Cincinnati Kroger Workers Prepare to Show Strength and Solidarity Though Strike Vote.Workers Taking Strike Authorization Vote to Fight Kroger's Gaslight Era Bargaining Tactics WASHINGTON -- Grocery workers represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union is a labor union representing approximately 1.4 million workers in the United States and Canada in many industries, including agriculture, health care, meatpacking, poultry and food processing, manufacturing, textile and Union (UFCW UFCW United Food and Commercial Workers ) are fighting back against the Kroger Company's nineteenth century bargaining tactics. Kroger seems to be operating under that century's model of "robber baron robber baron n. 1. One of the American industrial or financial magnates of the late 19th century who became wealthy by unethical means, such as questionable stock-market operations and exploitation of labor. 2. bargaining"-- pushing workers to the brink and forcing strikes, all to justify greedy demands at the bargaining table and in the community. In Cincinnati, where 10,000 workers are involved in negotiations with Kroger, UFCW Local 1099 members are meeting on at sessions throughout the day on Wednesday, October 10, 2007, to consider the company's latest proposals. The workers' bargaining committee is recommending that workers reject the proposals and vote to authorize a strike. Meetings and times can be found at www.ufcw1099.org. "There's no excuse for Kroger's behavior," said Lennie Wyatt, UFCW International Vice President and President of Local 1099. "This year, tens of thousands of Kroger employees have been pushed to the brink by their company and forced to vote to strike before Kroger gets serious at the bargaining table. These hardball tactics are an insult to Kroger employees and customers." It's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a to put an end to to destroy. - Fuller. See also: End this kind of "crisis bargaining" where a profitable company like Kroger comes to the table making outrageous demands of its hourly workers--demanding devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. cuts to workers' health care and other benefits. UFCW members understand that the rising cost of health care in the U.S. is a crisis we all must face together. In previous contracts, Local 1099 members have worked diligently to lower health care costs. Workers are picking up their share. Their hard work has made Kroger the hugely profitable chain it is today. But Kroger's greed just keeps increasing. The company seems intent on driving workers to the brink of a strike, and threatening to disrupt tens of thousands of consumers in an attempt to extract even more from its workforce. Kroger can't have it both ways. CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. David Dillon David Dillon is the CEO of Kroger in Cincinnati, Ohio. Born in Hutchinson, Kansas in 1951, he graduated from Hutchinson High School in 1969. He is an Eagle Scout and was a senior patrol leader in Boy Scout Troop 301, of which his father was Scoutmaster. crows to investors and the public that when Wal-Mart expands its operations, Kroger gains market share, increases sales and boosts profits. There's no excuse, then, to claim that competition from the low-wage, no-benefit Wal-Mart should require workers to strike in order to save affordable health care. Across the country, Kroger workers have reached agreements - without a strike - that provide for preventative health care benefits, affordable premiums, and quality care for workers and their families. Over the past ten months, UFCW members in Southern California, Seattle, Oregon, Detroit, Texas, and Toledo, Ohio have signed new contracts with Kroger without a work stoppage. Cincinnati workers deserve the same. For more on UFCW negotiations across the country, please visit the Grocery Workers United website at www.groceryworkersunited.org. The 1.3 million-member United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW) is America's neighborhood union representing workers in neighborhood grocery stores across the country. UFCW puts dinner on the table for America's families with members working in meatpacking meatpacking or meat-processing, wholesale business of buying and slaughtering animals and then processing and distributing their carcasses to retailers. The livestock industry is among the largest in the world. and food processing. |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion