Tag Archives: contract

Supermarket Swindle: Brave New Films Joins the Grocery Worker Fight

(cross-posted from Working Californians)

We have gained an amazing new partner in the fight for a fair contract for the grocery workers.  Brave New Films, of “Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Living” fame has created a new online campaign to help tell the story of the grocery workers and collect pledges from customers not to shop at the Vons, Raphs or Albertsons if they force a lockout or a strike.  Here is the first video:

You can sign the pledge here.

This is only the first of a series of worker profiles to help tell the story of working under a two-tier wage structure, or going without health insurance, not getting a raise for four years while the CEO’s salaries rose 216%.  As Robert Greenwald put it in a conference call, this is a campaign to “convince the gang of three that fairness is a value”.  He wants to “hold their feet to the fire until that happens.”

Brave New Films is giving these loyal and hard working employees a voice, like Charles Bingham, who is featured in this first clip.  Charles was born with an eye condition and he developed an infection while working at Ralphs.  Unfortunately, he was hired after the the strike and thus, despite having worked for the company for over 8 months, did not have health insurance.  He ended up going to the hospital, but left with a $8,000 bill, forcing him to declare bankruptcy.  His debt has now caused him to have to move out of his studio apartment and into a hotel.  If he had been cover like all workers were before the strike, this never would have happened.

Then there is Javier Ybarra, who has seen the power of his pay check demising over the years and now finds it “tragic” to work beside colleagues who are earning even less than him.  He works pay check to paycheck and “I scratch my head as I look over to my colleagues and wonder how they do it.” 

They now half jokingly refer to the lower tier workers as the B-Team, because it is second class.  Those post strike hired workers find a hard time being motivated to work hard compared to their coworkers who are making more.  They are now earning just a few cents over minimum wage.  They could go elsewhere, but as one worker on the call put it, then somebody else would just get hired.  It could be his son.  Instead he said defiantly, “somebody has to stand up and say something about that.”  He is standing up and now has an outlet for his voice.

Go watch the video and send it around to your friends and family.  I will be sure to post all of the new videos as the come out and track the progress of the “Supermarket Swindle” campaign.

Grocery Contract Update

(cross-posted from Working Californians)

We have now officially moved into the auto-renewal phase of the contract.  It will continually renew the temporary contract extension until one of the two parties gives 72 hours notice that they are pulling out.  The next meeting is set for the 16th and the UFCW has announced that they do not plan to cancel the extension this week.

The LA County Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, the Screen Acters Guild, Teamsters, CWA, SEIU, AFT and several other unions announced that they have sanctioned a USFC strike request.  That means that the 800,000+ members will honor the picket line in the event of a work stoppage through a strike authorization or lockout.

Maria Elana Durazo at the LA Labor Fed:

Workers throughout Los Angeles have made a commitment today, to stand in solidarity with our grocery workers in their fight to make their jobs, good middle class jobs again.  No Longer will we tolerate companies, who in their race to make more profits, are destroying what once made this city great, a strong middle class.

In granting a strike sanction, the Federation will support the grocery workers in various forms including picket line support, rallies, demonstrations, boycotts, food drives for strikers and coordinating public officials, unions and community support.

Robert Turner:

As an International Representative for the Teamsters, I can tell you this, we will not cross a picket line.  It wouldn’t be morally right to go against workers who work hard to make businesses profitable, but have no health care and struggle to provide for their families.

Elliot reminds us of what happened during the last labor dispute over at the Courage Campaign.

About 8,000 Teamsters tractor-trailer drivers and warehouse employees refused to cross the picket lines during the last Southern California supermarket labor dispute three years ago, forcing the markets to hire replacement workers to keep their supply lines flowing.

You should have seen the store managers trying to back an 18-wheeler into the stores’ loading dock.  Pure comedy.

Hopefully it will not come to that, but it does, there will be hundreds and thousands of people who have their back.

Tentative CSU Deal: A Victory for Californians

The San Francisco Chronicle reports a tentative agreement has been reached between the CSU faculty union and the administration. From early reports this seems a significant victory for the teachers:

A labor showdown between the California State University system and its faculty union was averted Tuesday with a tentative accord on a new contract that provides a guaranteed pay hike of 20.7 percent over four years for professors, lecturers, coaches and librarians.

“We expect our members to ratify this. We think it’s a good deal,” [union president John] Travis said. “We pretty much got everything that we asked for.”

What I like even more about this is that part-time and adjunct faculty are included in the wage increase, although the article says the rate of increase for those instructors – currently more than half of the overall CSU faculty – is undetermined.

This is fantastic news for the CSU workers.