Supermarket strike offers lessons in compassion
Sue Clark
“Aren’t they cute,” I commented as the clerk checked my groceries.
“They look so young.”
He didn’t say anything, so I persisted. “I’ve never seen you guys
training anyone before.”
“They’re scabs,” he said. “We’re probably going to strike.”
He looked worried.
“So those guys aren’t too popular?”
“You could say that.”
My first thought was of my own forthcoming inconvenience. I went
back into the store and stocked up on items I figured would not be
easily found in the 7-11 or Trader Joe’s, such as my Smart Ones
Deluxe Diet Pizzas. (As I write, I’m down to one.) It was one of
those worthy problems we have in Newport-Mesa.
I’ve seen both sides of a picket line. Twenty years ago, I was
newly married with a big mortgage on a house in Newport Heights. I
was a school counselor, on teachers’ salary scale, and considered
“quasi-administrative.” Instead of walking out with the teachers, I
sided with administration. I did it to suck up to the management and
to save money. Philosophy had nothing to do with it.
I wish I hadn’t. In an effort to save a few hundred dollars, I
crossed my fellow teachers’ picket line. In some cases, the
friendships I lost that week were gone for good. Memories stretch a
long way in a strike. My motive was financial fear, yet my decision
proved costly. I didn’t get any respect from management, either, for
that matter. I think they knew I stayed for the money.
A few days after the market strike began, I was talking with my
friend Marion at work. “I will never cross a picket line, “ she
declared.
Being the follower I sometimes am, I said, “Neither will I.”
Oddly, just saying that made me feel good. But I really had no idea
what the market strike was about; I hadn’t read up on the issues. I
often blindly take a side without any information.
The next day, I decided to go to the pickets and talk to them. I
picked up a bag of chips and some diet soda (I guessed correctly that
the women would like diet) and walked over to my local market. I
handed a young picket the food and told them it was for them, and
that I’d like to hear their take on the strike.
The response from the pickets was astonishment. They couldn’t
believe someone would bring them food. One of them almost started
crying. I told them I would never break a picket line (my new
philosophy of one day), but that I wanted more information. One of
the meat cutters handed me a contract and went over some of the
points with me. He was still shocked that I’d brought food.
Management was planning to eradicate his job and replace fresh
meat with packaged items containing preservatives. (He naturally was
most interested in this point.) It also looked as though new hires
would have a lower wage structure and certain types of overtime
would be disallowed. More non-union workers would be able to work at
the markets -- eliminating or reducing some union positions.
I waffled over the insurance portion. I pay $138 a month to cover
my daughter and me for medical and dental costs. However, I make a
lot more than the workers at my local markets. I was shocked to see
that many other market workers’ insurance benefits would be costing
up to twice as much, including preventative care and prescription
drug benefits. There would be a cap on chemotherapy, for example.
I mulled over these facts. I was of two minds, as usual. I myself
have a weekly shot of a mild chemotherapy drug for rheumatoid
arthritis. I pay $15 per shot. Having just received my first bill, I
realize that my insurance is critical in my fight against this
disease. If I worked at one of these markets, I don’t think I could
afford to have rheumatoid arthritis. I certainly couldn’t afford to
live in Newport Heights.
There are so many sides to this strike. I know one woman who works
at Stater Bros. who says she disagrees with the union. And it’s true
that I’ve only read the union’s take on this contract. I’d like to
read what management says, too. But that’s not the point.
How would you like to be walking a picket line, hearing drivers
yelling obscenities at you, and looking at your second week without a
paycheck? I’d be scared. Would you? Even if you wanted to be a scab
like I was, you wouldn’t be allowed to be. Would this be a
frightening Halloween for you and your family?
Parents, I don’t really care what your view of the strike is. I’m
not sure what mine is. But use this opportunity. Take your kids to
bring the pickets some chips, doughnuts or sodas. Then listen to them
for a few minutes. You don’t have to agree with them. You may very
well not.
As Steve Smith says (he makes good points sometimes), “turn off
the TV” and show your children economics in action. Let them look
over the contract and talk about it with them. Get the management’s
information, too.
I guarantee that you and your children will not forget the looks
on those strikers’ faces as they see you offering to break bread (or
chips) together and to simply listen. It is a lesson in compassion.
Cost: $3.50. Living proof of the American right to protest:
priceless.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Sue Clark is a Newport Beach resident.
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