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WSWS : News
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UFCW forces through concessions contract at Gelsons
markets in California
By Andrea Peters
10 April 2004
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On March 24, the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW)
leadership strong-armed workers at Gelsons, an upscale supermarket
chain in southern California, to obtain approval for a three-year
contract that the employees had voted down 12 days earlier.
The agreement that was forced through is identical to the contract
ratified on February 29 by 59,000 striking and locked-out southern
Californian grocery workers. It includes massive concessions on
wages and benefits.
The UFCWs quashing of opposition to the agreement among
Gelsons workers underscores that the trade union bureaucracy
is working to impose on its membership the labor conditions demanded
by the supermarkets to protect their profit margins from growing
competitive pressure.
During the 19-week strike/lockout by workers at Ralphs, Vons,
Albertsons, and Pavillions supermarkets, the employees at Gelsons
remained on the job, even though they were covered by the same
UFCW contract under dispute at the other stores. The union leadership
and management at Gelsons agreed that neither a strike nor
a lockout would occur, based on the understanding that whatever
contract was finally signed at the four larger chains would serve
as the framework for an agreement with the Gelsons workers.
Employees were informed that they would have the right to vote
on the final contract.
The agreement that ended the strike/lockout contained such
massive givebacks that the UFCW members at Gelsons voted
against it. The agreement includes the creation of a two-tier
wage and benefits system, in which new-hires earn substantially
less than current employees, have less medical coverage, no health
benefits upon retirement, and a meager pension plan to which they
must contribute 65 percent of the total amount. In addition, the
contract caps employer contributions to medical and pension benefits
for current employees, thereby forcing workers to make much larger
contributions to maintain their current levels of coverage.
On March 17, just over two weeks after this contract was signed,
Ralphs announced that it would be closing 15 stores in southern
California over the next two months, resulting in the elimination
of 600 jobs.
The UFCW leadership was only able to gain passage of the agreement
covering Ralphs, Pavillions, Vons and Albertsons workers by isolating
and demoralizing the striking and locked-out union members. (See
Union surrenders benefits,
wages in sellout of California grocery strike, March
2, 2004.)
In response to the March 12 vote by the Gelsons workers
against the contract, the UFCW leadership said it would continue
negotiations with management to work out some adjustments that
would make the agreement more acceptable to the membership. At
the same time, the union announced it did not intend to call a
strike, thereby making it clear that regardless of any discussions
with management, the contract was essentially a done deal.
Over the following week, the UFCW pressured the membership
for a second vote on the agreement. Facing a united front of the
UFCW and Gelsons to impose the contract, the workers finally
agreed. The contract approved on March 24 was the same as the
one voted down on March 12.
The betrayal at Gelsons, following the sellout of the
southern California strike/lockout, demonstrates that the UFCW
is primarily interested in demonstrating its continued usefulness
to the supermarket chains. In the face of growing competition
from low-wage, non-union outfits like Wal-Mart, the UFCW is working
to push through the wage concessions and cutbacks in health coverage
that the industry is demanding.
The contract signed in the aftermath of the grocery strike/lockout
is serving as the model for labor agreements being hammered out
between the UFCW and employers throughout the country. On March
30, the union reached a settlement with the Safeway and Giant
supermarket chains in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore. That contract,
which covers 29,000 workers, sets up a two-tier health benefit
system that increases the size of employee contributions for new-hires
and drastically extends the amount of time they must wait to achieve
full coverage. In addition, the agreement raises the health care
deductibles and prescription co-payments for veteran workers.
In Houston, Texas, where the contract with the Kroger chain
expired on April 3, negotiations covering 11,000 grocery clerks
are ongoing. Management is demanding a 40 percent reduction in
medical benefit costs.
See Also:
A warning to California grocery
workers: Trumka, AFL-CIO preparing final act in betrayal
[31 January 2004]
Union moves to strangle grocery
workers struggle in Southern California
[8 January 2004]
Talks break down in
Southern California supermarket strike
[10 December 2003]
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