Grocery workers glad to be returning
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Jenny Marder
After 141 days on the picket line, Surf City’s strike-weary grocery
workers will return to their jobs this week.
The bitter dispute ended Sunday, when grocery workers voted
overwhelmingly to ratify an agreement reached by the United Food and
Commercial Workers union and the company that operates Vons,
Pavilions, Albertsons and Ralphs supermarkets.
Union members voted 85% in favor of the labor contract at polling
places throughout Los Angeles and Orange County.
“I feel very good about [the contract,]” said Patrick Adkins, who
will soon return to his job as a grocery clerk at the Albertsons
Market on Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue. “The thing about it is
that -- from what the company had offered us in the very beginning,
which was an absolutely horrible contract that was nowhere near what
we had voted on -- it not only set us back but would have set back
middle class families all across the nation.”
The union called on thousands of workers from Vons and Pavilions
markets to walk out of their jobs on Oct. 11 in a massive protest of
health care cuts and pension rollbacks. The next day, Ralphs and
Albertsons locked out employees.
Now, nearly five months later, union members are lauding the final
contract as a success.
“The workers in this labor dispute were fighting to protect
affordable health care, their pensions and job security,” said Ellen
Anreder, spokeswoman for the United Food and Commercial Workers
Union. “These three goals were accomplished in the new agreement,
indicating that the workers’ struggle and sacrifice were worthwhile.”
Calls made to officials at Ralphs and Albertsons were not
returned.
Adkins said he feels good about the agreement and proud of the
workers who stuck it out until the end.
“We set a precedent for other people for a long strike in
general,” he said. “Anyone that belongs to a union is going to look
at the fight we fought and say ‘wow, these guys stuck it out for the
longest time.’”
As a picket captain, Adkins developed a mantra that he would use
to boost morale among his workers.
“It used to be ‘one day longer and one day stronger,’ but later I
shortened it to ‘stronger for life,’ because that’s what I feel that
I am,” Adkins said.
But Adkins, father of a 3-year-old girl and a 1-year-old boy, said
that it wasn’t easy.
“It was really tough for everyone on the line, not just me
exclusively,” Adkins said. “I’ve seen people that have gone hungry,
lost their vehicles and had to ride a bicycle to the picket line You
have people that have lost a lot and people that are standing in food
lines when they normally wouldn’t have been standing in food lines.
It was hard.”
The unions were able to defend health insurance and pension for
veteran workers. New hires, however, will receive substantially less
benefits and lower wages.
“That’s one thing that’s a shame,” Adkins said. “We, as a union
... are trying to have an equality and equal pay with others.”
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