\u201d message violated workers’ rights. You can read the full filing below.<\/p>\n

This is Activision Blizzard’s fourth ongoing unfair labor complaint<\/a> filed with the NLRB since 2021. A company spokesperson has not responded to Polygon’s request for comment.<\/p>\n

Blizzard Albany QA workers, who won the right to vote on a union last week, will have their ballots counted on Nov. 18. Activision Blizzard workers’ public union push began in January after Raven Software QA workers announced their intention to unionize. Those workers won their union in May.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n