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Superstore workers prepare
for
strike vote in Edmonton
Gil McGowan, AFL Staff
More than 3,000 Superstore workers in the Edmonton area could
be on strike by the end of March.
The workers, members of UFCW Local 401, are scheduled to take
a strike vote on March 17-18.
"Obviously, we’d all prefer a negotiated
settlement," says union president Doug O’Halloran. "But the company
is leaving us with no choice. They’re refusing to listen to our issues and
they’re refusing to compromise."
Superstore is owned by Westfair Foods which, in turn, is a
subsidiary of Loblaws, Canada’s largest and most profitable grocery chain.
Despite the fact that company profits jumped by 21 percent
last year, Superstore is offering wage increase of only between 15 and 25 cents
an hour. They are also demanding changes to the wage progression grid so that it
would take workers much longer to reach the top of the pay scale.
"The company is making millions, yet they’re nickel
and diming our members," says O’Halloran. "It’s disgraceful."
In addition to concerns over wages, O’Halloran says
Superstore workers are upset by the company’s ongoing refusal to treat them
with more dignity and respect.
"It’s a lot of little things that add up to a very bad
work environment," he says. "Managers pressure people to come to work
when they’re sick. They prohibit cashiers from having water bottles at their
tills. And they refuse to do things like buy new anti-fatigue mats for workers
who are standing all day. Our members are just saying: enough is enough."
The union has asked for a written guarantee that managers
will deal fair with workers and treat them with dignity and respect – but the
company has flatly refused.
If the Edmonton-area Superstore workers vote to strike, they
will join their counterparts in Saskatchewan who voted nearly 90 percent in
favour of strike action early in March.
At press time, the Saskatchewan UFCW members (who work at
Superstore and two other Loblaws subsidiaries, Extra Foods and Wholesale Club)
were still at the bargaining table. But they could begin their strike at any
time.
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