350 Grocery Union Members Have
Died From COVID-19
Grocery workers face new challenges as Covid worsens, pandemic fatigue sets in
Yesterday's Heroes Are Wearing Down & Retail America Along
With Them
For some grocery workers who stock shelves and check out
customers, the past few weeks have felt like deja vu.
Hand sanitizer and masks are in short supply. Some customers shop without
wearing a mask. And pandemic-related policies, from extra cleaning of stores to
limits on the number of shoppers, have largely faded away, according to members
of United Food and Commercial Workers International Union who spoke on a Monday
conference call.
Grocery workers say they face new challenges as
the coronavirus pandemic intensifies across the country. Covid-19 cases and
hospitalizations have risen in communities from big cities to rural towns.
Shoppers are rushing to stores for holiday items, such as turkeys and baking
supplies, along with stocking up again on toilet paper. And extra hourly pay
meant to show appreciation or compensate for additional health risks has ended.
“If you want to know one reason why this pandemic is getting worse, it’s very
simple: We haven’t learned. We haven’t changed,” said Janet Wainwright, a
five-year employee of Kroger who works in Virginia. “And grocery companies like
Kroger are choosing to make things worse.”
She pointed to specific concerns about her store: Employees are coming to
work, even with symptoms, because they can’t afford to take unpaid sick time.
The store is not enforcing mask wearing. And a container of free masks, once
placed near the front of the store, is now tucked behind a service counter.
“Are you kidding me?,” she said. “We should provide as many masks as customers
need,” she said. “Every mask customers take is worn and has reduced the spread
of Covid.”
Kroger, the country’s largest supermarket operator, began offering a $2 an hour
pay increase in March, but ended that extra pay in mid-May. It gave a $400
one-time bonus in the spring, as it phased out the pay and faced some criticism.
In a statement, Kroger said its “most urgent priority throughout this pandemic
has been to provide a safe environment for our associates and customers while
meeting our societal obligation to provide open stores, e-commerce solutions and
an efficiently operating supply chain so that our communities have access to
fresh, affordable food and essentials.”
It said it has invested more than $1 billion in extra pay and bonuses to hourly
workers since March — including a $100 store credit and 1,000 fuel points that
employees will receive Nov. 19.
Other retailers from Walmart to Kroger also offered temporary pay increases and
special bonuses in the spring. Some of those wage increases have continued.
Target ended its $2 an hour pay bump, but
sped along a planned minimum wage increase to $15 an hour. Lowe’s recently
announced a sixth bonus for hourly workers that will be paid in mid-November.
And Home Depot said it would make some
pandemic pay increases permanent. Walmart and Target also said they’ll
remain
shut on Thanksgiving Day to express appreciation for employees, too.
Yet the toll has been significant, particularly on grocery store workers who
can’t work from home and often have low pay and limited health benefits. At
least 350 of its members have died since the start of the pandemic,
including 109 grocery workers, according to UFCW.
Marc Perrone, the union’s president, said more than 48,000 members have gotten
sick or been exposed to Covid-19. Yet, he said, the actual number “is
undoubtedly much, much higher” — since the union may not hear about every case
and nonunionized retailers like Walmart and Amazon do not report their numbers.
Amazon said in early October that it had
counted 19,816 confirmed or presumed Covid-19 cases across its front-line
employees in the U.S., or slightly more than 1% of its 1.37 million front-line
Amazon and Whole Foods employees. It has not disclosed an updated number or said
how many workers have died.
Article originally published on
cnbc.com