Grocery East Why do the Bosses think you deserve less than grocery workers in Western Washington?
/Why do the Bosses think you deserve less than grocery workers in Western Washington?
In our last bargaining session, the Employers told us that because cost of living is lower in Eastern Washington, Eastern Oregon, and Northern Idaho, journey union members do not need the same kind of raises as the Westside. Over the last two days of bargaining, we came to correct this.
We know that Eastern Washington, Northern Idaho, and Eastern Oregon grocery workers desperately need and deserve meaningful raises. We presented data on rising rents and home sale prices in our region. We compared Westside and Eastside counties which have very similar housing costs and very different wages.
We compared a grocery basket in Spokane and near Seattle to show that the astronomical food prices set by these companies are the same regardless of where you live. Our grocery costs are the same, our rents are the same, and it’s all going up. But they insist on keeping a wage scale that pays us DOLLARS less!
Bargaining committee members shared our stories: having to choose between paying the power or the water bill that month, putting our children’s healthcare costs before our own, and struggling to afford to pay for the gas to get to work. We also shared over 100 stories submitted from UFCW 3000 grocery members under these Eastside contracts. Kroger and Albertsons can afford to pay us the wages we need so we don’t have to choose between buying groceries or putting gas in the tank.
If Safeway can afford a 4 billion dividend, they can afford to pay us what is fair. If Fred Meyer can afford to buy Safeway, they can afford to pay us what is fair.
While we educated the Employers on what it’s like trying to survive on these wages, we stayed strong, pushing the proposals we need:
Create Journey wage increases of multiple dollars over the life of the contract that gain ground on the West side.
Institute one wage scale for all UFCW 3000 Eastern Washington, Oregon and Northern Idaho and the same journey wage rate across all grocery scales.
Create raises of multiple dollars for Journey Meat Cutters over the life of the contract, a proposed dollar premium for Head Meat Cutter, and new designation of Head Butcher Block.
Increase the amount between steps from $0.10 above minimum wage and $0.05 between steps to $0.25 above the minimum wage and between steps so that every step sees an increase as the minimum wage increases with cost of living.
Reduce the length of our wage scales so our coworkers can reach the Journey rate sooner.
Maintain our strong healthcare plan and coverage and improve benefits without increasing employee premiums.
All the while the employers only came up $0.10 in the third year of their wage proposal. Proposing $0.50/$0.50/$0.60. This is not enough!
We’ll be back next week for bargaining. Next bargaining dates: February 15 and 16
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More information:
To get updates and join the fight to Stop the Mega-Merger, go to nogrocerymerger.com
For information about your health care plan with Rehn go to www.ufcwhealth.com or call 800-872-8979
If you have questions about the Pension contact Zenith at soundretirmenttrust.com or call 800-225-7629
General Membership Meetings happening next week