Eaze cannabis delivery drivers threaten strike ahead of annual pot holiday

Eaze cannabis delivery drivers threaten strike ahead of annual pot holiday
Delivery driver Lori Riehle (center) at Eazes depot in Silverlake chants and other unionized workers at cannabis delivery company Eaze and its subsidiary Stachs gathered for a news conference at United Food and Commercial Workers Local 770 office in Koreatown on April 10,2024.
(Suhauna Hussain / Los Angeles Times)

Eaze cannabis delivery drivers threaten strike ahead of annual pot holiday

Suhauna Hussain April 11, 2024

California cannabis delivery company Eaze may face a work stoppage next week

ahead of the annual pot holiday 4/20 weekend

, a peak sales time for weed businesses.

Nearly 600 cannabis delivery drivers and depot staff across California who work at Eaze and its subsidiary Stachs are represented by various locals of the United Food and Commercial Workers

International

Union.

Last week, they voted to approve a strike, the union said, after contract negotiations with Eaze stalled over disagreements about hourly wages

as well as and

the mileage reimbursement rate for drivers, who use their own cars to make deliveries.

The vote gives leaders authority to call a strike if contract talks stall at a bargaining session scheduled for Monday.

“We are totally willing to negotiate, and if you want to give us a deal, we are into it, but if you won’t, we will strike,”

said

Ron Swallow, a delivery driver at Eaze’s depot in Van Nuys,

said

at a Wednesday news conference held by UFCW Local 770, which represents 180 workers at Eaze depots in Southern California.

Workers at

his Swallow’s

depot in Van Nuys approved a strike authorization by a 95% margin,

according to Swallow he said

.

“I am super proud of all my co-workers

,

.

T

hey have stood united while their cars fell apart, while their rent is two months late,” Swallow said.

Ed Gutierrez, deputy director of UFCW Local 770’s cannabis division, said a super-majority of Eaze workers across the state voted in favor of a strike. The union declined to disclose a specific percentage and total number of ballots cast.

Cory Azzalino, chief executive officer at Eaze, said the company is hiring a “large cohort of new drivers” in anticipation of a work stoppage.

“Eaze is preparing itself to maintain operations in the event of a strike,” Azzalino said. “Corporate and depot staff will assist in keeping operations as normal as possible for our customers.”

Eaze, the largest multi-state cannabis delivery operator in the U.S., launched

in 2014with a buzzy presence in CaliforniaThe delivery service was

and was valued at $700 million, with more than $255 million in total investment capital raised, according to TechCrunch.

But the

San Francisco-based

company has struggled with cash flow problems

, as well as

and legal issues, with its former chief executive pleading guilty to a $100-million bank fraud scheme.

A lawsuit filed last year by the founders of Green Dragon, a cannabis retail company that merged with Eaze in late 2021, accused Eaze of defrauding investors by intentionally concealing its poor finances in order to finalize the merger.

Stachs and Eaze workers at the Van Nuys depot voted to unionize in March

2023 of last year

, with workers in La Brea, Gardena, Silverlake and other Southern California locations following suit later in the year.

Six depots in Southern California and five in Northern California have unionized with various UFCW locals, which are coordinating to negotiate a statewide contract. Negotiations

have been ongoing since began in

August

2023

.

UFCW Local 770 counts about 700 cannabis workers among the 31,000 healthcare, retail, grocery, and packing workers it represents in Southern California. Some Eaze workers in Sacramento recently unionized with the Teamsters.

Delivery drivers

have complainedinterviewed said

that the company’s decision last summer to slash the reimbursement rate for drivers from the 65.5 cents per mile rate recommended by the IRS to about 40 cents per mile with slight variation depending on location has

had the effect of cutting

cut drivers’ pay by $300

– to

$700

per a

month. Drivers

currently

earn minimum wage, plus tips.

Another sticking point is

Around the same time,

Eaze’s use of

also began using

a third-party company, Motus, to calculate a variable mileage rate based on where drivers are

located

and gas prices, which drivers said keeps them in the dark about how their reimbursement is calculated.

Lori Riehle, a delivery driver

based out of at

Eaze’s depot in Silverlake, said the mileage rate reduction “has been a nightmare.”

Riehle said the company’s most recent proposal which the company offered Mar. 19 as its last, best and final proposal of a flat $0.45 mileage over the course of a three-year contract, was unacceptable, given the wear and tear the job has on her vehicle.

“Reimbursement is not a perk they give us. …

W

e need that money,” Riehle said. “Today, my savings are gone I’m reaching for my credit card to get through the end of the pay period.”

Azzalino, the Eaze chief executive, said the company’s offer was reasonable, considering troubling economic head winds the weed industry faces and considering it’s higher than the state standard of a

$0.35 35-cent

reimbursement rate set for rideshare and delivery drivers classified as independent contractors under gig worker law Proposition 22.

In an industry being suffocated from high taxes and over regulation, Eaze pays our drivers fair wages averaging over $25 per hour including tips, as well as benefits and consistent scheduling,” Azzalino said in an email. “Eaze has not earned a profit in its history, so this is not the case of old industry hoarding profits.

There is limited turnover among drivers, who on average, have worked at the company for 2.4 years, “which is evidence of a reasonable compensation package,” Azzalino said.

On Wednesday afternoon, dozens of Eaze workers and union staff sat at folding tables in a parking lot outside UFCW Local 770’s office in Koreatown with posters and markers to make picket signs with slogans like “Eaze the greed,” “Weed deserve better” and “We won’t Eaze up until we get a fair contract.””Eaze wants to be portrayed seriously, but it doesn’t know how to run as a proper company,” said Bianca Goosen, a former supervisor at Eazes depot in Gardena who was laid off in December when the depot closed. She said was at the event to support her former co-workers. She said face daily risks on the job, including the possibility of being robbed at gun point, given the nature of their cargo but that the company’s human resource representatives are are slow to respond to requests if they respond at all. “It’s sad to see things haven’t changed,” Goosen said.She said that as union drives in various depots picked up, Eaze had sought to limit the new unions membership by creating divisions between depot staff and drivers. Eaze Depots rely on about three full time packers who assemble orders; she said the company began to cut their hours to reduce their exposure to drivers.Eaze did not immediately respond to questions about workers concerns about securityand allegations of union-busting

.

At UFCW’s news conference said cannabis delivery workers serve as a lifeline for patients who rely on cannabis to treat pain, and lamented broader economic instability for players in the cannabis industry.

Eric Goepel,

the

founder and CEO of the Veterans Cannabis Coalition, said at the Wednesday news conference that cannabis delivery workers serve as a lifeline for patients who rely on cannabis to treat pain and lamented broader economic instability for players in the cannabis industry.

California’s “bizarre” taxes and regulatory scheme make

s

it nearly impossible to turn a profit, he said, but squeezing workers is a “terrible miscalculation” by Eaze.

“The way forward here is not by going after the workforce and trying to nickel and dime them out of $500, $600 a month that they most desperately need, and which adds a smidgen of a fraction to their actual bottom line, when a company has raised hundreds of millions of dollars,” Goepel said.

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