http://socialistworker.org/2009/05/07/smells-at-whole-foods


Something smells at Whole Foods

The grocery store chain cultivates an image of social responsibility,
but its workers tell a different story.

May 7, 2009

WHOLE FOODS Market is a highly profitable corporation that far
outperforms its competitors, while maintaining an aura of commitment
to social justice and environmental responsibility. Its clientele is
attracted not only to its brightly lit array of pristine fruits and
vegetables, organically farmed meats and delectable (yet healthy)
recipes, but also to the notion that the mere act of shopping at Whole
Foods is helping to change the world.

Columnist: Sharon Smith

Sharon Smith is the author of Subterranean Fire: A History of
Working-Class Radicalism in the United States, a historical account of
the American working-class movement, and Women and Socialism, a
collection of essays on women’s oppression and the struggle against
it. She is also on the board of Haymarket Books.

In 2007, Whole Foods launched its "Whole Trade Guarantee," stating its
aim as advancing the Fair Trade movement--encouraging higher wages and
prices paid to farmers in poor countries while promoting
environmentally safe practices. In addition, Whole Foods announced
that 1 percent of proceeds will be turned over to its own Whole Planet
Foundation, which supports micro-loans to entrepreneurs in developing
countries.

Meanwhile, the company's Animal Compassion Foundation seeks to improve
living conditions for farm animals, while stores periodically hold "5
Percent Days," when they donate 5 percent of sales for that day to an
area non-profit or educational organization.

Whole Foods also has a distinctive reputation for rejecting
traditional corporate management models in favor of decentralized
decision-making, described as an experiment in workplace democracy.

There are no departments at Whole Foods stores, only "Teams" of
employees. And Whole Foods has no managerial job titles, just Team
Leaders and Assistant Team Leaders. Nor does the company admit to
having any workers, only Team Members who meet regularly to decide
everything from local suppliers to who should get hired onto the Team.

Generally, the company strives to achieve consensus at Team meetings,
where workers brainstorm about new ways to raise productivity. And new
hires need to win the votes of at least two-thirds of Team Members in
order to make the cut.

The liberal dress code at Whole Foods allows nose rings, Mohawks,
visible tattoos and other expressions of individuality to help promote
a stated goal of "Team Member Happiness" for its relatively young
workforce. Each Team takes regular expeditions, known as "Team
Builds," to local farms or other enterprises to educate themselves on
how to better serve their customers. When Team Members show extra
effort on the job, Team Leaders award them with "High Fives" that can
be used to enter an onsite raffle to win a gift card. When a Team
Member gets fired, it is sadly announced as a "separation."

For all its decentralization, the "unique culture" so beholden to
Whole Foods' supporters bears the distinct stamp of its cofounder and
CEO, John Mackey, who declared in 1992, a year after Whole Foods went
public, "We're creating an organization based on love instead of
fear."

The former hippie is known for shunning suits and ties, and wearing
shorts and hiking boots to meetings--and for insisting that before the
end of every business meeting, everyone says something nice about
everyone else in a round of "appreciations." In a 2004 Fast Company
article, business writer Charles Fishman favorably quoted a former
Whole Foods executive calling Mackey an "anarchist" for his eccentric
executive style.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

BUT SOMETHING sinister lurks beneath the surface of Whole Foods'
progressive image.

Somehow, Mackey has managed to achieve multimillionaire status while
his employees' hourly wages have remained in the $8 to $13 range for
two decades. With an annual turnover rate of 25 percent, the vast
majority of workers last no more than four years, and thus rarely
manage to achieve anything approaching seniority and the higher wages
that would accompany it. If Whole Foods' workers are younger than the
competition's, that is the intention.

Featured at Socialism 2009

Hear Sharon Smith at Socialism 2009 in Chicago and San Francisco,
speaking on "The Role of Radicals in the Working-Class Struggle" and
"The Return of Socialism." Check out the Socialism 2009 Web site for
more details. See you at Socialism!

But another secret to Whole Foods' success is its shockingly high
prices. When Wal-Mart began promoting its own organic products last
year, Whole Foods' Southwest regional president Michael Besancon
scoffed at the notion that Wal-Mart could present serious competition.
"There's no way in the world that we'd win a price battle with
Wal-Mart," he told the Rocky Mountain News. "I'm relatively smarter
than that."

On the contrary, Whole Foods orients to a higher-income clientele
willing to pay significantly more for somewhat higher quality foods.
Whereas the average supermarket chain's profits traditionally hover at
around 1 percent, Whole Foods was able to sustain a profit margin of 3
percent for 14 years after it went public in 1992. After hitting a low
of 1 percent in the economic downturn in late 2008, "now the margins
are expanding again," according to the Cabot Report's investment
adviser Mike Cintolo on April 26.

Indeed, Mackey is no progressive, but rather a self-described
libertarian in the tradition of the Cato Institute. He combines this
with a strong dose of paternalism toward the company's employees.
Mackey complained about his unique dilemma at the helm of Whole Foods
to fellow executives in an October 2004 speech:

I cofounded the company, so I'm like this father figure at Whole
Foods. I'm this rich father figure, and everybody's pulling at me
saying, "Daddy, daddy, can we have this, can we have that, can we have
this, can we have that?" And I'm either like the kind, generous daddy,
or the mean, Scrooge daddy who says "No."

Using a carrot and very large stick, Mackey managed to "convince"
Whole Foods workers across the country to vote in 2004 to dramatically
downgrade their own health care benefits by switching to a so-called
"consumer-driven" health plan--corporate double-speak for the high
deductible-low coverage savings account plans preferred by
profit-driven enterprises. As Mackey advised other executives in the
same 2004 speech, "[I]f you want to set up a consumer-driven health
plan, I strongly urge you not to put it as one option in a cafeteria
plan, but to make it the only option."

There have been setbacks for Mackey, to be sure. He suffered public
humiliation in 2007 when he was exposed as having blogged under the
false user name "rahodeb"--his wife's name spelled in reverse--between
1999 and 2006 at online financial chat boards hosted by Yahoo.

For seven years, he backstabbed his rivals--including the Wild Oats
franchise that Mackey later purchased as an addition to the Whole
Foods Empire. The Wall Street Journal reported a typical post: "'Would
Whole Foods buy (Wild Oats)? Almost surely not at current prices,'
rahodeb wrote. 'What would they gain? (Their) locations are too
small.'"

At one point, rahodeb even admired Mackey's latest haircut, gushing,
"I think he looks cute!"

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

PREVENTING WHOLE Foods workers from unionizing has always been at the
top of Mackey's agenda, and the company has been successful thus far
at crushing every attempt.

Perhaps the company's most notorious attack on workers' right to
unionize occurred in Madison, Wis., in 2002. Even after a majority of
workers voted for the union, Whole Foods spent the next year canceling
and stalling negotiation sessions, knowing that after a year, it could
legally engineer a vote to decertify the union. Mission accomplished.

At the mere mention of the word "union," Whole Foods still turns
ferocious. Even when United Farm Workers activists turned up outside a
Whole Foods store in Austin, Texas, where Mackey is based, the company
called the police and had them arrested for the "crime" of passing out
informational literature on their current grape boycott.

And as Mother Jones recently reported, "An internal Whole Foods
document listing 'six strategic goals for Whole Foods Market to
achieve by 2013...includes a goal to remain '100% union-free.'"

Mackey launched a national anti-union offensive in January, in
preparation for the (remote) possibility that President Barack Obama,
upon his inauguration, would make it a legislative priority to pass
the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), allowing workers to win
unionization when a majority of a company's workforce signs a union
card. Although union card check is standard procedure in many
countries, Mackey claimed to the Washington Post that it "violates a
bedrock principle of American democracy" and has vowed to fight to
prevent its passage here.

"Armed with those weapons," Mackey argued, "you will see unionization
sweep across the United States and set workplaces at war with each
other. I do not think it would be a good thing." Workers don't want to
join unions anymore, Mackey declared, contradicting every recent
opinion poll: "That so few companies are unionized is not for a lack
of trying, but because [unions] are losing elections--workers aren't
choosing to have labor representation. I don't feel things are worse
off for labor today."

In January, Whole Foods launched a nationwide campaign, requiring
workers to attend "Union Awareness Training," complete with Power
Point presentations. At the meetings, store leaders asserted, "Unions
are deceptive, money-hungry organizations who will say and do almost
anything to 'infiltrate' and coerce employees into joining their
ranks," according to Whole Foods workers who attended one such
meeting.

"According to store leadership," the workers continued, "since the mid
1980s, unions have been on decline because, according to Whole Foods
'theory', federal and state legislation enacted to protect workers
rights has eliminated the need in most industries (and especially
Whole Foods stores) for union organization...No need to disrupt the
great 'culture' that would shrivel up and die if the company become
unionized."

When rumors recently began circulating that a union drive might be
brewing in San Francisco, the response from the company was
immediate--including mandatory "Morale Meetings" to dissuade
employees. But company leaders failed to address workers' complaints
that they have gone without any pay raises, sometimes for more than
two years, because Team Leaders have neglected to hold "Job Dialogue"
meetings (known as "annual performance reviews" in traditional
corporate-speak).

There was a time in decades past when liberalism was defined in part
by its principled defense of the right to collective bargaining. That
liberal tradition was buried by the market-driven neoliberal agenda
over the last three decades, allowing companies like Whole Foods to
posture as progressive organizations when their corporate policies are
based upon violating one of the most basic of civil rights: the right
of workers to organize and bargain collectively. Indeed, Whole Foods
has ridden its progressive image to absorb its smaller competitors and
emerge as a corporate giant.

As the Texas Observer argued recently, "People shop at Whole Foods not
just because it offers organic produce and natural foods, but because
it claims to run its business in a way that demonstrates a genuine
concern for the community, the environment and the 'whole planet,' in
the words of its motto. In reality, Whole Foods has gone on a
corporate feeding frenzy in recent years, swallowing rival retailers
across the country...The expansion is driven by a simple and lucrative
business strategy: high prices and low wages."

Indeed, Whole Foods now stands as the second largest anti-union
retailer in the U.S., beaten only by Wal-Mart. Most of Whole Foods'
loyal clientele certainly would--and should--shudder at the
comparison.

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