14 May 2026

Despite Arizona Dispensary Employees’ Landslide Vote to Remove UFCW, Union Bosses Seek to Overturn Election Result

Posted in News Releases

Union officials ask Labor Board to disenfranchise workers who voted 14-1 to end union affiliation

Phoenix, AZ (May 14, 2026) – Employees of Curaleaf Camelback Dispensary overwhelmingly voted United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 99 union bosses out of power at their workplace. Dispensary employee Jennifer Mooney, who filed a petition for her coworkers with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) last month, led the workers’ effort. The petition sought a “decertification” election to terminate the status of UFCW Local 99 as the workers’ exclusive “representative.”

The NLRB is the federal agency responsible for enforcing the National Labor Relations Act, a task that includes administering elections to install (or “certify”) and remove (or “decertify”) unions. The petition was filed with free legal aid from National Right to Work Foundation staff attorneys.

Mooney’s petition, filed April 3, 2026, requested an NLRB-administered secret-ballot election for the 25-member work unit, including all full- and part-time Store Associates employed at the Curaleaf Camelback Dispensary’s Phoenix location.

The workers’ election took place on May 1, when dispensary employees voted 14-1 to remove UFCW Local 99 as the employees’ representative. However, UFCW union bosses filed a last-minute request with the NLRB seeking to overturn the workers’ decisive vote against the union.

“My colleagues and I didn’t appreciate how UFCW officials ignored our interests and tried to force a contract that we didn’t like,” stated Mooney. “We are thankful to have the Foundation’s assistance in exercising our legal rights.”

Arizona is one of the 26 states with Right to Work protections, which safeguard workers by making union membership and dues payment strictly voluntary. However, even in Right to Work states, union bosses can impose exclusive bargaining control upon all workers in a workplace, meaning they can dictate working conditions even for employees who oppose the union. A worker decertification victory would remove the union’s monopoly bargaining powers over those workers.

Foundation attorneys have recently assisted with a string of worker efforts in the cannabis industry to push out unwanted unions, including in Massachusetts, Missouri, and Ohio. Late last year, Foundation attorneys also submitted an amicus brief to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in the case Ctrl Alt Destroy v. Elliott, Case No. 25-2419, which may determine whether state laws that impose so-called “labor peace agreements” on the cannabis industry break federal law. The Foundation’s brief argues that California’s labor peace agreement scheme violates federal labor law by forcing cannabis industry employers to bargain with union officials – even when a majority of workers haven’t expressed that they want a union – in order to lawfully operate within the state.

“Once again, rather than respect the decision of workers who overwhelmingly want to be free of the UFCW at their workplace, union lawyers are attempting to overturn the vote of workers opposed to union affiliation,” commented National Right to Work Foundation President Mark Mix. “Unfortunately, many American workers who undertake to exercise their legal rights are often trapped by union officials who abuse the NLRB’s non-statutory, pro-Big Labor policies that keep workers in the unions’ rank-and-file for months or even years.

“Cannabis industry workers in particular are being targeted by Big Labor, which is using legislative efforts to impose union control in the cannabis industry, with little regard for workers’ right to have a free and fair election on union exclusive representation,” Mix added. “Foundation attorneys will always fight to ensure that workers can exercise their right to choose, free of impediments at both the state and federal levels.”