Lourdes Medical Center RN - New Three-Year Contract Ratified with Super Majority Vote effective January 1, 2022 through January 1, 2025

After countless hours of hard work and dedication put in by your bargaining team, we were able to recommend and ratify our new contract with competitive wage increases that will be retroactive to January 1, 2022, increase to max accrual bank and secure better membership language.

We look forward to building strength and unity within our facility so that we can show LifePoint that we will not be divided in our desire to be treated with respect and equity.

Please contact your bargaining team or Union Rep Maureen Hatton 509-340-7370 with any questions or concerns.

Your Bargaining Team, Left to Right: Holly Kelly, Jennifer Powell and Jessica Leon

Capital Medical Center Technical Service - Contract Ratified!

We are pleased to report that UFCW Local 21 members at Capital Medical Center overwhelmingly voted to ratify their new contract on February 25! As a reminder, your new contract includes:

  • An average 16.50% wage increase,

  • $1,750 ratification bonus, pro-rated by FTE,

  • Per Diem differential increased to 15%, resulting in an extra 3% wage increase for all per diems,

  • Increases to several differentials/premiums,

  • And so much more!

If you have any questions about your new contract, please reach out to a workplace steward or call Union Representative Ian Jacobson at (206) 436-6550. 

Kronos Overpayment

It has been brought to the Union’s attention that MultiCare is demanding repayment from employees who were overpaid during the Kronos outage. The employer’s demands are placing extreme hardship on our members and, accordingly, the Union has demanded to bargain with the employer regarding their repayment program. We are also considering other actions that may help mitigate the effect of this issue on UFCW Local 21 members. 

Stay tuned for updates as this issue continues to develop.    

PRMCE Techs Ratify Contract!

On February 2, 2022 Providence Everett techs voted online to approve a new contract through 6/30/25. The agreement includes robust across the board wage increases, many market adjustments, and improvements to step progression on the wage scales with NO TAKEAWAYS!

Need to join UFCW? Fill out your membership application!

Our PRMCE Professionals Bargaining Team: Maria Goodall, Vascular Ultrasound; Darryl Keffer, Respiratory; Rodney Powers, Diagnostic Imaging; Terryl Smith, Pharmacy Tech

PRMCE Professionals OVERWHELMINGLY Ratify Contract!

On February 2, 2022 Providence Everett professionals turned out in a big way for our online vote and approved a new contract through 3/1/25. The agreement includes robust across the board increases, many market adjustments, and improvements to step progression on the wage scales with NO TAKEAWAYS! 

ED Crisis Counselors UNANIMOUSLY voted with 100% turnout to join the Professional contract! Welcome to our union!

Need to join UFCW? Fill out your membership application!

PRMCE Professionals Bargaining Team: Deb Anderson, Medical Lab; Sara Dillon, Case Management; Emily Conner, Nutrition

Kaiser Permanente - Update

New Contract

Wage Increases should be paid out starting with the paycheck on the week of February 4. We are working on finalizing the new contracts and will get them to you as soon as possible.

General Membership Meetings 

GMMs will be held February 9-11 in-person at a variety of locations. For more information go to here.

Covid Benefits

Work during the pandemic has been a constant challenge for all and we are requesting the KP WA step up and reinstate Covid Benefits and provide incentives. Discussions have been happening both locally and with the National Alliance to make this happen. Stay tuned for more information about how you can participate!

Safe Staffing

UFCW, SEIU and WSNA along with dozens of other unions and community organizations are working together in Olympia to show our state lawmakers that our community cares about safe staffing. Senate Bill 5751 and House Bill 1868 create laws to improve worker safety and patient care. We are collecting member stories to present to lawmakers regarding current working conditions and staffing challenges. You can find the petition link here:

For additional information contact:

Christina Delgado

Contract Specialist KP/UFCW 21 

Christina.a.delgado@kp.org

425.306.1357

Rhonda Fisher-Ivie 

UFCW Local 21 Union Representative

rfisherivie@ufcw21.org 

253.245.3739



CHI General Update - WAGES OVERWHELMINGLY APPROVED

We are pleased to announce that members across CHI overwhelmingly voted to approve the proposed amendments to their contracts, which included earlier raises for all members along with a number of additional market increases! The approved wage increases will become effective on February 6, 2022.

These changes will affect the following units:

St. Anne Hospital (Pro-Tech)

St. Joseph Medical Center (Pro-Tech)

St. Michael Medical Center (Pro-Tech)

St. Michael Medical Center (Service & Dietary)

 Keep in mind that these changes are considered a mid-cycle amendment, meaning that we are still scheduled to start contract negotiations early next year. Stay tuned for more information as your contract nears its expiration.  

Sound Retirement Plan Update: Pension Plan Benefits Secured

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Great news for your retirement benefits. We wanted to share some fabulous news: after more than a decade of work, as of July 1, 2021, we have secured our retirement plans and their future funding is more solid than it has been in a very long time.

What is a retirement pension? We all hope to retire after a lifetime of work with enough income to live with dignity and some degree of independence. While relatively few people these days have a monthly pension that is paid for life, it is something that we have been able to keep in place for our union grocery store workers. A solid retirement plan is made up of many sources: personal savings, Social Security and retirement/pensions and investments. Your retirement pension from your work at the grocery store is one of these sources.

This path to secure our retirement benefits under the Sound Retirement Trust (SRT) required many steps for the employers and the unions and over the last year we have continued to push forward along that path. Some of you may be near retirement after decades of work while others may have started at the grocery store in just the last few years. Whatever your situation, your pension is one of the most important ways to have income when you retire. Your employer begins making payments into your pension when you are hired, and you become vested in the pension plan typically after just 5 years of work in the stores.

While grocery store workers have successfully fought to keep our pensions under the SRT, for nearly twenty years it has had funding problems caused by two large economic crashes (in 2000 and 2008) and long-term changes in the industry. In 2019 our union bargaining team secured a tentative agreement to turn that around and members approved that plan at vote meetings. We have been working hard ever since to move through all the steps to implement this approved agreement. On July 1, 2021, we completed the final step to secure the pension funding.

How the Sound Retirement Trust Becomes Fully Funded:

As a result of our pension agreements and the changes described below, the SRT will become what is called “Green Zone” status and will stay in the green zone for the foreseeable future.

Under the 2019 bargaining, three changes were made to help secure your retirement benefits:

For Kroger Employees:

• All the benefit liabilities for all benefits earned for your work before July 1, 2021, under the SRT will be transferred to the UFCW Consolidated Fund. Kroger will contribute to the Consolidated Fund to pay for all of these liabilities within 7 years.

• When you retire, your pension benefits for your work before July 1, 2021, will be paid by the UFCW Consolidated Pension Fund.

For Other Employees:

• The current SRT will remain in place and continue to be funded for your work before July 1, 2021. The SRT will continue to get a regular contribution from your employer for every hour you work in the future.

• When you retire, your pension benefits for your work before July 1, 2021, will be paid by the SRT.

• For All Employees under 2019 Bargain:

• Future retirement benefits for your work on and after July 1, 2021 will be in one new fund called the Sound Variable Annuity Pension Plan (VAP).

• The Sound VAP will continue to get a regular contribution from your employer for every hour you work. The Sound VAP is sending you a notice about how the VAP works. Below are some basic rules about the VAP. When you retire, your will receive one check for your work before July 1, 2021 (from SRT or Consolidated Fund) and one check from the VAP.

Finally, all of your service credited and covered employment under the SRT and the VAP are counted under the other plan for all eligibility provisions. This ensures that you do not lose vesting or become ineligible for benefits under the SRT as a result of these changes. This includes eligibility for benefit options and the time periods for applying and determining qualification for a pension or disability benefit, participation and vesting purposes.

How the VAP System Works:

In the past, large or drastic declines in the stock market where the pension investments were made, resulted in reductions in the value of the SRT’s funding and reduction to the early retirement and other benefits. To help insulate grocery store workers’ future benefits from these drastic swings, the Variable Annuity Plan (VAP) is structured with a built-in safety mechanism so the benefits provided will track the VAP funding levels.

When the VAP’s investments in the stock market are doing well, and there are returns of over 8.5%, that extra money is required to go into the rainy-day fund reserve account, called a stabilization reserve. In a year where the returns from the pension plan’s investment drops below 2%, the benefits paid under the VAP are shored up with money from this stabilization reserve. The stabilization reserve also will be funded with an additional $15 million in 2022.

The “variable” part of the plan comes into effect with the returns are between 2% and 8.5%. For returns that are between 2 % to 5.5%, there can be adjustments downward in benefits. For years with returns greater than 5.5% up to 8.5%, there can be adjustment upwards. With these safeguards and adjustments, the VAP should stay fully funded in all market conditions and the benefits increase over time as wages increase. Long term, returns are expected to be at or over 5.5%.

Freeing Up Time and Money to Negotiate Wage Increases:

In 2019 and prior contract negotiations, months of time and effort were spent to negotiate agreements for tens of millions of dollars to try to address pension funding. While we will still need to negotiate contribution rates from the employer each bargain, with a healthy SRT and the security of the VAP, it is anticipated that the SRT and the VAP should not be underfunded again. And because we continue to manage our Health and Wellness Plan so well, we hope to maintain the Health Plan with no changes and no increased costs.

Now that we have successfully addressed the pension and health benefits, we can take the time and energy of the bargaining team with the employer representatives and focus on the member’s top priorities: 1st and foremost increased wages, and also look to other improvements in the contract for training, staffing and additional ways to improve the workplace.

The amount someone gets at retirement depends on many things. If you have a question about your specific pension benefits, when you are vested, or other topics, please call our grocery store workers’ retirement plan administrator, Zenith, at 206-282-4500 or 800-225-7620, press option 2, then press option 3.

Lourdes Counseling Center - Per Diem Update

After months of work and dedication put towards getting the per diem employees recognized as fellow union members, we have won our election! With a near unanimous vote, the per diems have officially elected to join with UFCW 21 and their fellow coworkers!

We appreciate all of the time and effort that everyone has put into this, and are grateful to all of the leaders that stepped up in getting this accomplished.

WhidbeyHealth - Review Your September 17 Paycheck! Wage Increases Dispersed!

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On September 16, UFCW 21 and WhidbeyHealth were finally able to come to an agreement around language and wage scale discrepancies. Throughout this entire process, our position has been that WhidbeyHealth should have implemented the wage increases per our tentative agreement which the Support Service unit and Pro/Tech/LPN unit ratified on June 23. We are disappointed with WhidbeyHealth’s delay tactics and will continue holding them accountable to timelines in future negotiations!

Please review your September 17 paycheck which should show retroactive pay and wage increases of:

  • 1% hourly wage increase for Pro/Tech/LPN from February 7, 2020 until June 30, 2021 and 1.5% hourly wage increase effective July 1, 2021

  • 1% hourly wage increase for Support Services from June 7, 2020 until June 30, 2021 and 1.5% hourly wage increase effective July 1, 2021

We are now working on posting the contracts online and will have hard copies available. If you wish to have a hard copy and can distribute copies to your department, please reach out to your union rep Celia Ponce-Sanchez. 

If you have any questions or concerns please reach out to your union rep or the Member Resource Center 206-436-6570.

PCC - Sign Up For Union Training!

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PCC workers have been standing up to bring PCC back to its roots as PCC has continued to expand and change over the past years - whether this was fighting to nominate and then elect two PCC workers onto the PCC Board of Trustees or fighting to win new Worker Caucus Committee language in our contract that will allow for more worker input on store and Co-op operations.

Our union contract also has language that allows for workers to have input into the Board of Trustees’ search for a new CEO.

With the resignation of PCC CEO Suzy Munford on August 7, PCC has an opportunity to bring a CEO in that holds Co-op values dear. We have reached out to PCC leadership for information about their timelines for interviews and how they plan to incorporate worker input.

>> Want to get more involved? Sign up for a union training here! <<

Union statement on vaccination requirement for health care workers

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Mon., Aug. 9, 2021

CONTACT:

Amy Clark,
SEIU Healthcare 1199NW
amyc@seiu1199nw.org
425-306-2061

Ruth Schubert
Washington State Nurses Association
rschubert@wsna.org 
206-713-7884

Anna Minard
UFCW 21
aminard@ufcw21.org
206-436-6587

Seattle, Wash.— The Washington State Nurses Association, SEIU Healthcare 1199NW and UFCW 21 issued the following joint statement on COVID-19 vaccination requirements for health care workers:

“As unions representing nurses and health care workers in Washington state, the Washington State Nurses Association, SEIU Healthcare 1199NW and UFCW21 support science-based public health directives on COVID-19 vaccination requirements for frontline health care workers, with medical and religious exemptions. We stand firmly behind vaccination as the best way to save the lives of patients, family members and members of our communities.

At the same time, we fully expect employers to bargain with us over this change to working conditions.

We are facing an extraordinary staffing crisis in our hospitals and continue to advocate for reasonable deadlines and options for frequent testing as well as masking, as required in all health care facilities, for those who are unvaccinated. These provisions mirror those included in mandates in other states that allow health care workers to stay on the job caring for all of us through this ongoing crisis.

We also know that while the vaccines are incredibly effective, they do not replace PPE, universal masking or other infection control measures. We will continue to demand universal access to N95 masks and push employers to improve ventilation in facilities where needed.”

###

About SEIU Healthcare 1199NW
SEIU Healthcare 1199NW is a union of nurses and healthcare workers with over 30,000 caregivers throughout hospitals, clinics, mental health, skilled home health and hospice programs in Washington state and Montana. SEIU Healthcare 1199NW’s mission is to advocate for quality care and good jobs for all.

About WSNA
WSNA is the leading voice and advocate for nurses in Washington state, providing representation, education and resources that allow nurses to reach their full professional potential and focus on caring

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Albertsons/Safeway Department Manager Vote Ratified

On June 22, Albertsons and Safeway department Managers ratified the settlement agreement arising from a grievance filed on behalf of all effected members for unilateral changes and implementation of the existing company’s matrix formula for department managers. The settlement updates and expands the current contracts matrix formula for department managers.

If you have any questions, please contact Sean Embly @ 206-436-6545.

Cascade Valley Hospital - Victory—SRH Cancels Changes to Retiree Medical!

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After supporting the Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) filed by our brothers and sisters at WSNA, Skagit Regional Health has reversed its decision to discontinue the early retirement benefit for tenured employees. We had also demanded to bargain over the change to retiree benefits. This victory will make our upcoming negotiations with CVH on wages much smoother. 

We will be at the bargaining table June 9.

Your CVH Bargaining Team:

Laura Cowen, CNA

Linda Deeter, OR Tech

Robin Schultz, Pharmacy Tech

Pammy Hammond, CNA

PCC Community Update - March 24, 2021

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On Monday, we made progress in getting PCC to back off some of their bad proposals at the bargaining table. We have proposed language that would commit PCC to meeting regularly with community groups and to have dedicated worker seats on the PCC Board. PCC has so far rejected these proposals.


SUPPORT OUR BARGAIN!

  • RSVP to an info picket on April 14! 

  • Are you a PCC Co-op member? PCC Board elections begin April 8. Vote to put workers Donna and Laurae on the Board! 

Our next bargaining date with PCC is March 30.

Kroger Update - March 5, 2021

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Yesterday, the UFCW 21 bargaining team demanded that QFC bargain with us before finalizing a decision to close two Seattle stores.

On February 16, 2021, Kroger-owned QFC announced that it would close QFC 804 in Capitol Hill and QFC 873 in Wedgwood. In a clear attempt to intimidate workers, QFC blamed the store closures on the Seattle City Council’s passage of a $4 per hour hazard pay mandate.

“We have seen increased sales with the pandemic, QFC can afford the temporary hazard pay, and by the time the stores close they will already have paid out a lot of it. By picking on two of the smallest stores in Seattle, Kroger is simply looking for the least costly way to intimidate workers in Washington and around the country who are standing up for hazard pay.”

— Our QFC Bargaining Team

Sam Dancy, QFC Westwood Village

Amy Dayley Angell, QFC Ballard

Robin Hillistad, QFC Uptown

Jeff Alexander, QFC Wedgwood

Stefanie Cook, QFC Capitol Hill

Faye Guenther, President UFCW 21

Joe Mizrahi, Secretary Treasurer UFCW 21

Jim McGuinness, Attorney

Like other large grocery companies, Kroger has profited from the COVID pandemic as consumers shifted to at-home meal preparation. In 2020, Kroger’s profits increased 53% to $2.74 billion, and the company funneled $1.9 billion to investors through dividends and stock buybacks. 

UFCW 21 members have been taking action to fight back against Kroger’s bullying by continuing to push Hazard Pay ordinances across the state, speaking out in the media, and sitting down with the employer to bargain over the store closures. 

PCC COVID Agreement Summary

After intense pressure from workers, shoppers, and community through petitions, leaflets, and other actions we reached an agreement on 2/10 with PCC regarding COVID safety and hazard pay for all stores outside of Seattle and Burien! Here is a summary of all the provisions of the COVID Agreement. Contact your rep with any further questions.

Providence Centralia Hospital Community Letter

Dear Community & Patients of Providence Centralia Hospital,

We are the Technical Unit at Providence Centralia Hospital, serving you, our patients in a variety of different ways including Ultrasound, Echo, MRI, Interventional Radiology (IR), CT, X-ray, Respiratory Therapy (RT), and Pharmacy. Our jobs are very fulfilling, but also at times stressful, as we face chronic staffing shortages and now a global pandemic. We also know that it’s important for Tech workers to come together to voice our shared concerns, and to collectively advocate for the work conditions that we need for ourselves and our patients. That is why we voted to join UFCW 21 and are now meeting with management to bargain our first contract. We have joined the RNs at Providence Centralia Hospital and other Techs, Service, Dietary, and EVS workers throughout the Providence system in Washington State.

However, since we started the bargaining process, it has become clear that Providence Centralia Hospital does not respect our Technical Unit. While the RNs have an annual leave and sick leave bank, the Tech unit has an extended illness bank (EIB) and paid time off (PTO) bank. As of January 2021, Providence has taken away our extended illness bank, which acts as a short-term disability plan during medical leaves of absence. Providence has implemented a lesser short-term disability plan and is benefiting from the WA Paid Family Medical Leave (PFML) program, which is funded by the State and WA workers. Instead of providing more time off to frontline workers during a pandemic, Providence is decreasing sick time and PTO and saving money by using the State’s PFML program.

In addition, they offered us barebone proposals and are not agreeing to memorialize several important policies such as leaves of absence and PTO. They are undermining our good faith effort to advocate for time to be with our families and to get the time off that we need to do our jobs well.

We know that we will need to take actions to show Providence Centralia that healthcare workers and community are aligned in advocating for basic needs in our hospital. We hope that you will join us. Please let us know if you have upcoming meetings we can attend and give an update, or if there are other ways of connecting our struggle with other advocacy campaigns on access to healthcare and basic human needs such as housing and food.

We are so honored to be your healthcare team and look forward to better care for all our patients.

Sincerely,
Providence Centralia Hospital Bargaining Committee:
Jennifer (Mammography), Jamie (RT), Verity (Pharmacy), Jennifer (CT), Kathy (RT)


PCC UPDATE: RSVP for a PCC Contract Action Team Meeting

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PCC UPDATE: RSVP for a PCC Contract Action Meeting

Join us for a virtual contract action meeting to review our action plan to win a fair contract and workers on the PCC Board of Trustees! At these meetings, we will have an in depth bargaining update as well as updates on our campaign to get workers on the PCC Board. We will also be discussing our action plan to win a fair contract. Our next bargaining dates on 2/23 and 2/24.

Upcoming Contract Action Team (CAT) meeting dates:
Tuesday, February 16 @ 9am
Wednesday, February 17 @ 2pm
Wednesday, February 17 @ 7pm

You’re invited to our CAT meetings!
Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for RSVP and call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.

Your PCC Bargaining Team:
Atsuko Koseki, Edmonds Deli
Greg Brooks, Fremont Meat
Keith Allery, Greenlake Village Deli
Quinn Ráo, Ballard Front End
Scott Shiflett, Redmond Meat
Yasab Pfister, Burien Front End

Seattle approves $4 hazard pay for grocery store workers

For media inquiries contact Joe Mizrahi, Secretary Treasurer UFCW 21

Help our Union fight for hazard pay in your city!  

During the COVID pandemic, grocery store operators have reaped billions of dollars in windfall profits as a direct result of the shift to at-home meal preparation but have failed to compensate workers for the added risks and burdens of working on the frontline during the pandemic. The pandemic has steadily gotten worse while grocery workers have not received hazard pay in over 6 months.

Today, thanks to the hard work, testimony, and actions of UFCW 21 members, we won $4/hour Hazard Pay for grocery store workers throughout Seattle at grocery companies with 500 or more employees worldwide. Thanks to Seattle City Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda for her leadership in bringing forward this ordinance, the over 800 UFCW 21 members and allies who contacted Seattle City Council in support of this ordinance, as well as all the members and community allies who testified before the Seattle City Council in favor of Hazard Pay by sharing their heartfelt stories and fears. The effective date, pending signature from the Mayor, is February 3, 2021. 

“I am grateful the council recognized the risks grocery store workers face during this extraordinary crisis. Thank you to our communities for hearing our stories and helping us get our voices out. Now, thanks to our hard work together, Seattle has won hazard pay for essential front line grocery store workers. This is a victory for Seattle workers, and I hope other cities follow Seattle's lead.” - Maggie Breshears, Greenwood Fred Meyer

Our union’s hard work in passing this ordinance builds on the hard work we have done to pass Initiative 1433 Statewide Sick Leave in 2016, to pass Washington State Paid Family and Medical Leave in 2017, to pass Uninterrupted Meal/Rest Breaks and close the mandatory overtime loophole for health care workers in 2019, and raising the minimum wage! 


We believe every worker should have a voice on the job.  



Here’s what some UFCW 21 members have shared about hazard pay…

“Hazard pay is recognition that we are still risking our health and our lives to ensure people are able to eat. Throughout this whole pandemic, we’ve been a front line and I can see burnout happening in real time. I’ve come to work already crying, already shaking with anxiety over having to deal with unmasked customers and bus patrons on top of the taxing work. Everyone I talk to is at their wit’s end. If these pandemic conditions are to continue as the virus mutates, we deserve hazard pay. We’ve deserved it for a long time.” -Tori Nakamatsu-Figaroa, Uptown Metropolitan Market

“Hazard pay is important to me because fellow coworkers and I have to clean the protective barriers, surfaces, etc. What do they think we're cleaning!? The answer is we're cleaning COVID! It is outrageous that employees are not receiving hazard pay as of now. I have a fellow coworker who had a breakdown today because a customer was repetitively coughing on our video game cases, and we receive absolutely no compensation for cleaning up after customers. This has made me very angry.” -Björn Olson, Greenwood Fred Meyer 

“I work in Clicklist [grocery pickup] and I am responsible for caring for my 95-year-old grandmother. I am so afraid that I will unknowingly pass Covid-19 on to her. I take all the responsible actions in making sure I use latex gloves and double-mask for extra measure. I am in small living quarters with her, and if I was to pass this on to her it would most likely be a death sentence for her. That is an incredibly large burden on my shoulders. My fellow co-worker, also in Clicklist, passed it on to her mother and sadly her mother passed away. I feel as though I’m looking at my future and the end to my grandmother's life. The risk I'm taking by working at Fred Meyer and serving the community is not being acknowledged by my employer. The burden is high and the pay is low.” -Cindy Wilbur, Fred Meyer  

“Hazard pay is needed for grocery workers. We work around the public every day, risking our health to feed our families. I am a single mother of 2 small children that are at risk because I am at risk. I struggle to pay my babysitter, who basically raises my children because I am working 40+ hours just to barely survive, on top of risking not only my health but my children’s health. Kroger is making massive increases in profit while I barely scrape by.” -Hilary T.E. Williamson, QFC 

“My husband and I both work at Metropolitan Market grocery. I am on leave of absence for health reasons and to help care for our child while they are distance learning. We are currently relying solely on my husband's income and a few assistance programs to get by. I've also lost my insurance due to sheltering. Hazard pay would be so helpful to offset my lack of income and help us keep on top of bills and rent. It would also help my husband and coworkers feel as though they're valued as essential workers and that their sacrifice at this time isn't going without notice.” -Holly Jansma, Metropolitan Market 

20/20 Looking Back and Looking Forward

Dear UFCW 21 members,  

At the start of a new year, we find ourselves looking back and looking forward. 2020 was an intense year for most of us, and we face 2021 still in the grip of a public health and economic crisis, alongside a reckoning on racial oppression and an assault on our democracy.  

But we also face this new year together, as a union of over 46,000 working people. Many UFCW 21 members put their lives on the line in 2020 to show up for work and keep our communities fed, supplied, and cared for. Thousands of you newly joined us in 2020, making our union stronger in the face of challenges. We have grieved together, celebrated together, and stood side by side fighting for fair pay and safe working conditions.  

Together in 2020 we: 

Settled 25 contracts, including 70 Memorandums of understanding with employers around COVID safety and benefits. 

Welcomed 8,378 new members into our union, including 1,023 members from 8 new units who organized unions at their workplaces for the first time! 
Welcome to our union: 

Providence St Peter Techs 
Summit Pacific Medical Center RNs, Techs, and Service 
Providence Centralia Techs and Service 
Lourdes Medical Center Service 
Seattle Children’s Hospital Medical Assistants 
Metropolitan Market Mercer Island 
PCC Central District 
14 QFC ClickList locations 
Kaiser Pharmacy workers 

Conducted 41 Telephone Town Hall calls with thousands of members. 

Came together and donated 141,867 pieces of Personal Protective Equipment to frontline workers including: 95,600 Gloves, 18,353 N95 Masks, 9,740 goggles, and 6,175 Surgical Masks. 

We awarded $42,000 to our 2020 Scholarship Recipients

2021 will certainly bring new opportunities to accomplish our top priorities, including:  

Hazard pay for all essential workers. 

Priority vaccine access for essential workers and vulnerable populations. 

Personal protective equipment wherever it is needed. 

Child care support for working families.  

Maintain workers’ right to safety, including enforcement of COVID safety requirements and our right to workplaces free from discrimination. 

Milestones in our training and workforce development programs. 

Passing a Worker Protection Act and a financial transparency bill for big health care systems in Washington State. 

We will win these at bargaining tables, through our city councils and state legislature, through outreach in the press, and directly in our communities and workplaces by speaking up for what we know is right, caring for each other so we can stay in the fight, and standing together in solidarity as a union family.  

If you have questions or concerns, do not hesitate to reach out. Join us at the Winter General Membership Meetings, check out all the resources on our union website at UFCW21.org, call us at 1-800-732-1188, and get involved however you can. If you need help, you can always file a safety report at safetyreport@ufcw21.org or reach the Rep of the Day at (206) 436-6578.  

In solidarity, Faye & Joe  

Faye Guenther, President, UFCW 21 

Joe Mizrahi, Secretary-Treasurer, UFCW 21