May, 1999
Sears workers win
by Michael Flug
Olive Branch, Miss.- On March 24, workers at Focus Distribution, Inc. voted
114 to 90 to be represented by IUE/Furniture Workers Local 282. The
stunning result was the first election victory by any union in this booming
and notoriously anti-union suburb of Memphis. Focus Distribution is a
warehouse and shipping operation for Sears appliances. Several past union
drives, including a recent one by the Teamsters, had failed.
In January, a Black forklift driver called Local 282 and asked for union
pledge cards. He had heard that Local 282 was a militant Black-led union
which didn't make deals behind workers' backs. Before Local 282 staff could
even get involved, workers had formed their own shop committee and signed
up enough co-workers to petition for an election. "The organizing was done
so carefully," Local 282 vice-president Ida Leachman told N&L, "that the
company didn't even know there was a union campaign until the election
petition was filed on Feb. 8."
The company fought back with anti-union flyers, meetings and videos. "There
are about 260 workers in the warehouse, mostly Black men, but with white
workers and women too," Leachman said. Workers said that the attendance
policy was manipulated to avoid giving anyone raises, but what made them
angriest was the way management talked down to them like children.
The shop committee really ran the union campaign. When the company showed
the first anti-union video, claiming that the union would be coming to
workers' homes to intimidate them, the workers put out a leaflet the next
day saying "This is your campaign. Nobody will be coming to your door. It's
your decision."
A white worker named Thomas Langston researched the internet for
information on the union, and countered management propaganda with the
facts, even putting out his own leaflets. Langston and other workers were
passing out leaflets in the company parking lot and the company called the
sheriff. They grabbed Langston and said that because he was passing out
leaflets on his own time, he was trespassing on company property. After
they took him to jail, the company withdrew the trespassing charge, but the
state refused to drop a charge of failing to obey a direct order from a
police officer.
Leachman is thrilled that a hole has been punched in Olive Branch's
anti-union wall. "The company hoped that the arrest would frighten off the
workers and kill the union campaign, but it went the other way."
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