From Union City <[email protected]>
Subject Public outcry forces Kroger to drop demands for “Emergency Pay”
Date June 3, 2020 9:45 AM
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Public outcry forces Kroger to drop demands for "Emergency Pay" repayment

Today's Labor Quote

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Public outcry forces Kroger to drop demands for "Emergency Pay" repayment
Supermarket workers at Kroger recently reported receiving collection letters from the company alleging that they were overpaid "emergency pay" while on sick leave, and demanding the workers pay the company back. Their union, UFCW Local 400, investigated each case thoroughly and were preparing to file grievances against the company, but after an exposé in Dissent Magazine featuring a Local 400 member sparked an outcry from workers and customers on social media, the company backed down. The union said it was pleased Kroger had come to its senses and urged the company to "focus their attention on extending `hero pay' until this crisis is over."
[link removed] Read more here.

Today's Labor Quote: ATU Local 689

"Let us never forget that the conditions that built many of our unions (including: civil unrest, widespread unemployment, mass demonstrations) are not too different from today. Our unions weren't given to us but were the result of incredible sacrifices."

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Today's Labor History

This week's [link removed] Labor History Today podcast: Minneapolis general strike; "Mongrel Firebugs and Men of Property"
Political scientist and historian Michael Munk connects what's going on in Minneapolis today with the general strike that took place there in 1934. Plus: Steve Fraser, author of the new book "Mongrel Firebugs and Men of Property: Capitalism and Class Conflict in American History"; With the AFL-CIO car caravans originally planned for this Wednesday (now postponed) to demand swift action on the pending Heroes bill in Congress to help American workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Meany Archives Ben Blake reveals that the labor movement has used this technique effectively in the past. The latest episode of the "En Masse" podcast takes us inside the New England quarries nearly a century ago, and we celebrate the life of Rosie the Riveter.
[link removed] Last week's show: "Politics of the Pantry"; "We Just Come to Work Here"

International Ladies Garment Workers Union founded - 1900

A Federal child labor law, enacted two years earlier, was declared unconstitutional - 1918

- David Prosten

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