Hoping to
allay consumer fears and avoid any work stoppage, the region's
three major supermarket chains and the grocery workers union
agreed yesterday to extend their current contact for two weeks.
The contract was set to expire last night.
Representatives from the
union said they agreed to the extension because the grocery
chains had agreed to negotiate. Before the extension, there had
been minimal talks between the two sides.
“These next two weeks are critical,” said Mickey Kasparian,
president of the union's Local 135, which covers San Diego and
Imperial counties. “We have either got to hammer out a deal or
make significant progress.”
The two sides also said a federal mediator has become
involved in the talks and had requested the contract extension.
Adena Tessler, the spokeswoman for the region's three major
grocery store chains, said the companies are committed to
working with the union to come up with a mutually beneficial
contract. While the supermarkets were willing to continue
negotiations without an extension, the deal gives all involved
peace of mind as the talks continue.
“The workers and the customers can be confident that it will
be business as usual at the grocery store,” Tessler said.
The current labor deal helped end a bitter 4 ˝-month strike
and lockout in 2004 but little progress has been made on a new
contract. The grocery chains – Albertsons, Ralphs and Vons – and
the United Food and Commercial Workers union typically
renegotiate a deal every three years.
The current contract affects about 65,000 workers at almost
800 stores throughout Southern California. The three chains
account for more than 50 percent of the grocery business in the
region.
Ruth Milkman, a sociology professor who directs the Institute
of Industrial Relations at the University of California Los
Angeles, said the extension is good news for the union and its
workers, but much work remains.
“Everything depends on how serious they are about having
good-faith negotiations,” she said, adding that the involvement
of federal mediator Linda Gonzalez is a hopeful sign.
Part of the deal stipulates that grocery workers at the three
chains continue to work under the current contract with no work
stoppages until March 19. Any wage increases under the new deal
will be retroactive to March 5 as long as there is no strike or
lockout.
While the two sides have agreed to an extension, they are
still far apart on many issues, including wage increases and
health care benefits for employees and retirees. Besides those
issues, the union said it is set on eliminating a two-tier
employee system that its members agreed to in the current
contract.
Under that system, new hires get paid less than longtime
employees, and it takes them longer to qualify for benefits.
They also pay a greater share of the cost for those benefits.
The union has complained that the two-tier system is unfair
because workers doing the same job get different pay. They blame
it for increased employee turnover within the grocery industry
as well as for the rising number of employees without health
coverage.
The grocery stores chains, however, have said the two-tier
system has been a success, helping trim costs and improve
profits.
With the two sides so far apart on those issues, Milkman
said, it is unlikely that the current extension will be enough
time to resolve all the differences.
“It's a real question if two weeks is enough,” she said. “I
predict there will be further extensions.”
Jennifer Davies: (619) 293-1373;
jennifer.davies@uniontrib.com