Labor & your groceries: Chains can afford to share the wealth
 
It's deja vu all over again. That's how many Southern California shoppers are feeling about current grocery negotiations. It is because the supermarket chains remain locked into the same thinking that three years ago forced 60,000 grocery workers into the street for nearly five months. That shouldn't be the case.

Back then the grocers claimed, as they claim today, that employees' wages and benefits keep them from competing effectively, and that profit margins are so thin they can't share their success with the employees who help generate it, so they just had to cut wages and health care. We know now that just isn't true.

After the markets got their way in 2004, their competition never materialized, profits surged to record levels, grocery workers haven't had a raise since 2002, and now nearly half of the 80,000 Southern California grocery workers are without health care, including 20,000 of their children.

The fact is the markets are enormously successful, commanding significant market share not just in Southern California but everywhere they operate. They can afford to share their success with their employees.

Just how successful are the markets? Here are the facts, from the companies' own submissions to the Securities and Exchange Commission on their profits: