Workers who clean Target and other retail stores in the Twin Cities will hold a two-day strike starting Monday to protest working conditions and call attention to their right to form a union. The walkout will include demonstrations and a delegation to the Target shareholders' meeting.
The strike by members of CTUL, Centro de Trabajadores Unido en Lucha/Center of Workers United in Struggle, is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. Monday, June 10, and end at midnight Wednesday, June 12. Participants will include retail cleaners at 25 Target stores in the metro area, as well as Home Depot, Kmart, Kohl’s and Sears stores.
The workers are employed by various cleaning contractors – not by the retail chains themselves. But CTUL has put public pressure on Target and the other retailers, saying the chains need to make sure the cleaning contractors are providing fair wages and working conditions and not violating worker rights.
Picketing is planned from 6 to 10 a.m. Tuesday in front of the Target store in downtown Minneapolis, 900 Nicollet Ave., and from 6 to 10 a.m. Wednesday near the Target store at 2500 E. Lake St.
On Wednesday, a delegation from CTUL will go to the Target shareholder meeting in Denver “where striking workers will inform shareholders about workers’ rights violations taking place in the sub-contracted cleaning of Target stores,” CTUL said.
CTUL also announced that one Minnesota-based cleaning contractor, Anisca Floor Maintenance, has agreed to remain neutral and not oppose any effort by its employees to form a union.
“At Anisca we feel that it is important for all employees to be respected, treated fairly and be well compensated for their labor. Due to the nature of our industry some companies do anything they can to meet that bottom line, be it squeeze employees’ wages to below state required minimums, or other more unsavory tactics”, Caleb Ambriz, the General Manager at Anisca, said in a statement posted on the CTUL website.
“At times the fair treatment of employees can only be accomplished through the use of third parties such as labor unions. Whether or not to use these mediums is a decision that the employees should take based on their own free will, that is why we chose to be the first to sign on to this agreement.”
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Workers who clean Target and other retail stores in the Twin Cities will hold a two-day strike starting Monday to protest working conditions and call attention to their right to form a union. The walkout will include demonstrations and a delegation to the Target shareholders’ meeting.
The strike by members of CTUL, Centro de Trabajadores Unido en Lucha/Center of Workers United in Struggle, is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. Monday, June 10, and end at midnight Wednesday, June 12. Participants will include retail cleaners at 25 Target stores in the metro area, as well as Home Depot, Kmart, Kohl’s and Sears stores.
The workers are employed by various cleaning contractors – not by the retail chains themselves. But CTUL has put public pressure on Target and the other retailers, saying the chains need to make sure the cleaning contractors are providing fair wages and working conditions and not violating worker rights.
Picketing is planned from 6 to 10 a.m. Tuesday in front of the Target store in downtown Minneapolis, 900 Nicollet Ave., and from 6 to 10 a.m. Wednesday near the Target store at 2500 E. Lake St.
On Wednesday, a delegation from CTUL will go to the Target shareholder meeting in Denver “where striking workers will inform shareholders about workers’ rights violations taking place in the sub-contracted cleaning of Target stores,” CTUL said.
CTUL also announced that one Minnesota-based cleaning contractor, Anisca Floor Maintenance, has agreed to remain neutral and not oppose any effort by its employees to form a union.
“At Anisca we feel that it is important for all employees to be respected, treated fairly and be well compensated for their labor. Due to the nature of our industry some companies do anything they can to meet that bottom line, be it squeeze employees’ wages to below state required minimums, or other more unsavory tactics”, Caleb Ambriz, the General Manager at Anisca, said in a statement posted on the CTUL website.
“At times the fair treatment of employees can only be accomplished through the use of third parties such as labor unions. Whether or not to use these mediums is a decision that the employees should take based on their own free will, that is why we chose to be the first to sign on to this agreement.”