Showing posts with label labor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label labor. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2011

Railroads reach tentative accord with 4 more labor unions

Getprev
A bargaining committee representing more than 30 U.S. railroads, including the two that serve Southern California, have reached tentative contract agreements with four more labor unions after 22 months of talks. The accords lessen the chance of a national strike that the American Assn. of Railroads said could cost the U.S. economy as much as $2 billion a day.

The tentative pacts announced today by the National Railway Labor Conference were reached with the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Blacksmiths, Iron Ship Builders, Forgers and Helpers; the Sheet Metal Workers’ International Assn.; the National Conference of Firemen and Oilers; and the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen.

Details were not released pending ratification by union members.

The railroads, which include the western lines BNSF Railway and Union Pacific, have now reached tentative agreements with 10 unions representing more than 60% of the 132,000 employees affected by this round of bargaining.

Only three more unions are still negotiating. A 30-day cooling-off period, during which no strike can be called, remains in effect until Dec. 6. This latest round of bargaining began in January 2010.

RELATED:

Cal State faculty strike

Business-labor ad war kicks off for 2012

Ohio overturns collective bargaining law

-- Ronald D. White

Photo: A BNSF Railway cargo container train rolls into Winslow, Ariz., on its way toward California. BNSF is one of more than 30 U.S. railroads that have reached tentative accords with 10 labor unions after 22 months of bargaining. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

24 Hour Fitness faces sexual harassment lawsuit

A male employee has sued 24 Hour Fitness USA Inc., saying his female boss got a little too friendly with him at one of the fitness company’s clubs in Sherman Oaks.

Jonathan Prince says the club's manager invited him out for drinks, asked him to accompany her to Las Vegas and sent him unwanted, suggestive text messages for one month this summer.

In a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Prince said he told his boss to “cease her behavior and refused her advances.” Prince said his boss retaliated by falsely criticizing his work performance, diminishing his chances for bonuses and promotion. 
 
Prince said he “suffered and continues to suffer embarrassment, humiliation, emotional distress, mental anguish and severe shock to his nervous system.”

Officials with 24 Fitness declined to discuss the allegations.

“As a matter of practice, we do not comment on pending litigation. Our focus remains on making fitness accessible and affordable to people of all ages,” the company said in a statement.

The lawsuit seeks financial compensation “in excess of $50,000.”

RELATED:

Texas Roadhouse sought "young, hot" employees, lawsuit says

Bass Pro accused of racist hiring practices in lawsuit

TCW vs. Gundlach trial: How the jurors saw it

-- Stuart Pfeifer

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Wages rise in San Francisco and San Diego, stagnant in L.A.

Wallet
Wages in the country’s largest metropolitan areas seem to be bouncing back, with third-quarter paychecks in 16 of 20 major cities rising or remaining stagnant when compared with the same period in 2010.

Seattle led the list with a 1.9% jump, according to PayScale.com, which tracks cash compensation for full-time private industry employees.

Next up was San Francisco, which saw a 1.6% increase. The city by the Bay had struggled since 2009, and earnings are still well below their peak three years ago.

Houston, Boston and Washington rounded out the top five. San Diego was seventh, with wages up 0.8%.

Los Angeles, which has suffered one of the worst annual performances of any cosmopolitan area, recovered enough to keep wages steady year over year. But paychecks in the city are still about 3% thinner than they were before the recession.

Wages in Riverside are down 1%.

RELATED:

20% of Americans expect to be millionaires by 2020

Is meanness a moneymaker? Nice guys are paid less, study finds

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: A wallet. Credit: Julio Cortez / Associated Press

Friday, October 7, 2011

Wall Street: Jobs report helps stocks rise

Wall Street: Jobs report helps stocks rise
Gold: Trading now at $1,651 an ounce, down 0.1% from Thursday. Dow Jones industrial average: Trading now at 11,213.39, up 0.8% from Thursday.

Jobs and stocks. The jobs report this morning did not paint a pretty picture, but it had some good headline numbers that appeared to be enough to help send stocks up again.

Big leak. A leaked version of the so-called Volcker rule -- designed to stop proprietary trading on Wall Street -- has sent law firms and regulators and bankers into a tizzy.

Romney rising. With New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie ruling out a presidential run, Mitt Romney is picking up new Wall Street names to add to his already big lead on the street.

OccuPie Wall Street. A pizza shop near that Wall Street protests has been raking it in with a $15 pepperoni-heavy OccuPie pizza -- though the owner of the shop is warning that he is not taking sides. 

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York
Twitter.com/nathanielpopper

Photo credit: Stan Honda / Getty Images

Economy adds 103,000 jobs but jobless rate remains at 9.1%

Unemployment-blog-sept

Hiring picked up a bit in September as employers added 103,000 jobs over the month, the government said Friday in a report that’s likely to ease fears that the economy is hurtling toward another recession.

But the job growth wasn’t strong enough to lower the unemployment rate, which remained stuck at 9.1% for the third straight month. What’s more, manufacturing payrolls shrank, and government continued its sharp cutbacks.

Still, the latest statistics provided some encouraging signs. The Labor Department said the average workweek for all private-sector workers edged up in September. And statisticians said employers in August added 57,000 jobs, not zero as previously reported, and July’s job count was also revised up to 127,000 from 85,000 initially reported.

In all, that puts the third quarter’s average monthly job growth at 96,000 jobs -– still not enough to keep up with the population growth and bring down the unemployment rate. Job growth averaged 166,000 a month in the first quarter of this year.

The September jobs were partially inflated by the return to work of striking Verizon workers, just as their temporary absence from their jobs lowered the August job numbers. Apart from that, professional and business services led the industries in job growth by adding 48,000 to their payrolls last month. Healthcare employment rose by 44,000, and the long-declining construction sector added an unexpectedly large 26,000 jobs over the month.

The ranks of the unemployed, however, remained at about 14 million. And about 45% of these workers last month said they had been without jobs for six months or more.

Also, the number of part-time workers who want full-time hours rose sharply over the month, to 9.3 million, from 8.8 million in August. Including these workers and those who have quit looking because they don’t see hope of getting hired, the percent of unemployed and underemployed in the U.S. rose to 16.5% in September, up from 16.2% in the prior month.

RELATED:

U.S. economy expected to show gain of 55,000 jobs last month

State-run workers' compensation insurer to lay off 1,800

September retail sales rise a solid 5.1%, beating expectations

-- Don Lee

Photo: A sign greets job seekers during a job fair at a Goodwiill store in Atlanta. Credit: Associated Press

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Private sector adds 91,000 jobs, but planned layoffs at 2-year high

Jobs U.S. employers announced plans in September to shed more than 115,000 workers -- the highest total in more than two years, according to a new jobs report.

That’s more than double the 51,000 cuts announced in August and more than three times the 37,000 cuts planned a year earlier. The previous record was in April 2009, when employers planned to slash nearly 133,000 jobs, according to employment consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc.

According to another report, from payrolls processor ADP, private-sector employment rose by 91,000 jobs in September. The “modest” increase was led by 60,000 additional positions in small businesses, which have been averaging 73,000 new jobs a month for the last year.

Medium-sized companies also did well, tacking on 36,000 more employees, while large businesses shed 5,000 workers, according to ADP.

Monday, September 26, 2011

California seeks $17 million in back wages from ZipRealty

California's labor commissioner has filed a $17-million lawsuit for back wages against a San Francisco Bay Area real estate brokerage, ZipRealty Inc., that markets homes statewide and nationally using an Internet-based sales strategy.

The case is the largest minimum wage enforcement action in California history, according to the California Department of Industrial Relations.

The complaint filed in Alameda County Superior Court accuses ZipRealty of Emeryville of not paying minimum wage and overtime pay to hundreds of agents throughout California.

The lawsuit seeks about $7.5 million in unpaid minimum wages, $1.3 million in unpaid overtime and more than $9 million in damages and penalties.

"In times like these, enforcement of the minimum wage is critical to maintaining a floor that allows workers to survive," California Labor Commissioner Julie Su said. "This enforcement is important not just for employees but for hardworking employers who shouldn't have to compete against law breakers."

The suit is related to a September decision by a Kern County Superior Court judge that ruled that local ZipRealty agents frequently received no pay at all, even though as employees they were entitled to get at least minimum wage for all hours worked.

During the trial, ZipRealty argued that it did not need to pay minimum wage or overtime because the people involved were "outside sales persons." The court disagreed, noting that the agents should have been paid by law because they spent less than half their time working away from their offices.

ZipRealty lawyers did not respond to requests for comments on the lawsuit filing.

The ZipRealty case is a symptom of growing problems in the recession-wracked labor market, said Christine Baker, acting director of the Department of Industrial Relations.

"Violations of minimum labor standards are now occurring in a wide variety of occupations, even affecting employees outside traditional low-wage occupations," she said.

RELATED:

L.A.'s living wage ordinance isn't a job killer

Ganging up on guest workers

On Labor Day, he's thankful to have a job

-- Marc Lifsher

 

 

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Trade deficit with China cost nearly 2.8 million U.S. jobs since 2001

China The growing trade deficit with China has eliminated or displaced nearly 2.8 million U.S. jobs since 2001 -– or about 2% of all domestic employment during that period, according to a briefing paper from the Economic Policy Institute.

California was the hardest hit, losing nearly 455,000 jobs from 2001 to 2010 due to trade with the Asian giant, according to Robert Scott, the institute’s director of trade and manufacturing policy research. Texas lost nearly 233,000 positions the same way.

The increase in imports from China is only part of the picture, according to Scott. Since the Chinese yuan is pegged to the U.S. dollar, the currency remained artificially low, making U.S.-made goods more expensive in China and pushing down exports.

And heavy competition and cheap labor from abroad has pushed down wages for U.S. workers and reduced their bargaining power -– especially among the 70% of the workforce without a four-year college degree. In 2006, for example, a full-time median-wage earner lost $1,400 due to globalization, according to the report.

Since China entered the World Trade Organization in 2001, the trade deficit has boomed to $278 billion in 2010 from $84 billion in 2001.

Over that period, nearly 70% of the U.S. jobs lost were in manufacturing. Factory positions working with computer and electronic parts were especially depleted, but other jobs in apparel, textile fabrics and motor vehicles and parts were also significantly affected.

RELATED:

Chinese currency quickening pace of appreciation

U.S. ambassador warns China: Foreign businesses feel unwelcome

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: Employees stand by a Sany Heavy Industry Co. 86m truck mounted concrete pump as it is introduced at the company's factory in Changsha, Hunan Province, China Monday. Credit: Forbes Conrad / Bloomberg

Consumer Confidential: Toys R Us hiring; Wal-Mart gets sunnier

Toys R Us hiring for Christmas
Here's your who's-on-third Thursday (I don't know) roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

--Looking for work? How about a temp job as one of Santa elves? Toys R Us says it will hire about 40,000 seasonal workers for the holidays. Beginning this week and running through November, the company is accepting applications for a range of jobs around the country. Executive vice president of human resources Dan Caspersen said that "we are proud to create tens of thousands of jobs across the country this Christmas, while providing the potential for hardworking individuals to find a permanent position with us." In previous years, the company has hired between 35,000 and 45,000 holiday workers. According to a new report from the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas (no relation), companies are expected to hire at about the same level or less than last year's 627,600 jobs from October through December.

--Speaking of big-box retailers, Wal-Mart is going greener. The company says it will install solar-power panels at most of its California stores. A Wal-Mart spokeswoman says the company has installed rooftop panels on about 65 California stores and plans to raise that number to more than 130 -- about three-fourths of its stores in the state -- by the end of 2013. The Arkansas-based company hopes to use solar for 20% to 30% of each store's electricity needs. It says solar energy has cut its energy spending by more than $1 million. That's a lesson plenty of other businesses would be wise to heed.

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Toys R Us needs more helping hands for Santa. Credit: Classic Media

 

Monday, September 19, 2011

Grocery strike averted with Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons

Photo: A man stacks placards as grocery workers assemble picket signs in Los Angeles in September. The placards will no longer be needed. Credit: David McNew / ReutersGrocery union officials and negotiators for Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons have reached a tentative deal on a labor contract, a move that averts a strike that would have had more than 54,000 workers across Southern California walking off the job.

The negotiations between United Food and Commercial Workers officials and the three grocery chains, which stretched throughout the night and well into the morning, had grown urgent after a deadline for a possible grocery strike passed Sunday evening.

The contract covers an estimated 62,000 checkers, baggers, meat cutters and other grocery workers across the region, including those employed by Ralphs, which is owned by Kroger Co. of Cincinnati; Vons and Pavilions, owned by Safeway Inc. of Pleasanton, Calif.; and Albertsons, which is owned by SuperValu Inc. of Eden Prairie, Minn.

The contract also covers employees at other retailers, including Stater Bros. Markets, which are negotiating separate deals with UFCW’s seven area locals.

Details of the deal were not available as of 11:48 a.m. Monday.

The current negotiations hark back to 2003, the last time Southern California grocery workers and their employers faced a similar standoff over labor issues. The subsequent 141-day strike and lockout that began that fall left many union members with staggering debts. It reportedly cost the employers an estimated $2 billion and gave competitors an opportunity to step into the gap.

RELATED:

Ralphs says it will close stores if workers go on strike

Grocery workers give notice to end contract extension

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: A man stacks placards as grocery workers assemble picket signs in Los Angeles in September. The placards will no longer be needed. Credit: David McNew / Reuters

Friday, September 16, 2011

Ralphs says it will close stores if workers go on strike. Albertsons may follow. [Updated]

Ralphs
The labor fight between union officials and grocery employers spilled outside of the negotiation room  Friday as Ralphs announced that the company would “initially” close all 250 of its Southern California stores if workers go on strike.

How long these stores would remain closed is unclear.

About 18,000 employees are covered by the contract currently being negotiated between Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons and the United Food and Commercial Workers union. Ralphs has an estimated 22,000 employees in Southern California.

“During a strike, it is difficult to create a good shopping experience for our customers and a good working environment for our employees,” Ralphs spokeswoman Kendra Doyel said in a statement Friday. “We will evaluate the situation as it progresses.”

[Updated at 7:54 p.m.  Late Friday, a spokesperson for Albertsons confirmed that it too could shutter some of its stores in the event of a labor stoppage. Albertsons operates 215 stores in Southern California and has about 16,700 UFCW employees.

["We have contingency plans in place in the unfortunate event that there is a strike," the company said in a statement. "One of the lessons we learned during the 2003-04 labor dispute is that it doesn’t make good business sense to try to operate all our stores during a strike. At this point, we believe up to 100 stores could close for some or all of the strike. Any decision to reopen closed stores will be based on the business conditions at that end of a strike. We hope it does not come to this."

[A spokesman for Vons, which is owned by Safeway, said the company plans on keeping its stores open.]

The news came less than a day after UFCW officials gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons. Such a notice is a mandatory step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

The canceled contract, however, does not mean that workers will necessarily walk off the job Sunday evening.

Union officials said Friday that Ralph’s warning was a scare tactic.

“They’re playing chicken with their customers and their employees,” said Mike Shimpock, a spokesman for UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles. “They should get serious at the bargaining table and concentrate on getting a deal completed, rather than threatening employees.”

RELATED:

Dunkin' Donuts heads west, but not to California

Grocery workers give notice to end contract extension

Michelle Obama, Olive Garden, Red Lobster vow healthier kids' meals

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center in July join a labor march and rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Ralphs says it will close stores if workers go on strike. Albertsons may follow. [UPDATE]

Ralphs
The labor fight between union officials and grocery employers spilled outside of the negotiation room  Friday as Ralphs announced that the company would “initially” close all 250 of its Southern California stores if workers go on strike.

How long these stores would remain closed is unclear.

About 18,000 employees are covered by the contract currently being negotiated between Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons and the United Food and Commercial Workers union. Ralphs has an estimated 22,000 employees in Southern California.

“During a strike, it is difficult to create a good shopping experience for our customers and a good working environment for our employees,” Ralphs spokeswoman Kendra Doyel said in a statement Friday. “We will evaluate the situation as it progresses.”

[Updated at 7:54 p.m.  Late Friday, a spokesperson for Albertsons confirmed that it too could shutter some of its stores in the event of a labor stoppage. Albertsons operates 215 stores in Southern California and has about 16,700 UFCW employees.

["We have contingency plans in place in the unfortunate event that there is a strike," the company said in a statement. "One of the lessons we learned during the 2003-04 labor dispute is that it doesn’t make good business sense to try to operate all our stores during a strike. At this point, we believe up to 100 stores could close for some or all of the strike. Any decision to reopen closed stores will be based on the business conditions at that end of a strike. We hope it does not come to this."]

The news came less than a day after UFCW officials gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons. Such a notice is a mandatory step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

The canceled contract, however, does not mean that workers will necessarily walk off the job Sunday evening.

Union officials said Friday that Ralph’s warning was a scare tactic.

“They’re playing chicken with their customers and their employees,” said Mike Shimpock, a spokesman for UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles. “They should get serious at the bargaining table and concentrate on getting a deal completed, rather than threatening employees.”

RELATED:

Dunkin' Donuts heads west, but not to California

Grocery workers give notice to end contract extension

Michelle Obama, Olive Garden, Red Lobster vow healthier kids' meals

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center in July join a labor march and rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Ralphs says it will close stores if workers go on strike

Ralphs
The labor fight between union officials and grocery employers spilled outside of the negotiation room  Friday as Ralphs announced that the company would “initially” close all 250 of its Southern California stores if workers go on strike.

How long these stores would remain closed is unclear.

About 18,000 employees are covered by the contract currently being negotiated between Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons and the United Food and Commercial Workers union. Ralphs has an estimated 22,000 employees in Southern California.

“During a strike, it is difficult to create a good shopping experience for our customers and a good working environment for our employees,” Ralphs spokeswoman Kendra Doyel said in a statement Friday. “We will evaluate the situation as it progresses.”

The news came less than a day after UFCW officials gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons. Such a notice is a mandatory step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

The canceled contract, however, does not mean that workers will necessarily walk off the job Sunday evening.

Union officials said Friday that Ralph’s warning was a scare tactic.

“They’re playing chicken with their customers and their employees,” said Mike Shimpock, a spokesman for UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles. “They should get serious at the bargaining table and concentrate on getting a deal completed, rather than threatening employees.”

RELATED:

Dunkin' Donuts heads west, but not to California

Grocery workers give notice to end contract extension

Michelle Obama, Olive Garden, Red Lobster vow healthier kids' meals

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center in July join a labor march and rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Consumer Confidential: New Citi bank fee, grocery strike closer

Citipic Here's your flash-in-the-pan Friday roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

-- Another new bank fee? You betcha. Our friends at Citigroup say they'll start charging a monthly fee of $10 on checking and savings accounts with combined balances of less than $1,500, joining a growing list of banks seeking to recoup revenue lost under new financial industry regulations. The fee will be waived if a customer completes one direct deposit and one online bill payment per month through an account, or maintains a balance of at least $1,500 in checking and savings accounts. The change takes effect in December. Under Citi's current fee structure, customers are not required to maintain minimum account balances but must complete five transactions a month through an account to avoid a monthly fee of $8. Citigroup says it will not charge for debit card use or online bill payment. At least not yet.

-- We're another step closer to a SoCal grocery strike. Grocery workers could go on strike as soon as Sunday night in response to inaction on healthcare benefits. Eight months into contract negotiations, Southern California grocery workers issued a 72-hour notice Thursday night to cancel a contract extension and pave the way for a strike. A strike isn't guaranteed for workers at Albertsons, Ralphs and Vons, but canceling the contract removes the final barrier to a strike. In separate statements Thursday, all three grocers said they were disappointed in the union's move and they will remain in active negotiations. Let's hope a last-minute deal can be reached.

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Citi has a new fee for account holders. Credit: Tomohiro Ohsumi / Bloomberg

 

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Grocery workers give notice to cancel labor contract [Updated]

Protesters

In a bid to speed up negotiations that have dragged on for more than eight months, union officials representing supermarket workers in Southern California took one step closer Thursday night to going on strike.

Their move: Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with the region’s three leading grocery chains -- a mandatory final step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

Although the union is obligated to give the companies 72 hours' notice, the action does not guarantee workers will walk off the job Sunday. 

Albertsons said in a statement: “We are disappointed that union leadership decided to take this step. We are still in active negotiations.... We don’t want a strike, and we hope to continue bargaining rather than continue to alarm our associates and our customers.”

Kendra Doyel, spokeswoman for Ralphs, said: “Even though the union leadership has cancelled the contract extension, our stores are open for business. Bargaining will continue over the next three days and we remain hopeful that an agreement can be reached.”

[Updated Sept. 15, 9:15 p.m.: Vons said it and the other employers “intend to remain focused on the negotiation process and urge the unions to do so the same.”]

In a statement, Rick Icaza, president of UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles, said: “We returned to the bargaining table ready to compromise and make a deal that keeps our employers profitable but protects the jobs of our members. Instead, we got more of the same stonewalling from the supermarket corporations.…We don’t want to strike, but if they won’t negotiate, we have no choice.”

The labor negotiations, which have grown increasingly tense in recent weeks, stalled amid deep divisions over healthcare funding, worker scheduling and future staffing levels.

Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers and negotiators for Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons have been meeting steadily since a recent strike-authorization vote by union members won strong support.

The labor contract approved in 2007 expired March 6. It had been extended day to day, until Thursday evening.

The canceled contract covered an estimated 62,000 checkers, baggers, meat cutters and other grocery workers across the region, including those employed by Ralphs, which is owned by Kroger Co. of Cincinnati; Vons and Pavilions, owned by Safeway Inc. of Pleasanton, Calif.; and Albertsons, which is owned by SuperValu Inc. of Eden Prairie, Minn.

The contract also covered employees at other companies that are negotiating separate deals. So the number of workers in Southern California that might walk off the job if a strike does happen in the coming days is about 54,200, according to data provided by Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons.

Thursday’s news harks back to 2003, the last time Southern California grocery workers and their employers faced a standoff over labor issues. The 141-day strike and lockout that began that fall left many union members with staggering debts. It reportedly cost the employers an estimated $2 billion and gave competitors an opportunity to step into the gap.

RELATED:

ADP jobs report shows paltry growth again

Employees satisfied with co-workers, unhappy with benefits

Stocks fall in eurozone as U.S. jobs report adds to investor worries

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center this summer join a labor march and a rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store in Los Angeles. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

UPDATE: Grocery workers give notice to cancel labor contract

Protesters

UPDATED: 8:28 p.m.

In a bid to speed up negotiations that have dragged on for more than eight months, union officials representing supermarket workers in Southern California took one step closer Thursday night to going on strike.

Their move: Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with the region’s three leading grocery chains -- a mandatory final step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

Although the union is obligated to give the companies 72 hours' notice, the action does not guarantee workers will walk off the job Sunday. 

Albertsons said in a statement: “We are disappointed that union leadership decided to take this step. We are still in active negotiations.... We don’t want a strike, and we hope to continue bargaining rather than continue to alarm our associates and our customers.”

Kendra Doyel, spokeswoman for Ralphs, said: “Even though the union leadership has cancelled the contract extension, our stores are open for business. Bargaining will continue over the next three days and we remain hopeful that an agreement can be reached.”

Officials from Vons could not be reached for comment Thursday evening.

In a statement, Rick Icaza, president of UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles, said: “We returned to the bargaining table ready to compromise and make a deal that keeps our employers profitable but protects the jobs of our members. Instead, we got more of the same stonewalling from the supermarket corporations.…We don’t want to strike, but if they won’t negotiate, we have no choice.”

The labor negotiations, which have grown increasingly tense in recent weeks, stalled amid deep divisions over healthcare funding, worker scheduling and future staffing levels.

Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers and negotiators for Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons have been meeting steadily since a recent strike-authorization vote by union members won strong support.

The labor contract approved in 2007 expired March 6. It had been extended day to day, until Thursday evening.

The canceled contract covered an estimated 62,000 checkers, baggers, meat cutters and other grocery workers across the region, including those employed by Ralphs, which is owned by Kroger Co. of Cincinnati; Vons and Pavilions, owned by Safeway Inc. of Pleasanton, Calif.; and Albertsons, which is owned by SuperValu Inc. of Eden Prairie, Minn.

The contract also covered employees at other companies that are negotiating separate deals. So the number of workers in Southern California that might walk off the job if a strike does happen in the coming days is about 54,200, according to data provided by Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons.

Thursday’s news harks back to 2003, the last time Southern California grocery workers and their employers faced a standoff over labor issues. The 141-day strike and lockout that began that fall left many union members with staggering debts. It reportedly cost the employers an estimated $2 billion and gave competitors an opportunity to step into the gap.

RELATED:

ADP jobs report shows paltry growth again

Employees satisfied with co-workers, unhappy with benefits

Stocks fall in eurozone as U.S. jobs report adds to investor worries

-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center this summer join a labor march and a rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store in Los Angeles. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Ralphs, Albertsons and Vons workers give notice to cancel labor contract

Protesters
In a bid to speed up negotiations that have dragged on for more than eight months, union officials representing supermarket workers in Southern California took one step closer Thursday night to going on strike.

Their move: Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers gave a 72-hour notice to cancel their labor contract extension with the region’s three leading grocery chains -- a mandatory final step before a walkout. Once the contract is no longer in effect, grocery workers can strike at any time.

Although the union is obligated to give the companies 72 hours' notice, the action does not guarantee workers will walk off the job Sunday. 

Albertsons said in a statement: “We are disappointed that union leadership decided to take this step. We are still in active negotiations and have made progress during our talks this past week and a half. It’s important to remember that the 72-hour notice doesn’t change the terms of the existing contract, and it doesn’t mean a strike is imminent. All it does is give the union the ability to call a strike in the near future. We don’t want a strike, and we hope to continue bargaining rather than continue to alarm our associates and our customers. In the meantime, our stores are open for business and ready to serve the communities in which we operate.”

Company officials from Vons and Ralphs could not be reached for comment Thursday evening.

In a statement, Rick Icaza, president of UFCW Local 770 in Los Angeles, said: “We returned to the bargaining table ready to compromise and make a deal that keeps our employers profitable but protects the jobs of our members. Instead, we got more of the same stonewalling from the supermarket corporations.…We don’t want to strike, but if they won’t negotiate, we have no choice.”

The labor negotiations, which have grown increasingly tense in recent weeks, stalled amid deep divisions over healthcare funding, worker scheduling and future staffing levels.

Officials from the United Food and Commercial Workers and negotiators for Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons have been meeting steadily since a recent strike-authorization vote by union members won strong support.

The labor contract approved in 2007 expired March 6. It had been extended day to day, until Thursday evening.

The canceled contract covered an estimated 62,000 checkers, baggers, meat cutters and other grocery workers across the region, including those employed by Ralphs, which is owned by Kroger Co. of Cincinnati; Vons and Pavilions, owned by Safeway Inc. of Pleasanton, Calif.; and Albertsons, which is owned by SuperValu Inc. of Eden Prairie, Minn.

The contract also covered employees at other companies that are negotiating separate deals. So the number of workers in Southern California that might walk off the job if a strike does happen in the coming days is about 54,200, according to data provided by Ralphs, Vons and Albertsons.

Thursday’s news harks back to 2003, the last time Southern California grocery workers and their employers faced a standoff over labor issues. The 141-day strike and lockout that began that fall left many union members with staggering debts. It reportedly cost the employers an estimated $2 billion and gave competitors an opportunity to step into the gap.

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-- P.J. Huffstutter

Photo: NAACP members participating in the NAACP's 102nd annual national convention at the Los Angeles Convention Center this summer join a labor march and a rally in front of a Ralphs grocery store in Los Angeles. Credit: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Unemployed? Party City hiring thousands for Halloween season

Halloween hiring at Party City
Party City Holdings Inc., which operates dozens of stores in Los Angeles and Orange counties, announced that it plans to hire 14,000 seasonal workers to staff its stores during the busy Halloween shopping season.

The party-goods store operator said Thursday that the average Party City store would be hiring 15 to 50 seasonal employees to help customers as they shop for costumes and other Halloween party supplies, the Associated Press reported.

The privately held retailer said it would be hiring cashiers, stockroom workers and sales-floor associates. Employees may have the opportunity to continue working past Halloween based on staffing needs at individual stores, company President Lisa Laube said.

Anyone interested can apply through the company's website or in person at local stores. The company operates 800 stores across the United States, including many Southern California locations.

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Is California economy improving, or worse than ever?

-- Stuart Pfeifer

Photo: Halloween decorations Credit: Los Angeles Times

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Employees satisfied with co-workers, unhappy with benefits

Officespace Your co-workers probably like you and your boss just fine –- it’s their pay and benefits they’re peeved about, according to a new Gallup survey.

Three in 10 employees are dissatisfied with the health insurance offered by their boss. The same amount also wish they earned more money.

Compensation issues in general leave workers disgruntled -– 26% are unhappy with their promotion chances, 28% want better retirement benefits and 34% say there’s too much stress at work.

Blame the nation’s unemployment problem, Gallup says. Compared with 90% job satisfaction before the recession, just 83% of workers are currently content.

Employees are likely enduring less favorable work conditions in order to avoid the dismal job market, while employers are cutting costs by scaling back salaries, promotions and benefits, Gallup said.

Still, compared with the fallout of the dot-com bubble a decade ago, workers are more satisfied overall. The study, which was conducted in mid-August, found that 72% are completely satisfied with the physical safety conditions at work.

The majority of employees are also pleased with their co-workers, their bosses and their work schedule.

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Photo: Most U.S. workers are more satisfied with their bosses than Ron Livingston, right, in 20th Century Fox's "Office Space." Credit: Van RedinPhoto

Monday, September 5, 2011

Stocks fall in eurozone as U.S. jobs report adds to investor worries

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On Monday, Asia's stock market took a tumble, and markets in the European Union followed suit with falls of their own.

The reason for the beating taken by the foreign markets centered largely on fears that the U.S. is sliding back into a recession after a Friday report that the nation added no new jobs in August and kept its unemployment steady 9.1%. Another factor is worry over the ongoing European debt crisis, according to a report from the Associated Press.

Reactionary market declines could be seen across Europe on Labor Day as the U.S. stock market was closed. Germany's DAX index fell 5.28%, France's CAC 40 fell 4.73%, the FTSE 100 in London fell 3.58%, and the Euro Stoxx 50 fell 5.11%.

Retail sales across the 17-nation eurozone saw a surprise increase in July, but a report on the E.U.'s services sector released Monday revealed a slowdown across Europe for the fifth consecutive month, the AP said.

"The purchasing managers' index for the eurozone showed the services sector was still growing -- unlike the manufacturing sector -- but only barely," the AP said. "That will add pressure on the European Central Bank to keep interest rates on hold when it meets this week."

The souring economic situations in Asia, Europe and the U.S. are leaving investors with "so much uncertainty, so much fear, that investors don't know what to do," David Kotok, chairman and chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors, told the AP. "I don't remember the last time stocks were so cheap and nobody wanted them."

More evidence of investor worries were evident as well.

"The difference in interest rates between the Greek and benchmark German 10-year bonds, known as the spread, spiraled to new records on Monday, topping 17.3 percentage points," the AP said. "Yields on the Greek bonds were above 18%."

President Obama is set to give a major speech Thursday night in which he is expected to lay out proposals seeking to spark job creation. Obama previewed his speech in Detroit on Monday, saying the Republican Party will be publicly held accountable if its members don't support his job-creation plans.

From Monday's slumps in Asia and Europe, it's clear that investors on those continents will be watching to see whether Obama and U.S. lawmakers can turn the tide and stave off another recession.

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Photo: Traders in Frankfurt, Germany. Credit: Michael Probst / Associated Press

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