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Hardball: Giants Concession Workers Fight for the Soul of San Francisco

Enjoy the game. Don't buy food.

UNITE HERE

Picture AT&T Park, home of the World Series champion San Francisco Giants. Picture about as breathtaking a baseball stadium as exists in the United States with the San Francisco Bay, otherwise known as McCovey Cove, framing the outfield like a Norman Rockwell postcard as conceived by Leroy Neiman. Picture seats packed with people clad in their iconic orange and black reveling in the once hard-luck team that now defines the city and stands atop the game. What we don’t picture when we conjure images of this or any ballpark are the people actually doing the work to keep it all running.

As idyllic as the aesthetics of the park remain, those prepping the food and cleaning the toilets make $11,000 a year in a city where, due to yet another round of tech-bubble gentrification, they cannot afford to live. Concession workers at the park earn their $11,000 in a city where a one bedroom apartment runs $3,000 a month and people are spending near that much to live in laundry rooms and unventilated basements. These same workers, who commute as much as two hours each way to get to the park, have now gone three years without a pay increase. This despite the fact that the value of the team, according to Forbes, has increased 40 percent, ticket prices have spiked and the cost of a cup of beer has climbed to $10.25. This also despite the fact that, as packed sellouts become the norm, the stress and toil of the job has never been greater. Now, the 800 concession workers, represented by UNITE HERE Local 2  http://www.unitehere2.org/2013/05/500-att-park-concession-workers-vote-… have voted 97 percent to strike.

Team management, which subcontracted food services to a South Carolina outfit called Centerplate, claims no responsibility for the labor troubles, even though they receive 55 percent of every dollar spent by the Giants fans. I spoke with Billie Feliciano, who has been working at the park for over three decades. She said to me, “This is the first time in thirty-five years we’ve had to go to these extremes. Centerplate says talk to the Giants. The Giants say talk to Centerplate. If we stepped back for five minutes they’d figure it out after they started to lose all that money. All we are saying is we want a fair share.”

Getting their “fair share” from Giants owner 80-year-old multibillionaire Charles Johnson will not be easy. A child of Wall Street wealth whose fortune has grown exponentially with the expansion of the financial markets, he now heads the mutual fund Franklin Templeton started by his father. As he said to The San Francisco Chronicle, quoting the company’s namesake Ben Franklin, “A penny saved is a penny earned.” (It would be far more fitting if he quoted the Ben Franklin who said of money, “The more one has, the more one wants.”)

In a startling bit of symmetry, Johnson lives in the city’s Carolands Chateau, a 100 room, 65,000 square foot palace originally built a century ago for the daughter of railroad magnate George Pullman. That would be George Pullman, namesake of the bloody 1894 Pullman Railway Strike where the United States Army intervened to crush the nascent industrial workers organization known as the American Railway Union. Then, destroying the mere idea of an industrial union like the ARU was seen as a high priority. Today we are seeing service industry workers starting to organize, walk out and be heard, and a twenty-first-century Pullman is looking to halt the mere idea that the expansion of service unions will happen on his watch. This is why the struggle at AT&T Park is bigger than 800 concession workers and why everyone has a stake in offering solidarity and support. As legendary Bay Area KPFA Hardknock Radio host Davey D said, “There is a lot of talk about having a citywide fast food union in San Francisco. So if you can topple the union at AT&T Park, then you can topple that idea. And if you can topple [service] unions there, you can topple them anywhere and can stop that tide around the country.”

The workers are ready. Feliciano said to me, “We come there rain or shine. Are we striking? Not yet. But these workers are ready to strike.” The community, the Major League Baseball Players Association and the players on the Giants, from Buster Posey to Tim Lincecum to Sergio Romo, should support them as well.

As for the negotiations, they display all the arrogance of both Centerplate and Charles Johnson. During one session, while management scolded the union for thinking they were worth more than $11,000 a year, hedge fund honcho Mike Wilkins, a partner at $400 million Kingsford Capital Management, was on the field running the bases with 100 of his buddies, at a one-day rental cost of $500,000. This was described to the website Buzzfeed as an exercise in “grown up boys fantasy time.” Will San Francisco ever again be anything but a playground for the overgrown millionaire children of the tech sector? That’s the question. We’ll find out the answer in the weeks to come.

Go to thegiantzero.org http://www.thegiantzero.org/ for updates on the struggle
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UPDATE I :

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Concession Workers Launch One-Day Strike at AT&T Park

750 workers began a one-day strike early this morning against Centerplate, the San Francisco Giants’ food and beverage subcontractor.  The strike is a significant escalation in the workers’ campaign to achieve a new contract with wage increases, decent benefits, and job security.  Centerplate workers have not had a wage increase since the last contract expired in March 2010. The workers will return to work on Sunday.

“This strike should be a wake-up call to Centerplate and the Giants.” says Patricia Ramirez a cook for 13 years.  “We want a new contract with wage increases, health care, and job security, and we’re willing to fight for it.”

Negotiations have been at a standstill between Centerplate and the concession workers’ union.  Centerplate’s proposal would severely limit workers’ access to healthcare and keep in place the three year wage freeze from 2010-1012, despite the incredible financial success of the baseball team and its concessionaire over those years.  Concession workers voted by 97% to authorize the union to call up to 5 days of strike and a boycott of concessions.

“Groceries, gas, public transportation – everything has gone up in price over the last three years, including the prices at the ballpark.  But we haven’t had a wage increase since April 2009,” says Julie Nordman, a concession worker for 20 years.  “My stand alone brings in over $20,000 a game. Why can’t we share in the success?”

The concession workers’ primary dispute is with their direct employer, Centerplate, and not the Giants.  Picket lines will encourage fans to enjoy the game, but to refrain from purchasing food from Centerplate. The Giants play the Rockies today at 1pm.

“Hopefully Centerplate and the Giants will realize how important we are to the fan experience at AT&T Park,” says Patricia.  “I’m on strike because I want to see Centerplate come back to the negotiating table with a proposal that shows respect for the work we do.”                                                                                                                                    

UNITE HERE Local 2 http://www.unitehere2.org/ represents 12,000 hospitality workers in San Francisco and San Mateo Counties.
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UPDATE II

Giants' Ballpark Workers Go on One-Day Strike

By Joe Garofoli
San Francisco Chronicle
May 25, 2013

More than 700 concession workers at AT&T Park staged a one-day strike at Saturday's San Francisco Giants game against the Colorado Rockies, as a way to express their complaints about stagnant wages and potential health benefit cuts.

Spokepersons from both the Giants and the South Carolina-based concession management firm Centerplate expected no disruptions in service Saturday. Management and replacement workers would be selling hot dogs and garlic fries and serving patrons in the luxury suites.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/politics/joegarofoli/article/Giants-ballpark-work…