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DETROIT WORKERS RATIFY FAIR AGREEMENT WITH KROGER
West Coast, Houston, Dallas, and Toledo Workers Tell Company to End
Games at Bargaining Table and Settle a Contract that Shares Kroger’s
Success
WASHINGTON, DC-- Michigan Kroger workers
represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local
876 scored a major victory yesterday when they voted to ratify a
fair contract with the Kroger Company.
The contract includes immediate wage
increases for all members, as well as increases throughout the
contract’s term. It also includes job security, improved, affordable
health care coverage, and improved pension contributions.
“The contract is especially meaningful
for the approximate 700 current members who did not qualify for full
health benefits under the last contract, but will under the new
agreement," said Local 876 President Roger Robinson.
Kroger is a highly successful company,
realizing record profits, increasing market share, and growing
revenues.
Detroit is not the only location where
UFCW members are in negotiations with the Kroger Company. In fact,
tens of thousands of workers in cities across the U.S. are at the
table with Kroger, attempting to bargain for a fair contract that
will benefit Kroger workers, their company and their communities.
Those UFCW members, working at Kroger
stores in Houston, Dallas, Oregon, Southern California, Toledo, and
Seattle, are demanding that Kroger step up to the plate like it did
in Detroit and share the company’s success with the workers who make
it possible. To date, though, Kroger has refused to get real at the
bargaining table.
The company is up to its old tricks on
the West Coast, in Texas, and Ohio, insisting on contracts that
would, in effect, force workers and their families to choose between
paying the rent and paying for health care. Instead of seeking ways
to reward these UFCW members for their hard work, the company is
seeking ways to lower living standards.
“We all do the same jobs, and we all work hard,” said Mike Newman,
UFCW Local 911 member and Toledo Kroger worker. “We should all be
treated equally. It’s only fair.”
UFCW members are unified in a nationwide
movement to improve jobs in the grocery industry for workers,
families, and communities. For more on UFCW negotiations across the
country, visit the website at www.groceryworkersunited.org. |