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WSWS : News
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Union moves to strangle grocery workers struggle in
Southern California
By Andrea Peters
8 January 2004
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Picketing of major supermarket chains in Southern California
by 70,000 striking and locked-out grocery workers is now entering
its third month. Conditions facing the United Food and Commercial
Workers (UFCW) members are rapidly deteriorating, with the union
leadership effectively strangling the struggle of its own rank
and file.
On October 11, workers at Vons and Pavillions supermarkets,
which are owned by Safeway, Inc., struck against management demands
for massive givebacks in health benefits, wages for new-hires,
work rules, and other employment conditions. The following day,
employees covered under the same contract at Ralphs (owned by
the Kroger supermarket chain) and Albertsons supermarkets were
locked out.
Over the past two weeks, the financial position of the UFCW
membership has worsened dramatically. Since Christmas, the union
bureaucracy has drastically reduced strike benefits for picketing
workers, from $275 a week for 40 hours on the picket line, down
to $100. Moreover, the workers will lose their health benefits
at the end of January, when the term covered by the company-sponsored
health fund under the previous contract comes to a close. Striking
employees are not eligible for unemployment benefits, and union
officials are telling the locked-out workers they will likely
be denied benefits as well.
The same union officials who are slashing benefits for the
striking and locked-out workers continue to pull in six-figure
salaries and expense accounts. According to UFCW reports filed
with the US Department of Labor, half of the top union officials
drew in upwards of $200,000 in wages, living allowances and expense
accounts in 2002, with union president Richard Dority pocketing
just under $400,000. In the same year, Richard Icaza, head of
Los Angeles Local 770, took home $278,783.
Cutting strike pay is not the only tactic employed by the UFCW
leadership to undermine the struggle of the grocery workers and
engineer a brazen betrayal. On December 22, the union pulled down
pickets from the supermarkets distribution and warehouse
facilities. The union had posted the pickets at these sites only
three weeks earlier, more than two months into the strike/lockout.
Up to that point, delivery drivers, represented by the Teamsters,
had continued to bring supplies to the stores, although they refused
to back the trucks all the way up to the loading docks.
Once picket lines were set up at the distribution centers,
the supermarket chains encountered some difficulties getting supplies
to their stores, a problem they eventually overcame by employing
scab labor to load and drive the trucks. Neither the UFCW nor
the Teamsters did anything to oppose this strikebreaking.
In fact, the supermarket chains have used strikebreakers from
day one of the conflict, without encountering any serious resistance
from either the UFCW or AFL-CIO union federation of which it is
a part.
The decision to remove pickets from the distribution centers
was not the first open blow by the UFCW leadership against the
workers struggle. On October 31, a little more than two
weeks after the start of the strike, the union halted picketing
at Ralphs supermarkets, despite the fact that union workers
remained locked out and strikebreakers remained inside.
It was well known that the three grocery chains had agreed
to pool their profits for the duration the strike, but the union
leadership attempted to justify its treachery with the absurd
claim that removing the pickets from Ralphs would increase the
financial pressure on the other chains, while demonstrating the
workers good will toward the general public. In fact, the
result was the direct oppositesomething that came as no
surprise to the union officials.
They pulled the pickets from Ralphs in a calculated move to
demoralize the strikers and sap public support for the workers
by making it clear that the union had no intention of waging a
serious fight. Up to that point, it was obvious that the public
overwhelmingly supported the workers. The struck and locked-out
stores remained virtually empty, as consumers, with few exceptions,
respected the picket lines and shopped elsewhere.
For the UFCW, which was already looking for a means of engineering
a betrayal and forcing the workers to accept a contract with drastic
concessions, the widespread public support for the workers represented
a problem. The longer it continued, and the longer the stores
at the three chains remained virtually empty, the harder it would
be to convince the workers that they had no chance of winning
a decent contract. Hence the decision of the union bureaucracy
to drive a stake into the heart of the strike by pulling the pickets
at one of the chains.
Over the course of federal mediation with representatives from
Vons, Albertsons, and Ralphs, the UFCW leadership has already
indicated its willingness to make huge contract concessions. On
December 19, UFCW negotiators offered to have workers begin paying
between $150 and $200 each month for their medical benefits, resulting
in management savings of between $350 million and $500 million
over the three-year life of the contract.
The grocery chains, which are seeking up to $1 billion in savings
on medical benefits, quickly rejected the unions new proposal.
In addition to being concerned over their own profit margins,
the supermarkets are under tremendous pressure from Wall Street
to secure the full scope of givebacks being demanded. The supermarket
strike in Southern California is being followed closely by big
business throughout the country, which views the efforts to break
the opposition of workers as an important first step in the wider
campaign to further roll back health care benefits in industries
across the board.
Efforts by a federal mediator to resolve the strike are expected
to pick up again in the first half of January. The UFCW leadership
is desperate to come to an agreement with the supermarket chains,
describing its lifting of pickets from the distribution centers
as a good faith effort gesture to restart negotiations.
See Also:
Talks break down in
Southern California supermarket strike
[10 December 2003]
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