Pickets weather time on the line
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Alicia Robinson
Walking a picket line isn’t how most local grocery workers envisioned
starting the new year. After three months of carrying signs in front
of their workplaces, the striking and locked-out workers are weary
but keeping up hope for a favorable resolution to their contract
dispute.
United Food and Commercial Workers union members employed by Vons
grocery stores called the strike in October after a contract
disagreement with employers over health and pension benefits. Grocery
chains Ralphs and Albertsons, which are bargaining jointly with Vons,
responded by locking out UFCW members at their stores. The latest
talks with a federal mediator broke off Dec. 19, and no new talks are
scheduled.
Walking the picket lines through the recent cold weather and three
major holidays has taken its toll on many of the workers, though
they’ve tried to stay positive.
“My morale’s very high,” said Randy Bowes, a picket captain who
was at the Harbor Boulevard Albertsons on Wednesday afternoon.
Though some union members have had to look for other jobs, turnout
on the lines has been good, he said.
“It’s not as strong as it was in the very beginning, but we still
have a lot of people out here,” he said.
At the Vons on 17th Street, the mood was much less buoyant.
“Basically, things are not good as far as morale,” said Lee
Queener, a clerk from the Costa Mesa Ralphs who was picketing at the
17th Street Vons. “Who knows when they’re going to go back to the
table.”
A fellow picket who asked not to be named said recent reductions
in strike benefits have brought workers’ spirits down. Without
compensation, she said, “I wouldn’t be out here. Not at this point.”
Ralphs spokesman Terry O’Neil said the stores tried to keep the
union at the bargaining table in the beginning. The stores warned the
workers if a strike was called, it could be lengthy, he said.
“We expected the strike to last for a long time,” he said. “We
tried to communicate that to the best of our ability to our
employees.”
UFCW spokeswoman Ellen Anreder said the union hoped for the best
while preparing for the worst.
“We were hoping for it to be short, but we were prepared for it to
be long,” she said.
None of the employees had any idea they’d still be on the picket
lines after nearly 12 weeks.
“I certainly didn’t,” Queener said. “I thought it would go a
week.”
Bowes at Albertsons expressed similar sentiments.
“The union thought, as soon as this started, it would be over,” he
said.
Fernando Saucedo, a Vons checker picketing with Queener, said no
one wanted to believe the strike could last this long.
“Like they say, it looks like there’s no end in sight,” he added.
Queener estimated that as many as half of the people he’s talked
to are looking for or have found other work.
With a family to provide for and a mortgage to pay, Bowes said
looking for another job isn’t out of the question.
“In the near future, I might have to,” he said. “But until I get
to the bitter end, I won’t leave.”
Some workers have persevered this long because of money they’ve
put into pensions. Queener thinks the stores’ strategy with the
proposed contract is to drive workers to quit by shrinking employer
pension contributions for new employees, thus diminishing the pension
fund for all employees.
The grocery stores have said they’ve had no trouble staffing the
stores, and customers haven’t stopped shopping. But those on the
picket lines disagreed.
Workers said they’re grateful to the customers who have stayed
away from their usual stores despite the inconvenience.
“They’re willing to tolerate it for our sake, basically, and we do
appreciate it,” Saucedo said.
How long the stores might hold out is unclear to union members.
Even the extension of picket lines to distribution centers just
before Thanksgiving didn’t make the employers flinch. But all parties
seemed to agree that this dispute will have lasting effects on the
grocery industry.
The irony to Queener is that after union members have lobbied to
keep Wal-Mart stores away, the dispute could be paving the way for
the discount chain -- and hastening the demise of other grocery
stores.
“In 15 to 20 years ... there could be no more Ralphs or Vons,” he
said.
O’Neil said the strike won’t end until some major issues are
resolved.
“These are issues that do portend to the future of the industry in
Southern California,” he said. “The rise of nonunion competition had
never been a major factor in previous negotiations. It is now.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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