Pickets hopeful despite rejection
Alicia Robinson
Grocery store pickets were hopeful on Wednesday despite the
corporations’ rejection of a union offer to send employees back to
work in return for accepting a third party resolution of the nearly
four-month dispute.
In five press conferences held around Southern California, United
Food and Commercial Workers representatives proposed an immediate end
to the strike and lockout and asked the heads of Kroger, Albertsons
and Safeway to agree to a binding third-party decision in the labor
dispute, which began in October when the two sides could not agree on
healthcare benefits and other issues in contract negotiations.
Within hours of the press conferences, the stores issued a joint
statement rejecting the request and inviting the union back to the
bargaining table with a federal mediator, who has been negotiating
the dispute since November.
Picketing workers said a third-party decision maker was a good
idea and they were hopeful that the union’s announcement would result
in their returning to work soon.
“This is one of the first positive moves I’ve seen,” said Steve
Vass, a nighttime stocker at the 17th Street Ralphs store, who was on
the picket line at the Vons store down the street.
“I hope that it works out. I’m just not going to hold my breath,
knowing what’s happened in the past.”
Ralphs spokesman Terry O’Neil said store officials asked the
mediator to invite the union back to the bargaining table.
“We don’t believe it’s in the best interests of our company or our
employees to have a third-party arbitrator that is not familiar with
the issues decide the outcome,” O’Neil said.
At the Albertsons on Balboa Boulevard, picketing workers said they
weren’t surprised by the stores’ rejection because they expected an
initial refusal.
Despite that, Albertsons meat cutter Arnie Tiscareno and cashier
Sandy Crofton said they still think the deal could happen, and they’d
like nothing better.
“It would put us back to work,” Tiscareno said.
“Our customers would like that,” Crofton said. “They’re tired of
it, too.”
Under the union’s proposal, each side would submit its issues to
the arbitrator, who would make a final decision on the dispute.
Workers said they would expect the outcome to be equitable for both
sides.
“I think the food chains are out to break the union, is basically
what it comes down to,” Vass said. “I think whoever is arbitrating is
going to be fair.”
The union has staged a number of publicized protests, such as
blocking the entrance to a Vons store in Garden Grove and a “justice
pilgrimage” to the home of a Safeway executive in Alamo, Texas. But
some local workers said they have mixed feelings about the
effectiveness of those events.
Wednesday’s announcement was kept under wraps, even from union
members, until the press conferences. Holly Swedelson, a checker at
the Harbor Boulevard Albertsons, said pickets rushed to the TVs in a
nearby Kmart on Tuesday night to hear news about the next day’s
announcement.
“We were praying that they were going to say it’s done,” she said.
The pickets said they’d be ready to go back to work immediately if
they could. When they do return to their jobs, they don’t expect hard
feelings between workers and management, they said.
“This is our home,” Tiscareno said. “We’ve got to go back to it.”
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