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Whole Foods Workers Call for ‘Sick Out’ on March 31

A cashier wears gloves while scanning the groceries of a customer at a Whole Foods in Cambridge, MA  Photo by Erin Clark for The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Workers are calling on Amazon to provide workers with better benefits, as they have “put [their] lives at risk”

Across the country, grocery stores have been deemed one of the few “essential” businesses allowed to remain open. Which means that essential grocery workers are at particular risk of being exposed to COVID-19. Some grocery chains have taken it upon themselves to change their paid sick leave policies, while workers at Trader Joe’s have petitioned for better benefits and hazard pay. But now, workers at Whole Foods are calling for a “sick out” on March 31, demanding the resources and benefits “to do [their] jobs safely.”

Whole Worker is a group of Whole Foods team members who are not officially unionized, given Amazon’s (Whole Foods’s parent company) long history of union busting. In a petition, they call on all Whole Foods employees to not go to work on March 31, and note that “Whole Foods has temporarily relaxed its strict attendance policy, which means that team members can participate in this act of protest without fear of reprisal.” They are staging the “sick out” in response to the lack of protections they feel management has given them, which put both workers and customers at risk.

Demands include guaranteed paid leave, reinstatement of health care for part-time and seasonal workers, hazard pay, and the immediate shut down of any Whole Foods location where a worker tests positive for COVID-19. “Amazon and its subsidiary Whole Foods dared to keep open an Amazon warehouse and two Whole Foods stores where employees tested positive for COVID-19,” the group writes. “We must prioritize the health of our workers over short-term financial gain.”

Whole Foods had already announced that any employees “diagnosed with COVID-19 or placed into quarantine will receive up to two weeks of pay,” and Amazon contributed $1.6 million to a Team Member Emergency Fund. Employees also have “unlimited call outs,” and are receiving extra pay through April. However, the company has also come under fire for encouraging employees to “donate” their PTO to each other when Amazon’s CEO, Jeff Bezos, is literally the richest person in the world, and could easily cover those expenses. Whole Worker says their “fundamental needs” are still not being met by the company’s new policies, which have been put in place piecemeal over the past few weeks. We’ve reached out to Whole Worker for more specifics about their goals.

Whole Foods employees are not the only food service workers who feel the need to resort to a strike to have their needs met. Today, Instacart workers have planned a nationwide strike over the lack of paid sick leave and hazard pay, and in all likelihood due to that threat, Instacart has caved to some but not all of their demands. And Amazon workers at a warehouse in Staten Island are planning a walk out, after Amazon decided to keep the warehouse open after a worker tested positive for COVID-19.

It is strange, to say the least, that a grocery store is now a place where two of our greatest needs are at odds with each other — the need to stay safe by keeping away from people, and the need to eat. A strike or sick out holds extra weight now. But the people handling food and delivering it to your door need protections, and it’s clear corporations, unless pushed, are only willing to give a minimum to keep workers and customers safe. After all, sick food workers usually didn’t have access to sick leave two months ago. It shouldn’t take a pandemic to get permission to stay home if you have a fever.



from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2UxbheV
Whole Foods Workers Call for ‘Sick Out’ on March 31 Whole Foods Workers Call for ‘Sick Out’ on March 31 Reviewed by Unknown on March 30, 2020 Rating: 5

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