Disclaimer - The opinions of the author do not necessarily match those of the IWW. This article is reposted in accordance to Fair Use guidelines.
By DANIEL GROSS - Counterpunch, October 8, 2008
A peaceful union march is brutally attacked by police. A union activist’s leg is horribly disfigured and nearly amputated. Maimed possibly for life, she is charged with multiple felony offenses.
The battleground is not the coalfields of Harlan County in the 1930s or 1970s; it's not an example of anti-union violence in Colombia or the Philippines. Our setting is present day Providence, Rhode Island.
On that brilliant Saturday, August 11 of 2007, Alexandra Svoboda didn’t do what she was supposed to do. She didn’t stay home and watch TV. She didn’t go shop at her local Wal-Mart. She didn’t waste away hours on MySpace.
Original URL - http://www.brandworkers.org/en/node/37146
Joe is an IWW member.
On Tuesday, September 2nd, Joe Richard was fired from Ward's Supermarket. He
believes, as do his co-workers, that the firing was illegal and was direct
retaliation for his workplace organizing efforts. On August 8th, Joe and 14
other employees in the Natural Foods Department submitted a petition to
management requesting an increased employee discount (raising it to 20%, which
is not uncommon for the industry) and a regular schedule of employee performance
evaluations. Our petition was largely ignored for three weeks while the owners,
Billy and Trish Ward, went on vacation. After they returned, on August 25th they
held one-on-one meetings with the employees who signed the petition, elaborating
a new 'open door' policy, by which employees could have 100% access to
management if they had a concern or grievance. Beyond that, the requests listed
in our petition were largely ignored.
Little over a week later, Joe was
fired, ostensibly for 'stealing' a bag of coffee, which is donated by Sweetwater
Coffee Company explicitly for the personal use of Natural Foods Department
employees. This free coffee, which was and continues to be intentionally given
for employees to drink at work and take home, was routinely taken home and made
every morning by numerous Department employees, including Joe. To our knowledge,
no employee has ever been punished (either received written warnings or been
discharged) for the offense of taking home this free product, which the store
never paid a single cent for. Joe didn't receive a written warning (as the
employee handbook stipulates is appropriate for minor infractions) but was fired
two days after checking out with the coffee in hand (buying eggs and donuts as
well, on a Sunday morning).