SUPERMARKET WORKERS
NATIONWIDE MOBILIZE FOR GOOD JOBS AND AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE
Unified Action Hitting Grocery
Stores Across the Country
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) --
Grocery workers are standing up to protect good jobs with affordable
health care at supermarkets across the country today. Members of the
United
Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) International Union
in multiple cities are outside of major supermarkets communicating with
customers in support of the 26,000 Safeway and Ahold workers in
Baltimore, Md., and
Washington, D.C.,
who may be forced on strike because the companies refuse to offer a fair
contract that reflects their success.
Supermarket giants Safeway and
Ahold, owner of Giant Foods in the metro Washington, D.C. area, are
refusing to provide access to affordable health care and living wages
their employees have earned. This race to the bottom hurts communities
who often have to bear the impact from greedy corporations that force
hard-working families onto social services for basic needs.
Workers are taking action and
reaching out to customers at Safeway and Ahold-owned stores
coast-to-coast today, from Southern California and the Puget Sound to
Chicago and along the East Coast.
UFCW members at Safeway-owned
stores, Dominick’s and Genaurdi’s, and Ahold-owned Stop & Shop stores
are concerned about the companies’ bargaining agenda and how it could
hurt the industry.
“Safeway and the other big grocery chains already reached agreements
with workers in other parts of the country that provide affordable
health care and decent wages. It’s really important that these
companies treat all of its employees fairly,” says Melissa Champion,
UFCW Local 21 member and Seattle Safeway employee.
Caitlin Lawson, UFCW Local
328, works at Ahold-owned Stop & Shop in Massachusetts. She said, “When
we were fighting for health care and decent wages for part-timers, the
workers in Baltimore and Washington took a stand with us. Now I’m proud
to let my company know that I’m still in this fight for a fair contract
for all supermarket workers.”
The contract covering
workers in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore expires on March 29, 2008.
Over the past 18 months, UFCW members have mobilized in unified actions
to support supermarket bargaining. The central website,
www.groceryworkersunited.com,
has been a focal point for solidarity actions and coast-to-coast UFCW
member solidarity.
Just this week, a
grocery
worker from Chicago posted a message to UFCW members
on the East Coast encouraging solidarity. Jeff, a UFCW Local 1546
member, wrote, “Remember you are fighting not only for your contract
talks, but for the rest of them across the nation. We will be watching
here in Chicago because we will be starting grocery talks with Safeway
near the end of the year.”
The actions today are the
latest steps in the national unity bargaining movement among UFCW
members working in the grocery industry. The UFCW represents 1.3
million workers, with nearly one million in the grocery industry.