UPDATE: MultiCare’s Dirty Tactics Shut Down Community Caravan Supporting Its Workers, Community Vows to Return in Force!

Health care workers, faith leaders, labor unions, and community allies in Pierce County planned a car caravan around MultiCare-owned Tacoma General and Mary Bridge Children’s Hospitals today, in support of a fair contract for MultiCare’s essential workers. Workers who risked their lives to show up for patients during a yearlong global health crisis are now having to fight for pay that respects their work, for their own access to affordable health care, and for safe staffing in their hospitals and clinics. Workers have been bargaining since January with little movement from MultiCare in agreeing to fair wages and working conditions, and the Tacoma and Pierce County community is ready to step up and support their health care workers.

But before the caravan could begin, MultiCare sent a last-minute cease and desist letter to block it from taking place, saying they consider cars with signs to be unlawful picketing activity and threatening legal action if it continued.

This community will not be silenced. MultiCare workers will not be silenced. If MultiCare is so scared of our voices that they are already resorting to threats, we know that our solidarity and determination are working. The numerous community allies and workers who organized this public event are already spreading the word about MultiCare’s dirty tricks and planning our next action calling attention to this important fight.

alexis-speaking1.jpg

We thank the Tacoma NAACP, Tacoma DSA, Union of American Physicians and Dentists, Tacoma Ministerial Alliance, Political Destiny, Unite Here Local 8, and SEIU 1199NW for joining us today and for committing to this fight for health care workers’ rights and for safe, quality patient care in Tacoma and Pierce County. MultiCare workers have taken care of our community through a traumatic year, and it’s time for MultiCare to take care of its workers.

Tell PCC Administration: Stop Undermining Our Co-Op Democracy!

450x900px PCC workers on the board you can help.jpg

PCC administration is trying to block the union and community advocates from gathering signatures to nominate PCC workers to serve on the co-op’s Board of Trustees, which we believe violates the democratic process and the values of our co-op. Over the last several months PCC administration has:

  • Obstructed workers’ access to comprehensive election information.
  • Refused to allow workers to collect signatures electronically, even as COVID surges in our community.
  • Banned signature-gatherers from being outside PCC.

PCC members deserve a fair process that values the voices of essential workers. Two longtime PCC workers, Donna Rasmussen and Laurae McIntyre, are currently running for Board seats and need thousands of signatures to earn their nominations. Please sign their petitions to get them on the ballot!

HOW YOU CAN HELP:

Call the PCC office at 206-547-1222 and tell them:

“I’m a PCC shopper, and I’m asking the CEO to stop blocking workers from running for the Board of Trustees. Give Laurae and Donna a fair and safe process to get on the ballot and let workers collect signatures electronically.”

You can also file a customer comment online at: pccmarkets.com/contact-us


 

National Week of Action for Hazard Pay for Essential Workers

When the COVID-19 outbreak hit, our members across industries felt it immediately—especially in frontline industries like health care and grocery stores.

We continue to believe that all essential workers deserve hazard pay during this pandemic.

UFCW has been advocating for employer-paid hazard pay as well as federal support for essential workers throughout this pandemic. Hazard pay is intended to compensate people for hazardous work duties, and all essential workers have had elevated risk added to their work lives during this crisis. We also believe many workers have new job duties related to sanitizing, infection control, protective equipment, chemical use, and handling ever-evolving public health recommendations and government mandates that change nearly everything we do. These new duties and the reminder of the centrality of our work deserves recognition that goes well beyond thank-you commercials.

After workers spoke up about what we were facing on the job and started organizing for hazard pay, many grocery employers started paying it in various forms, most commonly $2/hour in extra wages. “We recognize that this crisis is far from over,” Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen wrote to workers in mid-April. “After reflecting on feedback from you, we want to further acknowledge you for your hard work to date as well as the work yet to come.” But by mid-May, Kroger had cut hazard pay, and in mid-June Safeway/Albertsons followed suit. Other smaller local chains have ended hazard pay or never started it in the first place. And health care workers facing daily exposure to COVID patients have been demanding hazard pay from early on in this once-in-a-century pandemic, with very little action from health care employers.

We know this crisis is still far from over. This summer we’ve started giving employers more of the kind of “feedback” that really moves corporate offices—union grievances, public pressure, and essential workers and our community coming together to say enough is enough.


NATIONAL WEEK OF ACTION FOR HAZARD PAY

UFCW essential workers across the country are taking action next week to stand up for hazard pay. You can participate in this week of action!

Below, click the button to record a video message explaining why hazard pay is important to you, and what it’s like working through a pandemic. Whether it’s cracked skin and repetitive stress injuries from constant sanitizing and disinfecting, working in health care without adequate PPE, or representing an industry that hasn’t been in the news as much but is still essential—laundries, food processing, cannabis, retail, etc! Why do we need hazard pay? Let’s tell the public:

If you’d like to participate further in the national week of action for hazard pay, contact your Union Rep.


HAZARD PAY GRIEVANCES FILED

In July, UFCW 21 filed grievances over Fred Meyer, QFC, Albertsons, Safeway, Haggen, and PCC’s cutting of our hazard pay. Here’s an excerpt of what we said in our grievance:

As you know, the Employer paid Hazard or Appreciation pay to bargaining unit employees for at least two reasons. First, it recognized Local 21 members have been working in the stores under constant threat of exposure to the deadly COVID-19 virus. Second, the Employer relies on Local 21 members to perform additional and/or different job functions to allow customers to continue shopping uninterrupted during pandemic conditions.

Both conditions mentioned above continue to persist today. Nevertheless, the Employer unilaterally decided to eliminate or modify the Hazard/Appreciation pay. In doing so, Local 21 believes the Employer has violated numerous terms of the parties' labor agreements, including, but not limited to the Recognition, Wage classification provisions and Appendices, and Just Cause.

In the coming weeks there will be plenty of opportunities to support this grievance and take action to show employers that we are all paying close attention to their next steps and we are not taking no for an answer.

SIGN OUR PETITION DEMANDING SAFE, FAIR WORKING CONDITIONS FOR HEALTH CARE WORKERS

Nurses and health care workers must have the resources to ensure our health and our families are protected as we fight this pandemic.

We’re coming together as health care workers and community members across Washington to demand employers and our elected leaders commit to:

  1. Follow workplace safety guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control, and provide adequate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) including masks, gloves, gowns and eye protection

  2. Provide scrubs and a secure location to change uniforms so we do not have to bring our soiled uniforms home and into the community

  3. Help us meet new challenges with a pay increase of $5/hr in recognition of our work and the increased risk to ourselves and our families during this pandemic

  4. Provide paid leave for any worker who the Employer does not permit to work due to exposure to COVID-19, with no loss of pay or accrued time off

  5. Offer accommodation (telework or alternative assignments) or paid leave with no loss of pay or accrued time off for any worker in at-risk group (older than 60, pregnant, or with an underlying medical condition)

  6. Provide prompt notice from employer of known exposure, assessment of exposure risk, access to testing, and whether a worker is placed on paid leave

Every worker who keeps our health care system running is critical to the safety and health of our communities. Let’s make sure they have the equipment and working conditions to keep themselves safe through this crisis. 

SIGN THE PETITION: we need to protect the health care workers who are taking care of all Washingtonians!

Unions Push Back on Labor Relations Board’s Anti-Democracy Decision

For Immediate Release: March 23, 2020
Contacts:
Tom Geiger, UFCW 21, 206-604-3421
David Groves, WA State Labor Council, AFL-CIO, 206-434-1301

Unions Push Back on Labor Relations Board’s Anti-Democracy Decision: Call for All Mail-Ballot Elections to Improve Worker Rights and Protect Health and Safety

Labor organizations across Washington State today are expressing outrage in reaction to the National Labor Relations Board (Board) postponing of all union recognition elections until at least April 2nd. They are also calling on the Board to revoke the decision, reschedule all such elections, and make all elections become all mail-in ballot only.

Recently, the National Labor Relations Board (Board) postponed all union recognition (or RC) elections until at least April 2nd. We strongly oppose this unilateral action undermining workplace democracy, and we call for immediate revocation of this action and immediate rescheduling of all RC elections, by mail ballot, as soon as they can be scheduled. Additionally, we call for the expediting of mandatory mail ballot procedures for all RC elections going forward.

“The Board’s decision shows that what was meant to be a balancing force weighing the interests of workers and employers is a broken system. The Board unilaterally revoked workers’ rights to organize by this one action,” said Faye Guenther, President of UFCW 21. “Any insistence that mail balloting require approval from employers amounts to giving a veto card to all employers to terminate any unionizing effort at any time.”

Further harm to workers right to organize result from the decision because the standard that the Board has typically used (so-called “laboratory conditions”) in union elections will be erased because without the prospect of a union election workers will be reluctant to begin any new organizing drive. What would be the point of beginning to organize if you knew the employer could simply deny the right to a vote? Without the right to vote being protected and expected, there is no democracy.

“Now is the time for increased worker involvement in their workplace health and safety, not a muzzling of workers,” said Larry Brown, President of the Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO. “Democracy in the workplace where workers can be assured of a safe work environment, the ability to stay home from work when sick, and their unfettered right to advocate for themselves and for the public they serve, is paramount not just for their well-being, but for the well-being of everyone in America.”

Going beyond the issue of workers’ intertwined rights to self-determination and to advocate for their own health and safety, this attack on these rights creates an ongoing threat to the health and safety of the general public.  For example, health care workers who are denied collective bargaining rights are less effective advocates for their patients than those who can be confident that if they speak up for patient safety their union will stand with them. Employers, pressured by intense market conditions, are endangering workers and the general public. Worker self-organization is one of the most powerful public health tools available, and it can produce immediate on-the-ground public health improvements. By example, unionized workers have already won agreements with employers that modify retail store conditions and health care facility standards that directly and immediately benefit the general public and the workers, resulting in immediate public health improvements.

Additional Information that would make workplaces safer for people working there and the general public:

  • More worker whistleblowers than ever.

  • We need workers to go home if they are sick more than ever.

  • Workers in industries such as retail grocery and pharmacies are in fact first responders in our COVID-19 world, just as police, fire and healthcare workers are.  

  • To make matters even worse, we have evidence of examples where employers (Florida and Washington State and New York)* refused to agree to mail balloting--in essence their veto of any election--when the Board was willing to conduct mail balloting just prior to the Board’s blanket postponement. In each of these examples, the employers refused to agree to mail ballots even as they scheduled mandatory, anti-union, captive audience meetings with workers. And this at a time when most local and state governments are strongly recommending, if not mandating, the elimination of people meeting together in confined spaces in order to limit the spread of the COVID-19 virus.

 We Demand:

  • Immediate rescheduling of all currently postponed RC elections; these to be conducted by mail ballot. These new elections ought to commence as early as practicable, but in no case later than April 1.

  • Elimination of any previous rulemaking or precedent that requires employer agreement in order to conduct mail balloting.

  • Development of new ways for workers to organize in workplaces, including voluntary recognition and other methods that are outside the traditional RC election model.

  • If the Federal Government fails to restart NLRB elections immediately, then State Governments should proceed with elections.

  • Consideration of any special new rules--given the new COVID-19 realities--intended to make certain that workers’ address information and other procedural details are conducive to conducting fair and democratic mail balloting.

  • Immediate mandatory postings in all relevant workplaces of the intent to reschedule elections by mail balloting to inform workers that their democratic rights are being restored followed by subsequent postings indicating the date/time/particulars of all rescheduled union RC elections.

  • Prohibition on all employer mandatory captive audience meetings. These meetings put workers and management alike in unsafe conditions. Also, given the new restrictions on union visiting workers’ residences due to COVID-19, the Board must immediately prohibit all captive audience meetings. Absent this, the union’s ability to communicate with workers is essentially eliminated while the employer anti-union activity would continue without any counter-balance.

  • Special attention to all union-filed or worker-filed complaints relating to retaliation for workers advocating for workplace health and safety and public safety in the context of union elections and/or other NLRA-protected activity.

  • Immediate staffing up of NLRB offices--remotely--in order to expedite the above matters.

Specific employers can be identified and interviews with union spokespeople can be arranged for reporters upon request.

Labor unions signing on include at the time of the release:

WA State Labor Council / MLK County Labor Council / AFT WA / WSNA / UFCW 21 / UFCW 4 / UFCW 365 / UFCW 1439 / UFCW 368a / UFCW 555 / UFCW 7 / Teamsters 38 / SEIU Local 49 / SEIU Local 503 / SEIU 925 / SEIU Healthcare 1199 NW / UNITE HERE Local 8 / PROTEC 17


“I am so disappointed on Lourdes for not allowing us to have mail in ballot.

We have worked so hard to unify our departments and be ready for our election on April 2nd. We are not going to allowed them to take our right to organize. We want our union and our right to a say in our working conditions. With this Covid-19 Crisis our management can do better by us and allowing us to at least to vote. We need our job protections, our safety and fair wages. I work in Central Supply and we are losing hours since our department is not emergency care. With the Union we would be protected instead of at the mercy of Lourdes.” - Maria Hinojosa, Lourdes Medical Center in Pasco.


“I’ve been working at Providence Centralia for over twenty years and really feel like we’re not being treated fairly anymore.

We don’t make what other people who work in similar positions make. We have had no cost of living raise in eight years. We don’t get step raises. We get merit raises, but it’s usually a small percentage that’s not nearly enough. They’re trying to shift our benefits to the state, which means taking away all our EIB (Extended Illness Bank) hours. And they just make changes to our jobs without consulting us. The last thing they did was take away one day each pay period for all HUCs, which was a big deal to us. And before that they cut HUC workers at night, which puts our patients in greater danger. If we’d had a union, I don’t think they would have been able to do those things. 

If we had somebody to back us, we’d be sitting in a different position. I don’t think it’s right that we’re not able to vote in the union right now. We’ve waited a long time for this, and I don’t think people should put it on the back burner. We’re motivated and want to act now. 

It’s time for us to be treated like we’re part of the business, not just people who are working there. It’s really hard to do our job. We should be supported and treated like we’re an important part of the team. We help make the hospital run. The nurses, who are union, get treated with respect. But those of us who aren’t unionized don't as much. That’s why it’s so important that we’re able to have a union election right now.” - Donita Letteer, Health Unit Coordinator, Providence Centralia 


"I've worked at the Providence hospital in Centralia, Washington for 25 years. Providence used to be a good employer, providing lots of perks and very good benefits. However, lately they become less like a family, farming out lots of the jobs in HR, payroll, and administration. That means that there's no one left here on campus to actually care about the little guy such as myself.

So many of the things that made this a really great place to work are gone now. We used to have sick time so we didn't have to decide between taking a vacation with our family or taking care of our family and ourselves when we were sick, which leads to more people showing up to work sick and everyone else getting sick as well. We used to be able to work a holiday and take our holiday pay for a double time-and-a-half pay out, which made working a holiday not so bad. There was a time when we would get substantial raises. Now we're lucky to get one or one and a half percent, even if we've done exemplary work for the year. Even little employee enrichment things like scrub sales and book sales in the lobby are gone now.

I don't believe they really care about their small potatoes employees anymore. They're more interested in their corporate image and advancing their administration. If we do nothing, this is going to continue on a downward trend until things become unbearable. I believe that the union is the only way that we're going to be able to stand our ground and maybe even recoup a few benefits.

I would like to add that during the coronavirus crisis it has been easy to see how little they care about the problems we are going through. The schools are closed and there's nowhere to send our children, but we cannot stay home either. And if they get sick or we get sick, we're not allowed to use our extended illness bank (EIB). We still have to use our vacation time. I have noticed that many workers are struggling with this. If they had daycare before, they would have been using it now.  Some folks are in a real pickle. I don't see anyone in the administration trying to help with that or even acknowledging that it's a problem. They just chastise us if we use too much PPE equipment. It makes me wonder how much we are really worth to them. I think the answer is not much. Now they're telling us that we're going to have to take voluntary days off with no compensation unless we want to use our vacation. I think now more than ever we need the union to step in and help us with this. We have no recourse, no way to fight for ourselves, and it seems that we're getting stepped on more and more. I am writing to ask you to allow us to proceed with our union vote." -Diana Jennings, Mammography Technician, Providence Centralia