

Grocery workers deserve share of success
The
Everett Herald Net
By George Keller
If you shop at a
Safeway, Fred Meyer, QFC or Albertson's, you probably noticed the yard
signs saying "Share the Success" posted on the lawn outside your grocery
store recently. We're the workers of these national grocery chains and
we're currently in contract negotiations. Employers need to share the
success with us - and with our communities.
We're among the more than 20,000 United Food and Commercial Workers in
Puget Sound who make a living in these stores - or, who are trying to. I
have served Everett grocery shoppers for more than 30 years at Safeway.
And I can tell you, it's getting tougher to make ends meet on the money we
make. Over the years, we've watched these stores transform from locally
owned businesses with a solid focus on great customer service, into large
hugely profitable national corporations.
Last year, Safeway, Albertson's and Kroger's (Fred Meyer and QFC) made a
combined $8.3 billion in profits nationally. In our region, they hold 80
percent of the market share. They're spending millions on store remodels
and on new stores and acquisitions. They can afford to assure those of us
who helped earn those profits a reasonable increase in pay. They can
afford to help us manage escalating health care costs and they can afford
to use scheduling practices that support raising a family.
We know the CEOs make millions, have stock options and use a company jet
for personal use. We know shareholders take home bundles of money. We have
no problem with profits that are hard earned. We do, however, have a
problem with the fact that we shared the work and don't get a fair share
of the success.
Sharing the success would mean that, as workers of these profitable
chains, we could afford the groceries we sell. I've seen co-workers leave
the store during lunch hour and go down to the local food bank because
they couldn't afford to buy lunch at the store.
I've seen co-workers lose their jobs when a prolonged illness meant they
lost their place on the schedule. Even healthy workers have a hard time
getting enough hours to make a living. Because the stores want to save
money by cutting hours, the average work week for grocery workers in Puget
Sound is 26 hours.
Sharing the success means we can call in sick without losing a day's pay;
it means we can make a parent-teacher conference without getting our hours
cut and our incomes reduced because of callous scheduling practices.
There's a growing trend in the retail business that claims tremendous
profits for those at the top without respecting the worker's contribution.
We see it in the large box stores like Wal-Mart and we're now seeing it in
our own stores. These practices are harmful to us, to our families and to
our communities.
When our wages don't meet the cost of living and we're struggling every
day to make ends meet, we know we're one health care crisis from
bankruptcy. When you go month after month robbing Peter to pay Paul, you
can't save for the kid's college, for retirement or even to make the
rising rent.
We continually hear how the cost of living is going up. It's a scary
feeling that you're being priced out of the middle class. Why are these
profitable national chains allowed to turn our hard work into their
profits at our expense? The only answer to that question is because we let
them.
This time around, we have a powerful voice. Every bargaining day, I travel
down I-5 and join the UFCW bargaining team at the table. You have no idea
how enlightening it is to see representatives of these national chains
face to face and hear what they have to say.
I'm among 20 UFCW grocery workers at the table and we've given our
employers fair proposals for health care, wages and pension issues. We're
fighting hard to get a fair deal during this contract negotiation. But
we're finding it tough to get these profitable chains to share the
success.
So, stay tuned. And next time you come to see us at the store, tell the
worker behind the cash register that you're behind them.
George Keller, a father and grandfather, is a grocery worker in Everett
for Safeway. He's worked in the industry for over 30 years.
|