If the kids decided to #occupy this, it could be world-historical.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/oct/12/walmart-historic-first-strike-american-workers
        
Walmart's historic first strike: American workers are on the move
It's a huge symbolic moment as grassroots labor activists take on
America's largest, resolutely anti-union private employer

Amy Goodman
guardian.co.uk, Friday 12 October 2012 17.27 EDT

Labor rights activists demonstrate outside Walmart's lobbying office
in Washington, DC. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The great recession of 2008, this global economic meltdown, has wiped
out the life savings of so many people, and created a looming threat
of chronic unemployment for millions. This is happening while
corporate coffers are brimming with historically high levels of cash
on hand, in both the "too big to fail" banks and in non-financial
corporations.

Despite unemployment levels that remain high, and the anxiety caused
by people living paycheck to paycheck, many workers in the United
States are taking matters into their own hands, demanding better
working conditions and better pay. These are the workers who are left
unmentioned in the presidential debates, who remain uninvited into the
corporate news networks' gilded studios. These are the workers at
Walmart, the largest private employer in the United States.

These are the tomato pickers from Florida. With scant resources, armed
with their courage and the knowledge that they deserve better, they
are organizing and getting results.

This week, Walmart workers launched the first strike against the giant
retailer in its 50-year history, with protests and picket lines at 28
stores across 12 states. Many of these non-union workers are facing
retaliation from their employer, despite the protections that exist on
paper through the National Labor Relations Board. The strikers are
operating under the banner of Our Walmart: Organization United for
Respect at Walmart started with support from the United Food and
Commercial Workers Union.

Our Walmart members protested outside Walmart's "Meeting for the
Investment Community 2012" in Bentonville, Arkansas. Demanding a stop
to the company's retaliations, the group promised a vigorous national
presence at Walmart stores on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving
and the largest retail shopping day of the year. The workers have an
impressive array of allies ready to join them, including the National
Organization for Women.

Walmart has historically shrouded its business practices by engaging
subcontractors to perform tasks like warehousing and delivery. In
Elwood, Illinois, warehouse workers employed by Walmart subcontractor
went out on strike immediately after a similar strike in California.
According to Warehouse Workers for Justice (WWJ):

"Warehouse workers labor under extreme temperatures, lifting thousands
of boxes that can weigh up to 250lb each. Workplace injuries are
common; workers rarely earn a living wage or have any benefits."

After 21 days on strike in Elwood, the workers "won their principal
demand for an end to illegal retaliation against workers protesting
poor conditions. They will return to work ... with full pay for the
time they were on strike."

I spoke with one of the Elwood strikers, Mike Compton, who described
just one of the awful conditions they endured at their low-wage job:

"We have a big problem with dust. You know, all our containers that we
unload come from China, and they're just filled with black dust. It's
horrible, breathing the stuff in all day, you know, and we'd have to
ask seven, eight times to get a dust mask. We'd just be pointed in
different directions, to a different manager, to a different
department. And half the time we'd walk away empty-handed at the end
of it anyway.

"We've actually had trailers that were labeled 'defumigated in
Mexico'. We don't know why. People have had trouble breathing in the
trailers. You know, dust – something as simple and as cheap as a dust
mask should just be readily available to anyone, in my opinion,
especially a company as wealthy as Walmart."

Compton was in Bentonville, Arkansas, Walmart's corporate
headquarters, to protest at the Walmart investor meeting. Meanwhile,
immigrant farmworkers have for generations labored under brutal
conditions, picking tomatoes in the rural town of Immokalee, Florida.
In 1993, they formed the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to
organize in solidarity with consumers to demand that major restaurant
chains source their tomatoes from farms that pay a fair wage to their
workers.

I spoke with farmworker and CIW organizer Gerardo Reyes-Chavez. He was
in Denver, where the fast-food outlet Chipotle is based. CIW has been
working on Chipotle for ten years. He told me:

"We have been able to create a Fair Food Program, addressing abuses in
the tomato industry. We created a whole new system ... to identify
where abuses are going on and uproot them from the system. This is an
opportunity for Chipotle to do the right thing.

"They claim that they sell food with integrity, and they are really
focused on the sustainability ... what we are saying is, this is an
opportunity for them to make it a reality."

The day after I spoke with Reyes-Chaves, Chipotle signed the Fair Food
Agreement. As the presidential candidates trade barbs over jobs in
their heavily-controlled debates, workers at the grassroots are
organizing for change, from Florida to California.

• Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column



-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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