By Reginald Johnson
BRIDGEPORT --- Union workers picketed the Stop and Shop
stores on Main Street and Fairfield Avenue Friday, urging customers
not to shop there while they are on strike.
“Don’t stop! Don’t shop!” workers on Main
Street called out to people as they pulled their cars into the parking lot.
“Please don’t cross our line!”
The Bridgeport workers are among the 30,000 employees
that went out on strike at 240 Stop and Shop stores in southern New England
on Thursday. Company management is demanding health and benefit cuts and
reductions in pay on some days.
Stop and Shop is owned by the Dutch firm,
Ahold. According to the union, Ahold made $2 billion in net profits last year. The
company got a $225 million tax break from the US government in 2017.
“They made $2 billion in net profits last
year, but they want us to accept the cuts,” said one worker. “It’s not right.”
“They’re bringing in replacement workers who
are making $20 an hour. That’s more than I make,” said one veteran worker.
Strikers picket the Stop and Shop store on North Main Street |
One woman picketing outside the Main
Street store in the North End, who said she worked in the store for 20 years,
was bitter at the customers who still keep coming to the store, despite the
strike. “They just walk through. They don’t care,” she said.
As one
customer walked through the picket line, one of the strikers called out “Why do
you walk through our line? We’d help you if you had a problem!”
But for the most part, it appeared that
patronage at the North End store was down a bit from Thursday when the
strike had just started. The parking lot was about one-third filled.
“ I don’t know how long this will go on. The
last time there was a strike it only lasted four hours, but now we’re already
into day two, so you don’t know,” said one employee.
The
strike creates a real pinch for many Stop and Shop workers.
A story in
the Connecticut Post quoted one of them, Chris Mauro, who works at the
Stop and Shop on Fairfield Avenue in Black Rock.
“I’m a single dad,” said Mauro, who lives in
East Haven but works in Bridgeport. “I got 32 years in and my son is getting
ready to go college. I’ve always been faithful to Stop and Shop, but I can’t
afford all the give backs.”
That includes triple their current contributions
to healthcare, triple the healthcare deductible and a reduced pension
contribution as well as a reduction of time and a half pay on Sundays.
“This is a very scary time for me,” he told the
Post. “The company isn’t even talking to our union.”
On
Friday evening at the North End store, Channel 12 showed up, and so did the
politicians --- including U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn, State Rep Chris
Rosario, D-Bridgeport and several City Council members. All of them voiced their support for the
strikers.
Members of the Teamsters Union Local 1150 also came to show solidarity.
Members of the Teamsters Union Local 1150 also came to show solidarity.