Corporate grocery chains are continuing their offensive, with Kroger the latest example. The company wants concessions, even though it plainly doesn’t need them—it’s making record profits and just gave its CEO a handsome raise. Store workers in Virginia, Tennessee, and West Virginia voted in May to authorize a strike after Kroger made them a final offer that featured meager raises, no paid sick days, and an end to retiree health coverage.
But as industry standards erode, one local is bucking the trend. In Washington state, members of Food and Commercial Workers Local 21 in April ratified a contract with the region’s biggest grocery chains that protects health care premiums, raises wages, boosts the employers’ contribution to their pension, improves transfer rights, and expands union leave time. And they did it without a strike, settling even before their old contract expired.
What’s Seattle’s secret? Why weren’t the grocery chains looking for a fight this year with the country’s largest UFCW local?
The answer lies in the years Local 21 members have put into steadily building power, through activism at work and alliances in the community.
“We believe that membership action moves the bargaining table, more than pounding the table moves the bargaining table,” says President Todd Crosby.
MADE THE BOSS BLINK
Albertsons, Fred Meyer, QFC, and Safeway pushed in 2013 for across-the-board wage freezes, even for workers with steps remaining on the pay scale. They wanted to dump thousands of part-timers off the health insurance plan and raise premiums, deductibles, and out-of-pocket costs for everyone else.
“Those negotiations were actually pretty scary,” said Ariana Davis, a Local 21 executive board member who’s been working at Safeway for almost a decade. “The employer said that because of Obamacare we don’t deserve to have insurance. They tried to take away our holiday pay, our sick time—everything that we had won over the years.”
After members authorized a strike, the union erected a massive clock in downtown Seattle, counting down the hours until the strike deadline, and workers showed they were prepared to follow through.
In every store, picket captains volunteered and got trained up. “We literally had picket schedules done, people signed up and ready to go, before we even took the strike vote,” said shop steward and picket captain Jeannette Randall. “I felt like a manager trying to write a schedule. We had people signing up for shifts on a form we posted in our breakroom, so management could see it.”
Stewards and captains drove to work each day with their cars conspicuously packed full of picket signs. Community allies rallied with members at the clock. And as the deadline neared, stewards organized their co-workers by shift to make a big show of cleaning out their lockers together.
“What made the clock powerful was that it was real,” said Communications Director Tom Geiger. “It wasn’t just some sort of a media stunt … You can come up with a creative idea, but you have to do a lot of on-the-ground, hard work to make those tactics successful.”
The companies blinked, backing off their concession demands and settling a tentative agreement with under two hours left on the clock.
ALWAYS ACTIVE
But Local 21 didn’t fall into the trap of stalling out after the 2013 contract was ratified.
Contract Action Team meetings, begun during negotiations, never stopped. These monthly meetings bring together activists in the same geographic area—who may come from different stores, employers, or even industries. (A third of Local 21’s members work in health care.)
Las reuniones se llevan a cabo en bibliotecas y centros comunitarios y se repiten en tres turnos para adaptarse a cada horario de trabajo. Los activistas sindicales reciben breves capacitaciones técnicas y actualizaciones sindicales que pueden llevar a sus lugares de trabajo.
Recognizing that, for many members, the union lives or dies on the shop floor, the local puts resources and staff time into making sure its stewards are more than just names on paper.
The union’s goal is one steward for every 10 members, covering every shift, department, and day of the week. That means 4,600 stewards—and it’s a work in progress. So far Local 21 has trained 1,000 stewards since it was chartered through a series of union mergers in 2005.
“We have almost 10 times as many stewards as we had 10 years ago,” said Crosby, “but we still have a long way to go.”
Las actividades de los delegados a menudo encajan con las campañas de contratos, como en 2013, cuando los delegados de Safeway coordinaron un “Día de Descanso” en todo el estado. Los “monitores de descanso” voluntarios ayudaron a los miembros a registrar sus horas de inicio y finalización y cuándo, o si, habían tenido descansos. Después de documentar violaciones generalizadas, los supervisores y delegados se enfrentaron juntos a la dirección. La acción ayudó a lograr un mejor lenguaje contractual sobre los descansos.
Los líderes locales creen que el activismo sostenido de los miembros es lo que convenció a las empresas de comestibles a adoptar un enfoque tan diferente este año. "Esta vez nos estábamos preparando para una pelea por el contrato, y nos sorprendió que la compañía no volviera a la mesa con propuestas de mierda", dijo Randall. "Les demostramos que éramos una fuerza a tener en cuenta".
SOCIOS A LARGO PLAZO
Con 45,000 miembros, el Local 21 es el sindicato del sector privado más grande del estado de Washington. Su objetivo es construir alianzas permanentes –no sólo coaliciones de campaña puntuales– con otros grupos progresistas.
El local tiene un departamento de organización comunitaria, que otorga pequeñas subvenciones a grupos independientes con valores alineados. Los miembros del personal de UFCW también forman parte de las juntas directivas de organizaciones comunitarias, y la organización local ha movilizado a miembros para temas importantes para sus socios a largo plazo, como la reforma migratoria y el cambio climático.
In turn, these community organizations support Local 21. After settling its biggest contract, the union is working with dozens of partner groups to pass statewide Initiative 1433, which would raise the minimum wage to $13.50 an hour by 2020 and guarantee seven days of paid sick leave.
Right now, even a union grocery worker in Washington has to be sick for three days before he or she qualifies for paid sick leave. For nonunion workers, it’s even worse. The UFCW estimates over a million workers in the state don’t get first-day paid sick leave—and many get no paid sick days at all.
“When you are bargaining at the local level with national and multinational employers, there are limits to what you can achieve,” said Crosby. “So we are clear with our employers that if we can’t win it at the bargaining table, then we are going to keep fighting in different venues—mainly politically, at the state and national level.”
Davis personally filed the I-1433 petition on behalf of UFCW. She has taken leave from her job to work full-time for the union, focusing her efforts on collecting the 300,000 signatures necessary to get it onto the November ballot.
Davis says she was lucky her manager granted her union leave. But from now on, members won’t have to rely on luck, because the new contract spells out the right to come off the job for up to nine months to work full-time for the union. The local plans to expand the union leave program, which has already given a big boost to the petition drive.
“We’ve been working on getting up to 80 percent of the workers in each store to sign,” Davis said. “I go into the store and I talk to everyone and say, ‘Hi, I’m Ariana, I’m the one who filed this petition, and this is why it is good for us.’”
For her, the link between the initiative and the union’s contract campaigns is clear: “We do everything in our power to show the employer that we aren’t going to rest and they won’t catch us off guard.”
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