Workers at Grand Central Bakery in Portland, Ore. Join Local 114
Representing manufacturing, production, maintenance and sanitation workers in the baking, confectionery, tobacco and grain milling industries.
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Workers at Grand Central Bakery in Portland, Ore. Join Local 114

(Below article is excerpted from a Dec. 18 article by NW Labor Press)

Workers who make bread for Grand Central Bakery in Portland, Ore. voted to join BCTGM Local 114 on December 12 in an election held by the National Labor Relations Board. The 29-to-9 vote affirmed what the workers had told management three weeks earlier: Local 114 has the support of a majority of the workers at the companyโ€™s wholesale bakery.

Workers who make bread for Grand Central Bakery in Portland voted to unionize Dec. 12 in an election held by the National Labor Relations Board. The 29-to-9 vote affirmed what the workers had told management three weeks earlier: Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco, and Grain Millers (BCTGM) Local 114 has the support of a majority of the workers at the companyโ€™s wholesale bakery at 2249 NW York St.

For now, just the 44 bakers and dishwashers at that location will be union-represented. Working three shifts a day, they make all the Grand Central bread and rolls sold in local Fred Meyer, QFC, Whole Foods, and New Seasons Market stores. The companyโ€™s 12 retail locations, its NE Fremont pastry bakery, and its Seattle wholesale bakery, remain nonunion, but supporters of the new-born union at the Portland wholesale bakery have given workers at all other locations an open invitation to join the union effort. Grand Central employs about 460 workers in all.

In the weeks before the union election, a company-wide memo told all employees not to talk to the press. It even directed them to ask TV camera crews to leave the property โ€ฆ if any showed up. Nor did the company respond to messages from the Northwest Labor Press.

But a spokesperson for the union committee explained some of why workers want a union. Wages of $16.43 to $21.42 an hour are far lower than union-represented bakers at Franz and Bimbo/Oroweat, who make over $25 an hour. Opportunities for advancement and raises are limited. Complaints of sexual harassment have been poorly handled by management. And workers have no say over changes that affect them. Safety is also a big concern, said the Grand Central worker, who asked not to be named. Workers use buckets to scoop a pre-ferment called poolish out of 500-pound mixing bowls, and that can lead to injuries.

The union campaign launched at the busiest time of the year for the company, and yet for four days, Grand Central Bakery managers pulled workers off the floor half a crew at a time for special meetings to try to talk them out of unionizing.