A grocery worker strike was imminent. Then came a 30-hour bargaining marathon

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LOS ANGELES-CA-MARCH 21, 2022: Rachel Fournier, a member of the bargaining committee, is photographed at UFCW Local 770 headquarters in Los Angeles as members make strike-ready signs on Monday, March 21, 2022. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)
Rachel Fournier, a member of a bargaining committee for grocery workers, is shown at UFCW Local 770 headquarters in Los Angeles as members made signs in March. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

A union representing 47,000 Southern California grocery workers tentatively signed a new three-year contract with Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons and Pavilions, averting a strike they had authorized last week.

The contract will be put to a vote next week by rank-and-file members of seven United Food and Commercial Workers locals representing employees at 540 stores from San Diego to San Luis Obispo.

The union delayed releasing details of the agreement until members ratify it. But it praised the result, which it said included higher wages and improved benefits for essential workers who have toiled through difficult conditions during the two-year pandemic. Ninety-five percent of UFCW members voted to move ahead with a strike if supermarkets refused to substantially raise their pay.

“This is a great agreement that will help turn grocery store jobs around and make tangible improvements in our lives," Rachel Fournier, a cashier at a Los Angeles Ralphs store and a bargaining committee member, said in a statement released by UFCW 770, which represents 18,000 workers in the Los Angeles area.

Another bargaining committee member, Manny Estrada, a pharmacy clerk at a Vons in Grover Beach, called it "a big deal. Grocery store workers have served our customers throughout the most difficult moments of our lifetime. We’ve kept the stores open and have contributed to the companies’ success. This is a well-deserved contract that we look forward to ratifying soon."

A spokeswoman for Albertsons, which also owns Vons and Pavilions, confirmed that a tentative agreement had been reached.

Robert Branton, vice president of operations at Ralphs, said in a statement, “We are pleased that this agreement allows us to put more money in our associates’ paychecks and secures healthcare and pension plans.”

UFCW grocery workers in Los Angeles prepared strike signs on March 21.
Tyson Kehm, left, and Andrea Garcia, help make strike-ready signs at UFCW Local 770 headquarters in Los Angeles on March 21. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

The top tier wage hike will also apply to workers at Food 4 Less, which reached an earlier settlement linking its contract to Ralphs'. Both chains are owned by Kroger, one of the nation's largest grocery companies.

The agreement came together about 6 p.m. Monday after a 30-hour bargaining session at a hotel. Negotiators reportedly dragged patio furniture into the bargaining area to catch naps. For the first time, the bargaining included not just union officials but also working grocery clerks — a strategy that allowed members to draw on their firsthand experiences during negotiations.

UFCW's bargaining hand was strengthened by a labor shortage that has enabled workers to switch jobs in California and across the U.S. as they seek higher wages amid a spurt of inflation.