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Healthcare and two-tier system at issue
Southern California grocery workers ratify new contract
By Kim Saito
31 July 2007
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Southern California grocery workers ratified a new four-year
contract on July 22. The 65,000 workers, employed at 785 stores
from central California down to the Mexican border, are members
of the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW).
The union said more than half of workers cast ballots, with
87 percent approving the contract, which is retroactive to March
6, 2007. The workers are employed by Ralphs, owned by Kroger;
Albertsons, owned by Supervalu; and Vons, owned by Safeway.
The agreement follows seven months of negotiations and two
strike authorization votes. Management, union bureaucrats and
the media hailed the contract, calling it a win-win
situation. However, the touted victory was only a partial recoup
of the devastating concessions given up in the settlement of the
19-week strike/lockout in 2003-2004, the longest supermarket strike
in US history. The UFCW betrayed the strike,
isolating workers and eventually forcing through a contract slashing
benefits for existing employees and instituting a two-tier system
that imposed huge cuts in pay and benefits for new workers.
The new contract eliminates the two-tier wage system created
by the last contract, but it will take most workers longer than
before, from six to nine years, to reach the top pay scale. In
just a few positions, such as meat cutter, will it require only
two years to reach top pay.
There were 33,000 so-called second-tier workers hired after
the 2003-2004 strike at pay rates far lower than veteran, or first-tier,
workers. Entering at $7.55 an hour, five cents above the California
minimum wage, they worked next to senior store employees who earned
$12.17 to $17.90 an hour with benefits.
The pay increases, retroactive to March 5, were paltry given
the high cost of living in the state. Over the next four years
the majority of workers will get a $1.65 increase. In
addition, according to one Albertsons worker in Thousand Oaks,
the contract did not address the problem of some higher seniority,
first-tier workers getting paid second-tier wages. They will have
to wait longer to get raises.
The waiting period for healthcare eligibility was reduced to
six months for new hires and dependent children, and 24 months
for spouses. Previously it took more than a year for workers to
get eligibility, and 30 months for children and spouses. However,
former second-tier workers will have to wait five-and-a-half years
to qualify for the top healthcare plan.
Preventive healthcare will be covered for all workers and will
include routine physicals, mammograms, prostate cancer screenings,
baby care and childhood immunizations. The union will supplement
healthcare coverage, supplying $3,000 for each employee, contributing
$240 million from a healthcare trust fund, managed jointly by
the union and the grocery companies.
In the past, supermarkets gave a set amount of money to cover
healthcare benefits; the new deal creates $1,000 reimbursement
accounts for each employee to pay for medical visits. Another
key change is an emphasis on wellness programs, such as weight
loss and programs to quit smoking.
Kevin Herglotz, senior vice president of Vons owner Safeway
Inc., said employers were able to offer wage increases and improved
health benefits because the union agreed to significant initiatives
that will help control the companies expenses.
It appears that the grocery chains retreated on the two-tier
system in part because of problems associated with high employee
turnover. Citing similar concerns, Stater Bros., Southern Californias
fourth-largest unionized grocer, signed a contract that eliminated
the two-tier wage system and increased health and pensions for
its 16,000 workers earlier this year.
The grocery chains also appeared to be anxious to avoid a confrontation
at this time, given that a major potential competitor, Britains
largest retailer Tesco, has announced it is spending $2 billion
to launch Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market and will open 100
small-format stores in the western US, about half of them in Southern
California.
Human cost of 2003-2004 strike
Recent reports present a clear picture of the enormous human
cost of the trade union bureaucracys betrayal in 2004. A
University of California, Berkeley study documents the fact that
20,000 children of grocery workers lost their health coverage
under the 2004 contract. A Reuters news article reported
that the huge sacrifices imposed by the contract took a toll on
workers and their families in the form of suicides, lost homes
and divorces.
The UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education report
published in January documents the decline in healthcare for grocery
workers as a result of the 2003-2004 strike. Researcher Ken Jacobs
said it was shocking how quickly healthcare coverage evaporated.
He commented, It is very dramatic and very disturbing, but
it does really reflect the long-term trends. And if changes arent
made on a policy level, we will see much greater deterioration
in job-based coverage in the state.
Based on data gathered from UFCW locals in Northern and Southern
California and interviews with 755 rank-and-file members, Jacobs,
Arindrajit Dube and Felix Su compiled the report called Declining
Health Coverage in the Southern California Grocery Industry.
Its findings included the following:
* Before the last strike, 94 percent of Southern California
UFCW workers had health coverage. Now only 54 percent have coverage.
* For workers hired under the new contract, waiting periods
increased from four months to a year for individual coverage,
18 months for courtesy clerks, and 30 months for family coverage.
New workers were required to pay 20 percent of the premium cost
while getting poverty wages.
* Of the workers hired since April 2004, only 7 percent of
these workers were covered through their employer. Half are uninsured
and the rest are covered through a parent or spouses employer
or receive government aid. There are now 20,000 fewer children
covered by grocery store health insurance plans.
* The study also found that 20 percent of workers reported
that they skipped needed doctor visits because of the cost.
At a hearing before the Blue Ribbon Commission on the Los Angeles
Grocery Industry and Community Health in January, one grocery
worker testified that he had cancer, but had to rely on government
programs to pay his bills because he was not covered by his employer.
Another worker said he needed medical care but would have to wait
11 months to see a doctor until his insurance went into effect.
In an article in the San Diego Union-Tribune, Jacobs
wrote, This steep and sudden drop in job-based health coverage
among grocery workers in Southern California over the last three
years is emblematic of what is happening with job-based healthcare
in general in California and the United States, but just at a
speedier pace. And as bad as the healthcare situation of the Southern
California workers is, their options are still better than those
of Wal-Mart workers. Between 2001 and 2006, the proportion of
Californians with job-based coverage fell by 5 percent.
The WSWS spoke with Phyllis, a seafood deli worker with
30 years service at a Ralphs in Irvine. She said, It
still didnt make up for all that we lost in the last contract.
There are parts of the contract that are good. The medical is
good, especially for families, (but) there arent many workers
like myself with 30 years in the industry. I am grandfathered
out because Ive already reached the top level of pay. Still
Id like some kind of increase because of the cost of living
going up.
Its hard to understand all the complicated contractual
language. Were only told the highlights. One
thing though thats new, those of us in the meat and seafood
section must now work in any other department when theres
a need.
It seems very wrong to me that were working so
hard making these wages, while many of the union people are making
more. I dont think thats right. They shouldnt
be paid so much. Frankly, I dont trust them or the company.
See Also:
Contract talks break down
at Southern California supermarkets
[24 May 2007]
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