Please
DO NOT cross workers’ picket lines
By
Aaron Regunberg and Common Creams
Thousands of Stop
& Shop workers in Rhode Island and across New England are on strike for a
fair contract.
I ask you to join me
in standing in solidarity with these hardworking Rhode Islanders by
honoring the strike until Stop & Shop offers its employees a fair contract.
I visited three store
branches in Providence to speak with striking workers, and I was inspired by
their united, brave commitment to stand up for themselves and their families.
These are mothers,
fathers, and professionals - many of whom have been loyal employees of Stop
& Shop for 20 or 30 years. Yet right now they are facing draconian cuts
that threaten their basic economic security.
Stop & Shop's
parent company made over $2 billion in profits last year, and recently received
a $225 million tax cut from Trump. Yet they are demanding that their workers
accept deep cuts to their pensions, health benefits, sick days, and take home
pay. It's simply not right.
American workers are
struggling with stagnating wages, while the wealth of those at the very top
continues to increase exponentially. That's what this fight is about. And
that's why it's so important we back our fellow Rhode Islanders until they
secure the fair contract they and their families deserve.
Shop
Stopped: Grocery Store Strike of 31K Workers Receives Support From Warren,
Sanders
"We really
decided there had to be a labor action and stand up to this corporate
greed."
Some 31,000 workers
walked off the job at Stop & Shop stores across New England Thursday in
response to the company cutting wages and benefits, a strike that prompted the
support and praise of prominent Democrats and left wing activists.
The strike is the result
of a March vote by store union members to walk off the
job if a fair
contract between the union and the grocery corporation could not be reached
during negotiations.
Even though the labor
action was not unexpected, the size of the strike was notable, as HuffPost reporter
Dave Jamieson pointed out.
Excluding the wave of
public-sector teacher strikes and a walkout at California public hospitals, the
Stop & Shop strike appears to be the largest since 36,500 employees at
Verizon (which owns HuffPost) formed picket lines in 2016, according to data
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Leaders from
the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) union, which is representing
the striking workers, pointed to the company's attempts to raise
healthcare cost buy-ins by workers and cut pensions as two sticking points in
negotiations.
Stop & Shop
owner Ahold Delhaize, a European grocery conglomerate, is withholding
financial information that would justify those cuts, union leaders said in a
statement.
"The company is
claiming the proposed cuts are necessary but is unlawfully refusing to provide
financial information to verify that claim," UFCW leaders said.
Stop & Shop,
in its statement on the strike, said that the company was "ready to meet
with union leaders any time" to resolve the dispute.
"We are committed
to good faith bargaining and hope to reach new contracts as quickly as possible
that both recognize and reward the great work of our associates and enable Stop
& Shop to compete effectively in the rapidly changing New England grocery
market," the company said.
Workers outside the
Stop & Shop in North Adams, Mass., told reporters from local outlet iBerkshires that
the company's refusal to use a fraction of its massive profits to help
workers—and the subsequent decision to attempt to cut benefits—was the main
issue.
"We really
decided there had to be a labor action and stand up to this corporate
greed," said North Adams union steward and strike coordinator Bill
Laviolette.
"They wouldn't
show us where they were losing money or why they were making such drastic
cuts," Laviolette added.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.) echoed her constituent Laviolette's call for fair treatment. In a
tweet, Warren said that she backed Stop & Shop workers in their action.
"I stand in
solidarity with UFCW for these hard-working families to be treated with the
dignity & respect they deserve," said Warren.
Sen. Bernie Sanders
(I-Vt.) also expressed his support for the strikers.
"I stand with
UFCW workers in their fight to protect health care and workers' rights,"
said Sanders.
Both Sanders and Warren
are running for the Democratic nomination for president in the party's primary
next year.
The strike appears
likely to continue for the foreseeable future, until one side gives in—and,
as HuffPost's Jamieson put it, in a tight labor market, the advantage
is with UFCW and the workers.
"They've been
investing in infrastructure here but not in the workers," said North
Adams' Laviolette.
Stop & Shop will
need to make a decision: either invest in people power or continue to lose
money.