Retail workers in unions reap higher wages even as U.S.
organizers suffer setbacks
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[July 09, 2021] By
Richa Naidu
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Wally Waugh, 57, a
front-end manager at a Stop & Shop supermarket in Oyster Bay, New York,
makes over $1,150 a week. He is a union member.
Adam Ryan, 33, a sales clerk at a Christiansburg, Virginia, Target,
makes $380 to $460 a week. He is not.
While the gap in how much they earn arises in part from the very
different regions where both live and work, it is also in line with a
Reuters analysis of U.S. retail wages, whose findings are previously
unreported. After reviewing two decades of retail wages, Reuters found
that union workers get paid more on average - and that the gap is
widening.
Reuters examined a three-year rolling average of data from the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and found that the weekly pay
differential between union and nonunion workers in the U.S. retail
sector widened significantly between 2013 and 2019 - from nearly $20 to
more than $50.
Graphic: Wage advantage for retail union workers increases - https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-UNIONS/rlgvddjzevo/chart.png
By the end of 2019, a unionized retail worker was taking home an average
of about $730 a week, compared with over $670 weekly for a nonunionized
worker, the Reuters analysis shows.(Reuters did not count 2020, a year
largely viewed by economists as a pandemic-hit outlier.)
Unionization, worker treatment and wages in the retail industry have
been in the spotlight this year because of a highly publicized attempt
by Amazon.com Inc workers to organize at a warehouse in Bessemer,
Alabama.
Amazon argued to its workers in Alabama that their benefits might
decline if a union bargained on their behalf. But the Reuters analysis
challenges Amazon's claim.
A sustained four-year labor squeeze in the retail industry - combined
with independent movements to push minimum wages in U.S. states to $15
an hour - is providing unions more power to bargain longer, and to give
workers more regular hours and better pay, said Kenneth Dau-Schmidt,
professor of labor and employment law at Indiana University Bloomington.
Workers often fear that retailers will move to close stores and
warehouses or fire people who try to organize. Amazon's agents allegedly
warned that the company could shut the Bessemer, Alabama, facility if a
union took root, according to the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store
Union (RWDSU). Amazon denied threatening a warehouse closure or layoffs.
Earlier this year, workers at the facility voted against unionizing by a
margin of more than 2-to-1.
'TRIGGER WORD'
Seventy-two percent of the 5,804 public and private union elections in
the past five years were in favor of workers trying to organize,
according to data from the U.S. National Labor Relations Board. Nine out
of every 10 petitions to form bargaining units were won by unions last
year, the highest rate of success in at least a decade.
Graphic: More union wins amid worries about Covid-19 working conditions
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https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-UNIONS/bdwpkwjdlpm/chart.png
But the percentage of unionized retail workers has been declining over
the past four decades. Last year, only 4.6% of U.S. retail trade workers
were unionized, down from about 9% in the early 1980s and from about 5%
a decade ago, according to Unionstats.com.
"'Union' is a trigger word for a lot of managers. They’ll start finding
things to let you go for and they’ll get you out,” said David, 39, a
Walmart store worker in Stillwater, Oklahoma, who declined to provide
his last name for fear of losing his job. Walmart Inc, which declined to
comment, is the biggest private employer in the United States and has no
unionized stores.
About two-thirds of Kroger Co workers are unionized - unlike Amazon,
Target Corp and Walmart, which have no organized workers. During
quarterly conference calls with analysts, Kroger has repeatedly called
out union-negotiated benefits that put it under financial "pressure"
that its competitors do not face.
The grocer - whose percentage of unionized workers has decreased since
2013 - said last month it has to work out several major union contracts
this year, including for workers in Atlanta, Houston and Memphis.
Both Kroger and Target flag collective bargaining in their annual
regulatory filings as a potential risk to operations that could increase
the cost of labor.
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Target worker Adam Ryan stands in the stockroom of his store in
Christiansburg, Virginia, U.S. May 10, 2021. Adam Ryan/Handout via
REUTERS
A Kroger spokeswoman said the company has contingency plans to keep facilities
running in the event of labor disputes.
To dissuade workers from organizing, retailers warn workers of the burden of
paying union dues. One Amazon worker, Darryl Richardson, said that ahead of the
Alabama vote on whether to unionize, Amazon put signs reading "Where will your
union dues go?" on bathroom-stall doors. Amazon did not respond to a request for
comment.
Dues vary from union to union, but are typically around 1.5%-2% of a worker’s
paycheck, labor experts say.
"When you aren’t making that much money, any amount is a lot," said Nelson
Lichtenstein, director of the Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy
at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
But the Amazon campaign in Alabama has renewed interest in organizing across the
retail industry and emboldened people like Ryan, who has been skeptical of
unions in the past. Publicity around the Amazon vote made him contemplate more
seriously "what a union is, how they can maybe help us with the issues we're
dealing with," he said.
Target told Reuters in a statement it has "significantly invested in hours,"
raised wages and offered multiple bonuses to frontline workers throughout the
pandemic.
Citing "low wages" and "wage theft" at Amazon as some key drivers, the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters last month entered the fray by voting to
lay the ground work to organize workers at the company's warehouses. Amazon says
it already pays workers fairly. The company in 2018 raised its minimum pay for
U.S. workers to $15 an hour.
POWER SHIFT
Reuters found that one factor behind the widening wage gap is that unionized
retail workers tend to work more hours per week, and more predictable hours,
than nonunionized workers, as illustrated by Ryan and Waugh.
Waugh's full-time schedule is largely stable at 40 hours per week, set by his
contract with Stop & Shop, which is owned by Netherlands-based Ahold Delhaize.
He earns more when he works overtime, on Sundays or on holidays, according to
the RWDSU, which represents him.
Target's Ryan, meanwhile, works a variable schedule from 25 to 30 hours a week,
depending on the store's anticipated traffic. Ryan said that even if Target
raises his hourly base pay, he will not necessarily earn more per week.
"Fifteen dollars an hour doesn't mean anything if that raise in wages is offset
by a reduction in hours," he said. Twenty-seven percent of U.S. retail and
wholesale workers worked 34 hours a week or fewer in 2019, according to the BLS.
As shoppers bought more goods online, retail workers who were paid on commission
saw their incomes drop. But companies from Kohl's Corp to Macy's Inc also cut
hundreds of thousands of jobs on sales floors and in stock rooms, leaving
payrolls lean. Today two employees perform work that years earlier was performed
by ten, unions say. That gives unions some leverage.
Plagued by high turnover, major companies like Walmart and Target have since
2016 sharply raised wages to try to retain more workers. Those wage hikes
fostered a spillover effect of better and more frequent increases at the
bargaining table at other retailers such as Kroger and Stop & Shop.
Kroger said it provides comprehensive compensation packages, including
competitive wages, healthcare and retirement.
In 2019, over 30,000 United Food and Commercial Workers Union-represented Stop &
Shop workers in the U.S. Northeast went on strike for 11 days until the chain
agreed to raise pay higher than what it offered prior to the strike.
"Sometimes we get two raises a year and that compounds over the years," Waugh
said. "For those of us who are fortunate enough to stick around, it puts us in a
very, very good position."
(Reporting by Richa Naidu in Chicago; Additional reporting by Dan Burns in New
York; Editing by Vanessa O'Connell, Ryan McNeill, Benjamin Lesser and Matthew
Lewis)
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