No. 568 February 3 - 9, 2010

<< Go Back to Issues
No. 538, July 8 - 14, 2009
 
Acme uncompromising, 1776 members remain willing to negotiate

 
Jul. 8- On the eve of Acme Markets' threat to terminate its contract with 4,000 workers in 40 stores in Greater Philadelphia, officials of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1776 said they remain willing to negotiate and urged the company to return to the bargaining table.

"By demanding that its employees accept a take it or leave it proposal and walking away from negotiations, the company has left its employees and their families totally in the dark as tomorrow dawns," said Wendell W. Young, IV, President of Local 1776.

"The refusal of Acme's executives to compromise means that their workers – the men and women who make their stores run and who have direct contact and relations with their customers – have no idea what conditions await them tomorrow," Young said.

Young said that he is advising Acme members of Local 1776 to report to work tomorrow. A meeting of the membership has been called for next Wednesday, July 15 at the Spectrum.

Young said that as recently as last week the union made a comprehensive offer to settle the contract. The company did not counter, insisting that the members of Local 1776 revote on its ultimatum.

"We remain committed to negotiating, and continue to believe that the solutions can be found only in collective bargaining."

On June 9, 2009, in response to the Union's willingness to discuss a new pension structure offered by the company, Acme terminated negotiations, presented a final proposal to the union and announced its intention to terminate the collective bargaining agreement tomorrow. Since that time the employees of Acme have been subjected to a campaign of coercion and threats designed to convince them to accept the company's proposal, which seriously diminishes health and pension benefits and freezes most wage rates for four years.

in February 2008. The contract has been extended by the parties until Acme's unilateral decision to terminate in expressed in the June 9 letter. Acme's workers have remained on the job under an extension of that contract.
"We bargained patiently for 18 months and our members worked throughout this time, most of them with no raises. Not once did we threaten a job action or talk in any way about a strike or walkout. We stayed at the table because it was in the best interests of Acme's workers, the company and the customers that our members serve every day.

"At the start of these talks our nation's economy nosedived in a way that we haven't seen in generations, making the pension and health care issues in this contract only more difficult to resolve. At the same time, the company has continued to lose market share year-after-year, as reported recently in the news media.
"These issues can be solved, but not if Acme's managers insist on trying to take advantage of the economy by scapegoating their own employees for management's failures to take the steps necessary to compete in this market."

Young said that the union has offered proposals to help the company control costs. He said these provisions are similar to provisions between Local 1776 and other supermarket chains in the region.

"Instead of considering these offers, the company has issued its ultimatum and threatened and intimidated its workers. It has tried to blame them for its own failure to manage and invest in its stores," he said.
 
Source: United Food and Commercial Workers
 
Latest News
   Italians protest US base expansion, G8
   Obama: No green light for Israel to attack Iran
   Protesters killed, wounded as Honduran military prevents Zelaya's return
Nation
   Americans swap homes for hotels as recession bites
   Economist: FDIC gearing up for bank closures
World
   Africa refuses to act on Sudan war crimes warrant
   Ahmadinejad mocks rivals and trumpets 'free' vote
   Equatorial Guinea: Elites hoarding oil revenues, report charges
   Fears for the world's poor countries as the rich grab land
   Iran clerics declare election invalid and condemn crackdown
   Iran police fire tear-gas as thousands mark 1999 unrest
   Mexico accused of torture in drug war
   MI5 accused of bribe offer in Rangzieb Ahmed torture case
   New IAEA head says no evidence of Iran bomb program, but calls for end to peaceful nuke development anyway
   Nigerian militants say Chevron facility destroyed
   Obama gaffe brings chilly response from Putin
   Recession pushed 90 million into extreme poverty-UN
   Report: US to block Iran sanctions at G8 summit
   Trade cannot be relied upon to reduce poverty
   UK warns of 'consequences' as Iran charges Embassy employee
Afghanistan/Pakistan War
   Afghan roadside bomb kills senior British commander
   Pakistan desperately short of money to resettle Swat residents
   PM seeks US help to fence Pak-Afghan border
   Truck bomb in Afghanistan kills 25, many of them children
   US faces resentment in Afghan region
   US uses false Taliban aid charge to pressure Iran
Iraq War
   Biden warns of ending commitment
   Bombings throughout Iraq leave dozens dead
   Iraq tells US not to interfere in 'internal' matters
   Mosul citizens protest annexing parts of city to Kurdistan
US Military Affairs
   'War on terror' used to target minorities: report
   ACLU: Obama admin. used false confessions
   Binyam Mohamed launches legal fight to stop US destroying torture images
Palestine/Israel
   Biden: Israel 'entitled' to attack Iran
   Gazans take the plunge at poisoned beaches
   Israeli official: Spread of Arab population must be stopped
   UN expert: Israeli seizure of aid ship a crime
Labor
   Acme uncompromising, 1776 members remain willing to negotiate
Environment
   Battle raging in US mining country
   Chicago water: In public reports, city silent over sex hormones and painkillers found in treated drinking water
   EPA allows TVA to dump spilled coal ash
   Extinction looms, study says
   Poor face more hunger as climate change leads to crop failure, says Oxfam
   Shell blamed over 'cover-up' of Nigeria's oil spills
   Tenn. ash spill site fails to make EPA hazard list
Women
   Dominican Republic: Losing freedom but not dignity
   Fashion on trial: France debates whether women can wear niqabs
   Gender finally moving to forefront of AIDS fight
   Mexico's women make gains in politics
   States defund women's commissions
LGBT
   Anti-gay killer released after one year
   India's historic gay ruling
   Massachusetts sues US over gay marriage rights
   Out-of-state gay marriages now recognized in D.C.
Media Watch
   Free Press exempt from latest round of Gannett layoffs
   Washington Post scraps plans for 'salons' after uproar
Health
   Ban advised on top pain relief pills
   Food safety body sets French fries, baby food rules
   New Research: Nitrates and nitrites may cause Alzheimer's, diabetes and Parkinson's disease
   Obama health czar directed firms in trouble
   US stem cell research rules ease some restrictions
   Venezuela cites health concerns as it bans Coke Zero
Culture
   'Food Inc.': Shattering the Myth of Agrarian America
   Successive human endeavors: Chris Harman's A People's History of the World
Analysis
   The Great American Bubble Machine
Commentary
   Even with Sen. Franken, Employee Free Choice Act is stuck
Obituary
   McNamara's evil lives on
 
<< Go Back to Issues
Global Report TV #127, Feb. 3 - 9
Check out more Global Report TV!
Sign up for
The Global Report newsletter!

The Global Report Radio
Listen to this week's show!

The Global Report Podcast
Listen to this week's podcast!


Hosting donated by PurpleCat.net

GRTV You Tube Button
 
GR Twitter Button
 
GR F Book Button
 
Free Speech TV
 
Daily Censored
 
Project Censored
 

Cost of the War in Iraq
(JavaScript Error)

Quote of the Week
"
Democracy doesn't come from the top. It comes from the bottom. Democracy is not what governments do. It's what people do.
"
-- Howard Zinn


Goal: $60,000
So Far: $1,175
Still Needed: $58,825
The Global Report is a 501c3 nonprofit news organization. WE CAN USE ALL OF THE HELP WE CAN GET and we rely upon donations from our viewers and readers. Without you, we wouldn't be consistently bringing the best in award-winning, under-reported news to the greater public for over eleven years.

copyright 2010 The Global Report | Contact | Home