Hood Famous Bakeshop - “We are excited to continue negotiations for our first contract. Motivated to fight for a fair and equitable workplace!”

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Your Bargaining Team met with Chera & Geo again yesterday, July 16, to receive their counter to our initial proposals. While many issues remain, we were happy with the progress made and, most importantly, the Employer’s willingness to show movement in their proposal.

We were appreciative of the fact that the Employer responded to nearly all our proposals and, for those issues they did not, we had very productive conversations on how to move forward. However, we will need to respond with some edits from their proposals and, honestly, we haven’t started with the more contentious economic issues.

The Bargaining Team did not have time to submit counter proposals and would love to hear from you about how we should respond! We’d like to invite you to our virtual Contract Action Team meeting next Tuesday, July 21 @ 5pm to discuss negotiations and next steps!

Hood Famous CAT Meeting
Tuesday, July 21
5:00 PM via Zoom

Kroger Mandates Masks — UFCW 21 Members Demand Reinstatement of Hazard Pay

UFCW 21 members at Kroger stores, including the Auburn Fred Meyer workers pictured above, have been protesting the company’s pay cuts with sign actions at their stores.

Send a message to Kroger

The United Food and Commercial Workers Union called Kroger’s decision to require that customers wear masks “long overdue.”  UFCW has been demanding a mask mandate since early in the pandemic, and here in Washington UFCW 21 members were central to the governor’s decision to require that customers wear masks in stores and public places to help make our workplaces safer and prevent spread of COVID-19.

UFCW International President Marc Perrone has called on all grocers and retailers to implement mask requirements and said they should be enforced by “trained professionals, not retail workers already stretched thin during this crisis.”

Meanwhile, UFCW 21 members at Kroger-owned Fred Meyer and QFC stores in Western Washington are demanding that Kroger reinstate the $2/hour hazard pay that it terminated in May.


Eli Campbell, who works in grocery at the Bakerview Fred Meyer in Bellingham spoke out against Kroger’s termination of hazard pay, saying: “The pandemic is still here. Our added responsibilities for cleaning and sanitation remain, and so does the risk.”

“Our sales are amazing. We have been selling so much,” said Andrenna Caballero, an Assistant Deli Manager at the Port Hadlock QFC. “That's why when we were told our hero pay was going away and our hours were going to be cut we were all so angry.”


UFCW 21 members at Kroger stores, including the Auburn Fred Meyer workers pictured above, have been protesting the company’s pay cuts with sign actions at their stores.

UFCW says 278 members have died from COVID-19 in the first 100 days of the pandemic, and 44,419 have been exposed or infected.

If you need signs for your store, contact your rep.

Harrison Community Caravan Takes the Streets of Kitsap!

The UFCW 21 Harrison ProTech Bargaining Team was joined by UFCW 21 Kitsap Movement Builders, UFCW 21 Doctor’s Clinic & grocery members, as well as the Kitsap Central Labor Council and political and community leaders for an inspiring, powerful, creative and ultimately very noisy action from Bremerton to Silverdale on Tuesday, July 14.

UFCW 21 members shared what is happening in our workplaces, the risks to our safety and how we are doing everything we can (including making our own personal protective equipment) to keep ourselves and our colleagues safe. We asked community to join our campaign asking CHI to do better in terms of health care, wages, PPE, and other important safety protections. Then about 40 cars decorated with streamers, paint, and signs saying things like “Protect Health Care Workers, Protect Our Community” and “Honk for Healthcare Workers” circled Harrison Medical Center in Bremerton, getting waves from health care workers on break and passers by. We then beeped our way, in formation, over to Silverdale, where we did the same thing at Harrison Medical Center there.

We wrapped up the action with a reminder for everyone to sign on to the petition which health care members will be delivering at the end of July. Please sign and share, so that CHI has no doubt that the Kitsap Community is horrified about what is happening to our health care workers and expects CHI to do the right thing!

SIGN THE PETITION

Hear what UFCW 21 members had to say that day:

My kids were born at Harrison. Health care means a lot. As a CNA, I’m one of the lowest-paid people in the hospital, and I do most of the patient care. I’ve been on the bargaining team ever since I started, 21 years ago. I fight for the little guy. We have over 200 people that are CNAs in the hospital, we’re the biggest group out of the Pro-Tech group, and I fight for them tooth and nail every single day because that’s how I care about the CNAs, that’s how I care about the workers, that’s how I care about Pro-Tech.
— Rob Shauger, CNA, surgical floor, Harrison Medical Center, member of the UFCW 21 bargaining team
We as health care workers are the ones that really have the knowledge, not the administration. The biggest thing in this pandemic that’s been really scary, as a health care worker, is that we’re now carrying around our PPE, which most of us have had to go out and purchase ourselves. We’re in the ER and we’re wearing these masks for more than 3 weeks, masks that were originally meant to be to be one-time use per patient. Six months ago, we were changing out our gowns, goggles, masks, between every patient and now we’re using it for weeks on end. I’m just asking for the community to support us on this. In order for us to take care of you, we need your support to take care of ourselves, too.
— Ona Burkett, ER Tech, Harrison Medical Center, member of the UFCW 21 bargaining team
We are also bargaining for a fair contract right now. The Doctor’s Clinic is owned by CHI, so we’re all in this together, and they’re doing the same things to us. They said we don’t deserve hazard pay because this is the job we signed up for. Let me tell you—this is not the job we signed up for! I’ve been here for Ebola, I was there for H1N1, this is a whole new world for everyone. This beautiful garbage bag I’m wearing today? I’ve been making these myself, for our own protective equipment. We didn’t get the kind of protective gowns we were supposed to have, so I took some garbage bags and figure out how to iron them together. I’m very proud of this, but I’m also extremely angry. I did it to protect myself and my coworkers, but I should not have had to do this. I bought the garbage bags myself. If we go down, we can’t protect the community, so we need to be protected.
— Monique Pyles, Medical Asst., The Doctors Clinic, member of the UFCW 21 bargaining team
Monique Pyles

Monique Pyles

“We really have each other’s back here in Kitsap!”

-Naomi Oligario, Port Orchard Safeway, UFCW 21 member & event emcee

I’ve been in the grocery industry for a long time; this is a tough time for essential workers. We’re keeping our communities fed, supplied, healthy, and cared for in the middle of a global emergency, and we’re proud to do it. But we also need to be kept safe at our jobs. As a patient of this Kitsap health care system, I know the safety of these health care workers affects my safety. If me and my coworkers get sick, our community food supply chain gets messed up. I know if health care workers get sick and can’t work, our access to good quality health care is affected. Essential workers in this stand together, stand for each other, and stand for the community.
— Eric Otis, Bremerton Fred Meyer

Our community car caravan passes Harrison Medical Center to let them know Kitsap stands with health care workers!

Grays Harbor - During a Global Pandemic Management Wants to Reduce Our Sick Leave

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We continued to bargain with Management last week and were not able to reach a settlement.  Management’s relentless pursuit to take away our sick leave hours during a pandemic is their short sighted plan to reduce costs off of our working backs. Our Bargaining Team remains adamant that taking away our sick leave is not the answer to the hospital’s financial problems. We encouraged Management to look at other cost saving ideas, i.e. better billing practices and streamlining paperwork.

“We understand Shared Sacrifice and we want the hospital to succeed but having Management balance the budget off our backs is not acceptable. Join us at our Zoom Contract Action Team meeting on Tuesday evening  to discuss our next steps in getting a fair contract.”

Grays Harbor Hospital Bargaining Team


Tuesday, July 21

6:00 PM - 7:30PM

https://zoom.us/join

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.

Providence Centralia (Tech Unit and Support Services) - Register now to discuss your first UFCW 21 contract

Welcome to UFCW 21 Providence Centralia Tech Unit and Support Services Unit

Our next step is to fight and win a good collective bargaining agreement! We will be having a Zoom Webinar on Tuesday, July 21 from 5pm to 6:30pm to talk about contract bargaining and to answer any questions. In addition, a bargaining survey has been sent out via email to both units. We will compile survey results, comments from the Webinar, and your bargaining committee’s advice to create our first contract proposal. Please attend the Zoom meeting or fill-out the bargaining survey to have your voice heard!

Please register with the following link and an email with the Zoom Webinar link will be sent to your email: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Ev5wvrSNQJqvsO_dFE667w
OR
If you do not have a computer/smartphone, you may call in
Phone: (253) 215-8782
Webinar ID: 824 2705 5245 (no password required)
 
If you have questions please contact your Union Rep, Erin McCoy (206) 436-6598

Dynacare Labcorp - Bargaining Begins!

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Your bargaining committee started to bargain with Dynacare LabCorp on June 29 via Zoom, given COVID-19. We proposed non-economic contract language, surrounding floating, changing schedules, and other staffing language. Next we will propose wage increases and other economic language. 

At this point, LabCorp has not responded to our proposals. We have several bargaining dates through the end of August, and we have a contract extension for 60 days from the expiration of the contract. 

We hope LabCorp will respond with realistic proposals and we will need to stand unites to win a good contract! We will be having a contract action team meeting via Zoom in early August. The link will be sent out via email.

Next Bargaining Date

July 28, 2020

Conifer St. Elizabeth - Conifer St. Elizabeth Members REJECT the Contract!

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On Friday July 10 members at Conifer St. Elizabeth voted on the employers most recent contract offer.

100% of Members voted NO to REJECT the offer! 

This outcome shows Management that their current offer is not good enough and we know that they can and should do better! We will be back at the bargaining table soon and look forward to continuing to stand together to get a Fair Contract! 


CAT MEETING
Wednesday, July 15
5:30PM

Join our CAT meeting via Zoom to learn where we go from here! Details will be texted out.

Complete your PHA and save money

If you’re participating in the Sound Health & Wellness health care plan we want to remind you that right now you’re able to earn $300 in your HRA, and up to $600 if you have family coverage, by simply filling out your annual Personal Health Assessment. It is easy, its confidential, and it’s a benefit we’ve negotiated on your behalf. Don’t miss out on this great benefit.

Go to: www.soundhealthwellness.com

LOG-IN https://secure.soundhealthwellness.com/index.php?action=

HRA FAQ (PPO) https://soundhealthwellness.com/ppo/benefits/health-reimbursement-arrangement-hra/

HRA FAQ (KP) https://soundhealthwellness.com/kp/benefits/health-reimbursement-arrangement-hra/

If you have Questions, or need help Troubleshooting contact the Trust @ (206) 282-4500

Summit Pacific - Digital Contract Action Team Meeting

Join our first Contract Action Team Meeting! This meeting is open to all bargaining unit members at Summit Pacific. We’ll discuss the bargaining process and the member surveys.

Friday, July 17 at 7PM

*Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.

What do you want to include in your contract? Fill out your contract survey!

July 13 Telephone Town Hall Calls

UFCW 21 Telephone Town Hall Monday, July 13 at 6:30 PM 
Call-in Phone Number:  888-652-0386 Meeting ID: 4947 

TO JOIN: This Monday, July 13, listen for a phone call from UFCW 21 between 6:30 and 6:40 pm. (Note that sometimes this call appears on phones as “potential spam.”) If you miss the call or don’t receive a call, just use the call-in number above to join the call at any time. 

Health Care UFCW 21 Telephone Town Hall Monday, July 13 at 7:30 PM 
Call-in Phone Number:  888-652-2664  Meeting ID: 4948 

TO JOIN THE CALL: This Monday, July 13, listen for a phone call from UFCW 21 between 7:30 and 7:40 pm. (Note that sometimes this call appears on phones as “potential spam.”) If you miss the call or don’t receive a call, just use the call-in number above to join the call at any time. 

Cascade Valley Hospital - Contract Vote Scheduled

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Through multiple Zoom bargaining sessions our Bargaining Team reached a tentative agreement with Management that includes some of the following highlights:

  • Ratification Bonus

  • Wage Increases for 2020

  • Increases to Shift Differentials

  • No Takeaways

  • Wage, Healthcare and Equity Adjustment Reopener in 2021

“We look forward to discussing this with everyone at the Vote Meetings and encourage our membership to attend the Zoom meetings.”

— Cascade Bargaining Team


Contract Information Zoom Meetings

Wednesday, July 22
11:00am – 12:30pm

Thursday, July 23
6:00pm – 7:30pm

Zoom Invitations and Voting Materials will be sent out soon.

We will be voting this fully recommended offer by mail! Please make sure your address and information are up to date.

Conifer St. Joseph - Enough is Enough! Vote Notice

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Conifer delayed bargaining with us for 9 months! The time has come to vote. 

What we vote on will be determined by Conifer, and on July 17 the Bargaining Team will either have a proposal from the employer that the Bargaining team will recommend for RATIFICATION and VOTE YES or the Bargaining team will recommend to REJECT and VOTE NO!

“Strong people stand up for themselves, Stronger people stand together”

– Terri Ross


VOTE DETAILS
Friday, July 17
3:00PM - 7:00PM Tacoma, WA - TBD

Want more details? Join our Online CAT Meeting Via ZOOM.

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed and texted out.

PCC Agreement Ratified

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Our 1 year agreement with PCC was ratified on July 1, 2020. This agreement runs through December 31, 2020 for both grocery and meat contracts. 

We won significant wage increases with full retro throughout the scale while maintaining our healthcare and securing our pension.

“Given restrictions on meetings and members dealing with an ongoing pandemic, we are glad to have reached this 1-year deal now so that members can get immediate raises and full back pay. We can all focus on fighting for a full 3-year contract in a few months when we can regroup in person.” 

– Our Bargaining Team

Forks Community Hospital Tech / Service - Contract Vote Scheduled

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After historically productive negotiations, we were able to reach a tentative agreement before our contract expiration. We were able to win significant market adjustments for a number of positions and overall COLAs over the 3 year agreement that bring us up to industry and area standards.

We also were able to win:

A new preceptor program

Improved rest between shift language

Easier access to EII benefits

Increased premiums and differentials

With NO Takeaways!

“We achieved our goal of making improvements to our contract that make our facilities more comparable with and even competitive to surrounding hospitals and facilities.”

— Our Bargaining Team

We will be voting this fully recommended offer by mail! Please make sure your address and information are up to date.

You can view the full contract and wage scales online.

Contract with Proposed Changes - View Document

Wage Scale - View Document

Join an online vote meeting to hear more about the offer and ask questions. Vote meetings will be 7/13 at 8 AM and 6 PM. Details for joining will be mailed out with the vote instructions.

Workers Win Historic $2 Million Settlement from Macy’s Over Secure Scheduling Violations in Seattle

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 1, 2020

Contact: Joe Mizrahi, jmizrahi@ufcw21.org

Workers Win Historic $2 Million Settlement from Macy’s Over Secure Scheduling Violations in Seattle

Macy’s owes more than 800 workers back pay and damages in the largest settlement in the history of Seattle’s Office of Labor Standards

SEATTLE - Workers are celebrating the 3rd anniversary of Seattle’s Secure Scheduling law, a law their union UFCW 21 was involved in passing, with a $1,999,839.35 settlement stemming from claims they filed with Seattle’s Office of Labor Standards (OLS) around Macy’s scheduling practices.

“When I first reported scheduling issues, I was just hoping that Macy’s would have to follow the law like everybody else,” said Susan Hedman, who worked at the downtown Seattle Macy’s for more than 30 years. “fact that our settlement turned out to be the biggest one in OLS history is beyond my wildest dreams.” Hedman, a shop steward with UFCW 21, encouraged coworkers to track their schedules and hours after noticing a discrepancy between the city’s scheduling law and the treatment she was experiencing at work, especially when it came to the premium pay she was supposed to earn for last-minute schedule changes. “I noticed something with my schedule that didn’t feel right, so I started documenting what was happening and I went to my union. It took some effort, but it was pretty easy to keep track of the violations. It’s not enough to have strong labor laws on the books—we need to enforce them. Strong city enforcement coupled with the backing of my union helped me and my coworkers get what we deserved.”

Macy’s, which closed its two Seattle locations in 2019 and early 2020, owes back pay and damages to 803 employees who worked in those stores between July 1, 2017, and February 24, 2020. Workers will receive about $2,500 on average, with some receiving upward of $10,000.

“We hope this sends a strong message to employers, especially retail employers in Seattle, that you cannot break the law and expect no consequences,” said Joe Mizrahi, UFCW 21 Secretary-Treasurer. “UFCW 21 members and other workers in Seattle fight hard to both pass strong workers’ rights laws and adequately fund the office that enforces these laws. This historic outcome is what happens when we have elected officials who prioritize workers over corporations, and we appreciate the continued leadership of our city council and the hard work of OLS investigators.”

The Secure Scheduling ordinance, which went into effect on July 1, 2017, requires large retail and food-service businesses to post workers’ schedules two weeks in advance, compensate workers for employer-requested schedule changes, and offer additional work hours to current employees before hiring new people.

“In 2016, I co-sponsored the passage of our Secure Scheduling Ordinance because I believe that all work is dignified,” said Councilmember Lorena Gonzalez. This law has always been about forcing massive corporations, like Macy's, to respect the time of workers that are key to their success. This settlement shifts respect back to Macy's workers and makes them whole, while holding Macy's accountable. Thank you to our OLS staff and the UFCW Local 21 members that played a role in upholding this important labor protection.”

“I want to thank the workers whom this has directly impacted for years. You deserve the money owed to you,” said Councilmember Lisa Herbold. “Secure Scheduling requires employers to schedule 14 days in advance, and if that schedule needs to change then employers must compensate their employees.  Time is money and last minute disruption of the schedules of parents, caregivers, students, and people with second jobs has real economic impacts. I also want to thank OLS and UFCW for bringing this injustice to light and setting the record straight.”

Any worker who believes their employer is violating Seattle’s labor laws should document what is happening and contact their union or file a complaint directly with OLS at seattle.gov/laborstandards or by calling (206) 256-5297.

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UFCW 21 is building a powerful union that fights for economic, political and social justice in our workplaces and our communities. UFCW 21 is the state’s largest private-sector union with over 46,000 workers in retail, grocery stores, health care, cannabis, and other industries in Washington State. More than 10,000 UFCW 21 members live or work in Seattle. Whenever workers are ready to form a union, give UFCW 21 a call.

Pride 2020

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Every year we celebrate Pride, our hard-fought right to bring our whole selves to work and to be who we are at work and in our communities. People have sacrificed and died for the right to love who we love and live as who we are. In 2020, in the face of the twin pandemics of COVID-19 and institutionalized racism in the US, we must be vigilant in not sliding back but moving forward for all workers. We know LGBTQ and Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) face discrimination in our workplaces and our communities. We continue to make vital contributions to healthcare, grocery, retail and all of our workplaces so that all our communities can be healthy and thrive.

We hope you can join us in celebrating Pride 2020!


Attend Pride 2020 Events online: 

This year’s Seattle-area Pride celebrations have moved online, and we encourage any and all interested UFCW 21 members to attend. Register for free at the link below.

www.togetherforpride.org 


Check out the gallery of past years when we could celebrate Pride in person: 


There are a few in-person Pride events as well:

As with all in-person actions at this time, please be careful and follow all best practices: wear a face covering, bring hand sanitizer, practice social distancing, and do not attend if you are feeling unwell or are in a high-risk category for COVID-19.

Black LGBTQ+ Lives Matter   
Saturday, June 27, 1:00pm
Wright Park, 501 S I Street, Tacoma

This rally and march organized by three young activists focuses on the impact of police brutality on Black LGBTQ lives.

Capitol Hill Pride March  
Saturday, June 27, 10:00am
Seattle Central College Campus Lawn, 1701 Broadway

This event is organized by the Capitol Hill Festival directors Charlette LeFevre and Philip Lipson. Help bring a message that strengthens connections between the issues particularly facing the Black and LGBTQ community today.


Further reading:

Read the open letter from LGBTQ organizational leaders to Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan

“Here we are, more than 50 years later, still fighting the same systems of anti-Black violence and lack of police accountability that spurred our movement.” Read the full letter >>

Read the letter from UFCW 21 community partner LGBTQ Allyship to Mayor Durkan and Seattle City Council

“It is in our tradition to fight for justice, to demand for equitable treatment, and advocate for fairness. The brutal murder of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Shaun Fuhr, Manual Ellis and Tony McDade and so many others at the hands of the police is unconscionable. Over the last week many in the LGBTQ+ community went to the streets in Seattle to protest police brutality targeting our black community.”  Read the full letter >>

Read UFCW 21’s statement on the recent Supreme Court ruling banning workplace discrimination against LGBTQ people nationwide: 

“Today’s Supreme Court ruling confirms the legal precedent of what our union already knows: all working people deserve a workplace that is free from discrimination based on who we are. No one deserves to be fired or denied a job because of our gender identity or sexual orientation. That has now been upheld as federal law by the highest court in the country, offering millions of workers legal protection from discrimination at work.”  Read the full statement >>

Support Whole Foods workers in Seattle who were kicked out of work for wearing Black Lives Matter masks, then watched management take down the store’s Pride flag as a show of neutrality. Follow these workers on Twitter: twitter.com/WfmWsl 


Learn how to get involved in LGBTQ rights in the labor movement year-round by getting in touch with these organizations:  

  • UFCW OUTreachis a UFCW constituency group working to ensure full equality for LGBTQ+ workers on their jobs and in their unions. 

  • Pride at Work is a UFCW 21 community partner organization dedicated to mutual support between the organized labor movement and the LGBTQ community to further social and economic justice. Learn more at prideatwork.org  

  • LGBTQ Allyship is a UFCW 21 community partner building power among LGBTQ communities and allies in Washington State to work towards economic, racial, and gender justice. Learn more at allyship.org 

  • Ingersoll Gender Center is a UFCW 21 community partner and one of the oldest organizations by and for transgender and gender nonconforming communities in the United States. Learn more at ingersollgendercenter.org 

  • Gender Justice League is a UFCW 21 community partner working to empower trans activists and our allies to fight oppression based on gender & sexuality in Washington State. Learn more at genderjusticeleague.org 

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