

May 27, 2009
Hundreds to Rally at Agata & Valentina and Demand Union Activist Be Re-Hired
Grocery Workers Union Brings Campaign to Organize Fine Food Markets to Manhattan's East Side
Today, hundreds of New Yorkers are rallying rally outside of Agata &
Valentina, an upscale market that sells fine foods at high prices, to call
for improved working conditions, fair wages, and compliance with health and
safety regulations. UFCW
Local 1500 also charges that A&V has violated their workers' rights under
Federal Labor law.Earlier this month Agata & Valentina fired an employee who had sought
assistance in improving his workplace from United Food and Commercial
Workers Union Local 1500. On Wednesday, neighborhood groups, concerned
shoppers, and UFCW members from around New York will join community leaders
in calling on Agata & Valentina to rescind the termination of the fired
employee and to make a statement acknowledging the right of workers to
organize free from harassment and intimidation.
"All is NOT fine at A&V," said Patrick Purcell, Director of Special
Projects for UFCW Local 1500. "A&V is using the standard fine food market
playbook that calls for employers to make huge profits by charging inflated
prices, sharing as little of the profits with the workers as possible and
then firing those who seek the help of the Union to improve their lives,"
Purcell continued. " What they fail to realize is that communities do not
think there is anything fine about this business practice," Purcell claimed.
"In fact, New Yorkers are fed up with this type of greed and demanding
better from stores in their neighborhoods. The campaign at A&V will unite
workers and consumers like never before" Purcell concluded.
United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1500 is based out of
Queens Village and represents 23,000 grocery workers in the Metropolitan New
York area including but not limited to Pathmark, Stop and Shop, Shop Rite,
D'agastinos, Fairway and Gristedes.
UFCW Local 1500's campaign to organize fine food markets has resulted in
the successful unionization of Jefferson Markets in The Village, the return
of over one million dollars in back wages for workers at Amish Markets and
the closing of two anti-union Balducci's grocery stores.
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