Grocery store pickets suffering under heat
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Deepa Bharath
Shane Solomon felt the searing rays of the sun pierce through his
baseball cap on Wednesday afternoon.
Many in Southern California felt that sweltering heat over the
last few days. But Solomon and others like him who spent several
hours a day picketing outside the supermarkets, felt its fury.
Solomon was one of the striking supermarket employees who was
holding a sign outside Ralphs on East 17th Street. The workers of
three supermarket chains in Southern California have entered their
11th day of picketing, protesting a contract they say will cut their
health benefits by half.
Solomon said the sun has been merciless ever since the strike
began.
“Most of us are out here at least 40 hours, six to seven days, a
week,” he said. “We’ve just been wearing hats and a lot of sunscreen.
But we’re constantly standing and walking. So the heat does drain
you.”
Vendors and customers have, however, helped by dropping off crates
of water and soda to keep the pack cool and hydrated, Solomon said.
Pickets didn’t expect the heat wave when they started off 10 days
ago, Ralphs employee Kelly Moore said.
“There’s absolutely no shade here,” she said, holding up her sign
to shield her face. “But I feel sad for those picketing inland and in
the desert. We’re lucky at least to have a little bit of that ocean
breeze.”
The unseasonable warmth will linger over the weekend, but the
cool-down will begin shortly afterward, said Noel Isla, a
meteorologist for the National Weather Service in San Diego.
“It was the strong high pressure that was causing all the heat,”
he said. “But it’s already started cooling down a little bit.”
The hottest day this week was Tuesday, when temperatures along the
coast were in the low to mid-80s, Isla said.
Beach attendance was also higher than usual, Newport Beach
Lifeguard Capt. Eric Bauer said.
“We occasionally get these spurts of good beach weather during our
off-season, and this last week was an example of that,” he said. “The
surf has been good, too.”
There have been almost 15,000 people on the beach each day since
temperatures began to soar, Bauer said. Usually at this time of year,
less than half that number show up, and it shrinks more if it is
cloudy or raining, he said.
As for the pickets, they say they’ll survive this scorcher.
“It’s OK,” picket Greg Smith said. “This heat’s better than the
heat we get from some of the customers who want to shop here.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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