

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May
9, 2007
Statement by
United Food and
Commercial Workers International Union On Grocery Bargaining in Southern
California
After seven months of
unproductive negotiations with grocery employers, UFCW Southern California
local unions left the bargaining table on Tuesday. The latest offer by the
three grocery companies, Safeway, Kroger and Supervalu, was an insult to
members, and left UFCW leadership with no choice but to break off
negotiations.
The companies are trying to
force another strike, like the work stoppage they caused in 2003 that put
60,000 UFCW members on picket lines for nearly five months and disrupted
shoppers and communities throughout the region.
The three grocery giants
have repeatedly denied members’ need for accessible, affordable health care,
and living wages for all workers. This despite the fact that all three
companies have shown a recent rise in profits that analysts predict will
continue to grow.
It would appear that Safeway
CEO Steve Burd knows that workers need affordable, quality health care for
themselves and their families. That’s why he announced earlier this week
that Safeway and nearly 40 other companies were launching the Coalition to
Advance Healthcare Reform (CAHR). The UFCW applauds Burd and other CAHR
participants as welcome voices to this important discussion. We wish that
all three grocery leaders would bring this commitment to the bargaining
table.
UFCW members will be
reaching out to consumers in Southern California and across the country to
remind the grocery giants that their success is due to workers and shoppers,
and that they need to show concern for their community and workers by
reaching a fair agreement with Southern California workers.
Two grocery companies in
Southern California, Stater Bros. and Gelson's, settled fair contracts with
UFCW members that included quality, affordable health care and living wages
for all workers. That two regional supermarket chains can afford to offer
their workers a fair contract proves that it's possible to be profitable
while still showing your workers respect.
If these regional markets
can offer a fair contract, then surely Supervalu, Kroger, and Safeway --
national supermarket chains that are currently raking in billions of dollars
in profits -- can do the same.
Southern California's
grocery workers, together with Stater Bros. and Gelson's Markets, created a
road map to a fair contract, a map that can be followed by the national
chains. But instead of doing the right thing and partnering with the workers
who helped them return to profitability, these national companies dragged
out negotiations in an effort to keep their workers' wages low and benefits
out of reach for workers and families.
Southern California's
grocery workers are unified, and UFCW-represented grocery workers across the
country are supporting them as well. But it’s time to end this drawn-out,
dead-end negotiations process. With the support of the public, UFCW members
can and will win a fair contract -- even if means a long, difficult battle.
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For more information, please contact
press@ufcw.org.
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