Kroger Strike Appears Averted

Kroger and the United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400 Union reached a “Fully Recommended Tentative Agreement” on a new contract Thursday for Mid-Atlantic division associates in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio. 

Kroger and the United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400 Union reached a “Fully Recommended Tentative Agreement” on a new contract Thursday for Mid-Atlantic division associates in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio. 

Just last week, the union had voted to authorize a strike but returned to the bargaining table. It had planned informational pickets starting March 11. 

The next step is the union will hold a ratification vote for bargaining unit members.

The strike would have affected 3,000 employees and 38 stores in the three state mid-Atlantic region. 

“Kroger’s commitment to increase wages and ensure associates have access to low-cost, high-quality healthcare benefits has long been a core priority,” said Lori Raya, president of Kroger Mid-Atlantic. “I am pleased to have an agreement that rewards these associates with more money than ever before.”

Kroger is the nation’s largest unionized grocery retailer. The two sides used a federal mediator to reach the agreement. 

It raises starting wages to $13 per hour and provides wage increases up to $2.50 per hour for department leaders and top rate associates over the life of the contract. It also includes a premium increase for all night shift work.

See the full statement at www.krogermidatlanticcba.com

Kroger Employees Approve Strike Vote In Three States

Workers at 38 Kroger grocery stores in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio have voted to go on strike. Whether they do or not is dependent on further negotiations with the company.  

Updated on Friday, March 1, 2024 at 4 p.m.

In a statement, Kroger said: “We are disappointed that our offer was rejected by UFCW Local 400 members present during the vote. And we understand that our associates and customers are best served by the company and union returning to the bargaining table.

Thanks in large part to the involvement of U.S. Senator Joe Manchin and the Federal Mediation Conciliation Services, the parties will resume contract negotiations and we are pleased to do so. The company and union will meet to continue discussions toward finding common ground on areas of concern.

We are hopeful that we can work together to reach a fully recommended tentative agreement that is a win for associates and helps to keep groceries affordable for the communities we serve.”

Updated on Friday, March 1, 2024 at 3 p.m.

United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400 Union announced at 2:30 p.m. Friday that it will resume talks with the company “in hopes of reaching an agreement.” The union also plans to hold a series of rallies at select stores on March 11 where they will announce the next steps they plan to take.

The union said, for now, they will continue to work as normal and all Kroger stores in the three-state area will remain open.

Original Story

Workers at 38 Kroger grocery stores in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio have voted to go on strike. Whether they do or not is dependent on further negotiations with the company.  

United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400 Union announced Friday that Kroger union members have voted in favor of authorizing a strike. The union is cautious to say they are not on strike yet, but the bargaining committee can call a strike at any moment. 

Employees in select stores voted 1,375–214 (87 percent) to reject the company’s contract proposal and 1,347–229 (85 percent) to authorize a strike.

“This vote has sent a powerful message to Kroger that they must do better if they expect us to ratify a contract,” explained the union’s bargaining committee in its announcement to members. “Now, we are ready to sit down with the company and negotiate an agreement that we can recommend for ratification. If not, we are ready to continue to do whatever it takes to get a fair contract. By sticking together, we will win.”

If it takes place, the strike would involve approximately 3,000 workers. 

In a statement, the Kroger company said that Kroger Mid-Atlantic stores in the three states are open for business and serving customers despite UFCW Local 400’s announcement of a strike authorization. 

“Despite our proposed historical investment of $300 million in associate wages and health care in West Virginia, our offer was not ratified. Our associates are the heart of Kroger, and we respect and value their hard work,” said Lori Raya, Kroger Mid-Atlantic division president. “Our proposal would put more money in every associate’s paycheck and preserve high-quality healthcare at 72 percent less than the average healthcare expense for West Virginia families. We remain dedicated to finding common ground and extend an open invitation to UFCW Local 400 for further dialogue.”

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., issued a statement on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, that: “I greatly value the diligent work every Kroger team member performs in West Virginia and the indispensable role Kroger stores and their employees fill in our communities. I encourage all parties to come back to the negotiating table as soon as possible to preserve jobs and benefits and keep these essential stories operational and thriving.”

The Mid-Atlantic Division operates more than 100 stores in Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Ohio. Based in Richmond, Virginia, the Mid-Atlantic Division employs about 15,000 associates. 

United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400 is led by President Mark Federici and represents 35,000 members working in the grocery, retail, health care, food processing, service and other industries in Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee.

The regional stores included in the potential collective bargaining agreement include: 

West Virginia:

  • Kroger #668, Box 1264, Mt. Gay, WV 25637
  • Kroger #708, McGraw & Main Streets, Ripley, WV 25271
  • Kroger #714, 350 Patterson Dr, Morgantown, WV 26505
  • Kroger #722, PO Box 2609, Rt 4 & 20, South Buckhannon, WV 26201
  • Kroger #725, 1439 MacCorkle Ave SW, St Albans, WV 25177
  • Kroger #730, 450 11th St, Elkins, WV 26241
  • Kroger #734, 518 Park Center US Rt 60, Rainelle, WV 25962
  • Kroger #739, 2908 State St, Gassaway , WV 26624
  • Kroger #743, 308 Stokes Dr, Hinton, WV 25951
  • Kroger #752, 2007 East 7th St, Parkersburg, WV 26101
  • Kroger #753, 930 Division St, Parkersburg, WV 26101
  • Kroger #754, 10635 MacCorkle Ave SE, Marmet, WV 25315
  • Kroger #755, 1851 Earl Core Rd, Morgantown, WV 26505
  • Kroger #763, 5450 Big Tyler Rd, Charleston, WV 25312
  • Kroger #765, 180 Red Oak Shop Ctr, Ronceverte, WV 24970
  • Kroger #768, 981 Dunbar Village, Dunbar, WV 25064
  • Kroger #769, #5 Riverwalk Mall, South Charleston, WV 25303
  • Kroger #770, 151 Beaver Plaza , PO Box 579, Beaver, WV 25813
  • Kroger #772, 5717 MacCorkle Ave. SE, Charleston, WV 25304
  • Kroger #774, 102 Emily Dr, Clarksburg, WV 26301
  • Kroger #778, 500 Delaware Ave, Charleston, WV 25302
  • Kroger #780, 411 Mall Rd, Oak Hill, WV 25901
  • Kroger #782, 19 7th Ave  , Huntington, WV 25701
  • Kroger #785, 1100 Fledder John Rd, Charleston, WV 25314
  • Kroger #788, 6360 US Route 60, Barboursville, WV 25504
  • Kroger #790, 133 Beckley Crossing, Beckley, WV 25802
  • Kroger #792, 2627 5th Ave, Huntington, WV 25702
  • Kroger #794, 101 Great Teays Blvd, Scott Depot, WV 25560
  • Kroger #805, 1734 Harper Rd, Beckley, WV 25801
  • Kroger #807, 223 The Crossing Shop Center, Elkview, WV 25071
  • Kroger #813, 500 Suncrest Town Center, Morgantown, WV 26505
  • Kroger #817, PO Box 1209 Rt 85 Hopkins Rd, Danville, WV 25053

Ohio:

  • Kroger #776, 40 Acme St, Marietta, OH 45750
  • Kroger #781, 6306 State Rt 7, Proctorville, OH 45669
  • Kroger #799, 1008 Washington Blvd, Belpre, OH 45714
  • Kroger #800, 401 Matthew St, Marietta, OH 45750

Kentucky:

  • Kroger #783, 711 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, Ashland, KY 41101
  • Kroger #796, 370 Diedrick Blvd, Ashland, KY 41101

No End In Sight For Special Metals Strike In Huntington

A strike at the Special Metals special alloy plant in Huntington is entering it’s 20th week. Union workers and members of the local community are eager to see the negotiations reach a resolution.

Special Metals is the largest plant of its kind in the world, an important producer for the U.S. Department of Defense, and one of the oldest employers in the greater Huntington region.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting received no response from the company after multiple requests for comment.

On October 1st, around 450 United Steelworkers walked out of Special Metals. Safety issues, health care, and the length of temporary jobs were reasons given for the strike.

“Over the course of the negotiations, they’ve made small moves on their raises and stuff,” said United Steelworkers Local 40 Chairman Greg Elkins. As far as health care, we’re going backwards.”

During a Huntington city council meeting in January, in a 6 to 4 vote, the council passed a resolution urging both Special Metals and the workers to come to the negotiating table.

David Maynard, a member of the union’s negotiation committee, told the council that 450 workers without money to pay for goods would start negatively impacting the local economy.

“We’re not going out to eat, we’re not going to the movies, we’re not shopping. It’s costing the city money,” Maynard told the council. “We would continue to work under our contract. We’re just asking to stay on a plateau where we’re at.”

Before voting in favor of the resolution, Council Member Bob Bailey said local representatives should support their constituents.

“If you think back about this country, you’ll find out who made it strong. It’s men and women of the unions. We’ve got a good workforce, and these men and women, they deserve anything this council can do for them,” Bailey said.

Aside from the local economy, the strike is impacting the U.S. Department of Defense.

Level 1 Fasteners is a Huntington based manufacturer for the Navy and its other subcontractors. The company produces fasteners, items that hold different parts together like nuts and bolts, that are vital for Navy ships and submarines.

Level 1 Fasteners told WVPB that 15% of its fasteners are made with materials produced from Special Metals. The company currently has material from Special Metals still in stock, but with most of its orders from special metals on back order, it will need to switch toward using material from other vendors.

“I hope those work in our favor, because they’re beginning to find out that we are a necessary part of their business,” said Elkins, noting that the supply chain issues demonstrate cracks in the company’s contingency. “Some of the contracts specifically state that Special Metals, Local 40 has to do the work, and without us in there, I would say that those contracts are all on hold.”

David Adkins
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Special Metals Apple Street Gate

To Elkins, the current strike feels different than the one he was part of over 20 years ago.

“I was here in ‘98, ‘99,” Elkins said, “The people who are negotiating this contract are not the same people.”

Elkins said that although morale among the union members shifts up and down, it is currently up.

“We all feel the same about our jobs. Everybody likes what we do. We just want a fair contract,” Elkins said. “With the rate of inflation and everything else that’s going on in the world. We just, we feel we deserve what we’re asking for.”

Valentine’s Day marked the 136th day since the strike began on October 1. No date has been set for the next round of negotiations. The 1999 strike lasted 10 weeks.

Biscuit World Union Effort Rooted In W.Va. History

While making biscuits and meatloaf at a fast-food restaurant during the coronavirus pandemic, 64-year-old Cynthia Nicholson often thinks back to her husband’s coal mining days in West Virginia.

In that job and in his time as a pipefitter, she said, the work was grueling and sometimes dangerous — but there were standards for safety, working conditions and wages, and people felt they were treated fairly. She said that was because he belonged to unions.

At Tudor’s Biscuit World in Elkview, a franchise of a regional chain that serves comfort food, Nicholson says workers have no such protection. With the coronavirus surging, she doesn’t feel safe.

So, a few months ago she did the only thing that makes sense to her: She reached out to her late husband’s union friends and asked for help. On Tuesday, after months of organizing, National Labor Relations Board officials will count votes cast by some of the franchise’s roughly two dozen workers to find out if it will become the first unionized fast-food restaurant in the state.

The push for a union in this mountain town of fewer than 2,000 people echoes a larger national movement of organizing among retail and food service workers. In a business where workers have routinely been asked to stay on the job and interact with the public during the pandemic, they hope forming a union will give them more say in how they are treated.

The effort also resonates deeply in a state with a storied history of labor activism, coming 100 years after the largest worker uprising in U.S. history erupted in West Virginia coal country.

“We’re tired of being treated as badly as we’re being treated,” Nicholson said. “The workers are treated with no dignity, no respect, like they’re just a number.”

The vice president of Tudor’s Biscuit World did not respond to a voicemail or text message from The Associated Press, and no one from the chain’s corporate offices responded to phone calls.

Relatively unknown outside the region, Tudor’s Biscuit World is a staple of West Virginia: a must-stop eatery where diners can get made-from-scratch biscuits doused in gravy; country-fried steak and sandwiches including the Miner or the Mountaineer. Founded in Charleston in 1980, the chain now has more than 70 locations, mostly in West Virginia and in parts of neighboring states Ohio and Kentucky.

In one sense, the Elkview franchise, surrounded by hills and parked next to a Dairy Queen, is far removed from the West Virginia coal mines where men and women once stood in the vanguard of the American labor movement. In another, the connection is visceral.

Workers here feel connected to the state’s labor history in their bones, bonded by blood to men and women who saw the value of organizing for safer conditions and better pay in their own lives. Unions have been weakened considerably over the years, but many West Virginians remember a father, a husband or some other relative who once held a union job, and they witnessed the power of banding together.

Employees in the state have often gravitated toward unionization when concerns about job safety are heightened, notes West Virginia University historian William Hal Gorby.

“Workers across sectors are saying, ‘We are living through a moment in time where it’s making you wonder: Do you want to do this particular job because you could get sick and or die from it?’” he said. “In the early 20th century, it was the coal mine and lack of regulations and now it’s COVID.”

A century ago, concerns over safety and quality of life drew workers to Blair Mountain, where armed miners were subdued by government officials and at least 16 men died. It was a setback for the labor movement at the time, but union membership in the state reached a peak in the decades following the battle. In the 1940s and 1950s, roughly half of West Virginia workers were employed in heavy industries such as coal, steel and glass, and the majority of those workers belonged to a union.

By 2021, however, only 10.5% of West Virginia workers were represented by unions, according to U.S. Department of Labor statistics released last week.

Nicholson is a retired dental assistant who lives in Elkview. She started working at Tudor’s about a year ago, earning $9 an hour as a prep cook for extra income after her husband died of cancer.

She saw things that worried her immediately. After an employee tested positive for COVID-19, the restaurant’s employees were never informed, she said. When one of her coworkers questioned the store’s COVID policy, Nicholson said, she started getting her hours cut. Employees often had to work past their scheduled hours to cover shifts and then were reprimanded for working overtime, she said.

Nicholson also alleges that she and other employees were shorted on their paychecks and charged hundreds of dollars for meals at work they never ate.

“The belittling that goes on astonished me,” she said, adding that in her previous job as a dental assistant, “You weren’t allowed to act like that.”

Nicholson reached out to one of the unions her husband had belonged to: the Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 625, based in the capital of Charleston. Union officials there connected her with the United Food & Commercial Workers Local 400, which represents 35,000 workers across six states and Washington, D.C.

When a majority of the workers at Tudor’s Elkview franchise signed authorization cards, Nicholson said, there was a lot of excitement. They hosted rallies where people held signs saying, “We love union biscuits.”

But soon the temperature changed. Employees started worrying that they could lose their jobs or have their hours cut. Nicholson said she was written up for small things, something that hadn’t happened before.

Former Tudor’s head cashier Jennifer Patton, 38, said she was afraid of joining a union at first, but felt more comfortable after talking to her father-in-law, who was a union man.

She signed on after she found out that an employee she had been riding with to another Tudor’s location had tested positive for COVID-19 and she hadn’t been told.

Her decision had consequences: In the months that followed, she said, she was suspended multiple times even though she had never been disciplined previously and had even been promoted. Her bosses then took away her security clearance to work cashiers. Last week, she was fired.

Patton’s son just started his first year of college. She said paying for her son’s education is important to her.

“Me and my husband work every day, as many hours as we possibly can, and we still struggle,” she said. “Nobody deserves to be talked to and treated the way we are.”

Tudor’s employee Susie Thompson, 67, agrees.

“I wouldn’t be doing this job at my age unless I had to,” said Thompson, whose ex-husband belonged to a union as a strip miner. “It’s hard. Morale is so low.”

Nicholson hopes enough workers feel the connection to the state’s past to tip the balance in favor of a collective bargaining unit now.

“Unions protected our family members, so many workers in this state’s history,” she said. “We need that protection at Tudor’s.”

Striking Workers Urge Huntington City Council To Support Blocked Resolution

Huntington’s City Council chambers were filled Monday night with employees participating in two separate strikes at the Cabell Huntington Hospital and Special Metals. Members of the council considered a resolution that called for both organizations to come to the negotiating table in good faith.

The motion was blocked by Huntington’s legal team on grounds of impartiality.

The resolution in support of the strikers was introduced by Councilman Bob Bailey. He noted the importance to “get behind these people in these picket lines. Christmas is coming. […] They need Christmas presents for their children. So I’m only going to pray that you’ll do the right thing. And back these union people. These are our people.”

A federal mediator has called on the Cabell Huntington Hospital and SEIU to return to the negotiating table on Nov. 30.

Molly Frick, director of human resources for Cabell Huntington Hospital, issued a statement Monday. “We eagerly await confirmation to return to the bargaining table,” Frick said. “We presented our last offer to the SEIU District 1199 on Nov. 9. As of today, not only have we not received a counteroffer, we have not received any response. We recognize a strike is a serious matter that deserves earnest action.

She added: “Work stoppages at hospitals differ from those at industrial facilities. The very health and well-being of human lives are the responsibility of the entire team. We have heard from many union members that they’re ready to return to caring for patients and supporting operations. We encourage the SEIU to either respond to our offer or return to the bargaining table, so that our team members can return to work.”

The organizing director of SEIU District 1199, Sherri McKinney, argued in a statement that the Cabell Huntington Hospital isn’t truly acting in good faith, “when they have made an offer far less than what we have already had for decades and bargained for on Nov. 3.”

“It is our hope that the hospital will do what is just and fair and stop this strike in good faith during this holiday season for the Huntington Community at-large, but after the many false statements to the media and divisive tactics, they need to find another way of conducting business,” McKinney said.

Two union hospital employees came to speak before the council in support of Bailey’s resolution to support the striking workers.

Union worker Trish Burns shared with the city council how her sudden loss of health care has affected her 25-year-old son. “He’s a full-time college student. He has worked full time to pay for his education. Last week he was admitted to the hospital with no insurance because Cabell ripped my insurance away.”

The City of Huntington
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Huntington City Council Broadcast
Trish Burns speaking at the 11-22-2021 City Council Meeting

Council member Tia Rambaugh called for her colleagues to take a position. “Ultimately, I think that governance and administration should not remain impartial in these situations, because this is our community,” Rambaugh said.

Despite her background in business, she argued that it was unethical to stay quiet on the sidelines. “You guys are our workers. We are your neighbors. And it’s important for us to make our opinions known so that administration in these businesses can potentially recognize that they’re not working in a silo, that we all have to work together, and that our opinions mean something.”

Councilman Patrick Jones was the last to speak on the resolution. With tears in his eyes, Jones argued it is not unreasonable to demand higher compensation to keep pace with inflation. “Their children, many of whom I see in the halls of our schools each day while I’m working, can enjoy this holiday season in the same manner with a feeling of security and peace that the families of officials in management at these institutions will surely enjoy,” Jones said.

City of Huntington
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Huntington City Council Broadcast
Huntington Councilman Patrick Jones

Council members officially didn’t side with either the workers or the companies. It is the 53rd day since the Special Metals strike began, and it is the 20th day of the Cabell Huntington Hospital strike.

Jones swore that if there is not a deal made in the next two weeks, he will introduce another resolution to the city council.

Report: Man Pulled Gun on Frontier Communications Striker

A Georgia man has been accused of pulling a pistol and telling a striking Frontier Communications worker in West Virginia “don’t mess with me.”
The Charleston Gazette-Mail cites a report filed with state police as saying the striker had yelled “you’re taking our jobs” at the Lawrenceville man Tuesday near Flatwoods.
The report says 44-year-old Ato Oronde Clark was charged with one count of brandishing a weapon. It is unclear if he has a lawyer.

A Communications Workers of America statement says Frontier started hiring out-of-state workers to maintain operations after roughly 1,400 employees went on strike Sunday. The strike began after union leaders and the company failed to reach a contract agreement.

Frontier spokesman Andy Malinoski says Clark had not done work yet and his contractor has terminated him.

 

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