Moving on after months-long strike
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After a 19-week strike and lockout of 59,000 supermarket workers at
852 stores in Central and Southern California, the United Food and
Commercial Workers Union conceded to the major demands of the
supermarket chains.
The strike, which ended March 2, took a heavy toll on the grocery
store chains, with at least $1.5 billion in foregone sales. There has
been mixed response in Laguna Beach to the strike’s end.
Ralphs shoppers Robert Guinther, 53, and his mother Pat Guinther,
83, were back to shop at Ralphs on Wednesday.
“I had to come here,” Pat Guinther said. “I walk all the time, and
the kids here are all so kind to me. I was happy and relieved when I
found out it was over. I got hugs from some of my kids.”
Robert Guinther said he saw his mother also get hugs from the
dairy man.
Clerk Ingrid Hietzke is glad it’s over, and thanks the shoppers
for their support.
“I appreciate everything they did for us,” Hietzke said.
Toni Dietz, who had worked at Ralphs for 10 years, started working
for her husband’s company during the strike and decided she isn’t
going back.
“I haven’t been there as long as most of the other girls, [but]
I’m glad those girls went back to work,” Dietz said.
She said the biggest thing about the strike was that they were
trying to stop the two-tier pay system.
“Because all the new hires will get paid less money, benefits and
probably no pensions -- what’s going to happen?” Dietz said.
“Obviously, they’ll start scheduling people who make less money [and
work] more hours.”
Only about five people at Ralphs in Laguna are guaranteed 40
hours, Dietz said. Everyone else is only guaranteed 25 hours.
“There’s no guarantee to make a living anymore,” Dietz said. “For
now, the contract is for three years. It’s a lose-lose situation.
Everyone loses. They lost a lot of money, and they didn’t end up
keeping everything they had before. Basically, everybody loses.”
She thinks everyone else will continue to go to places like Trader
Joes, Wild Oats or the Farmer’s Market.
“They set it up [years back] so people could make a career out of
it,” Dietz said. “Now they’re stopping pensions. People work here for
30 years and want to be able to retire, and in the end, they [the
supermarket] want to take it all away.”
Kristen Daneen worked at Pavilions for two months during the
strike.
“I had a good time -- the only thing was the stress of walking
into the job over the picket line,” Daneen said. “Other than that,
[those on strike or locked out] yell into the doors.”
People’s cars were getting vandalized and she was taunted in the
parking lot with threats that they would damage her car, Daneen said.
“There were a lot of flippant remarks,” Daneen said. “The
customers were like, ‘Oh, my gosh,’ wishing that it was over. Some
came in in tears and asked for the management.”
She, like many other fill-ins, did it for the money, Daneen said.
She was paid $17.90 an hour.
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