Metro donates to food bank as workers facing 'affordability challenges' continue strike - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:50 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Metro donates to food bank as workers facing 'affordability challenges' continue strike

A Canadian grocery chain donatedperishables to a Toronto food bank on Tuesday asthousands of store workers facing "significant affordability challenges," according to their union,continued their strike for afourth day.

Daily Bread Food Bank trucks picked up food at 11 Metro locations on Tuesday

Daily Bread Food Bank truck 1
A Daily Bread Food Bank truck picks up perishables at a Metro grocery store in Toronto on Tuesday. (Doug Husby/CBC)

A Canadian grocery chain donatedperishables to a Toronto food bank on Tuesday asthousands of store workers facing "significant affordability challenges," according to their union,continued their strike for afourth day.

Daily Bread Food Bank trucks collected food, mainly fresh fruit, vegetables and meat, from 11 Metro grocery stores. About3,700 grocery store workers, members of Unifor, have been on strike since Saturday at 27 Metro stores in the Greater Toronto Area. All 27 stores are closed.

Neil Hetherington, CEO of the Daily Bread Food Bank, told CBC News on Tuesday that the grocery chain and its workers are in a difficult situation but they agree that food should not go to waste.

"Both sides have said, fundamentally, it makes sense that all of the food, the fresh food...gets to people that need it. And right now, more than ever, the food bank needs food," Hetherington said.

Hetherington said the food bank saw 270,000 client visits in June, anumber that compares with 80,000 in the June before the pandemic. He said the food bank is increasingly seeing working peopleturn to food charity.

He said the numbers reflect a lack of affordable housing, income security issues and precarious employment in Toronto.

"In a city, in a country as wonderful as ours is, that shouldn't be the case," he said. "We see food insecurity every single day."

WATCH | Metro worker says living paycheque to paycheque is an 'understatement':

Toronto Metro worker says living paycheque to paycheque is an 'understatement'

1 year ago
Duration 1:40
Meat manager Austin Coyle is among more than 3,000 front-line grocery store workers on strike. He said he worked seven days a week nearly the entire month of July but still worries about affording rent for his two-bedroom apartment in Scarborough.

As for the Unifor workers, theyrejected a tentative agreement reached last week. Unifor says frontline grocery workers need Metro to come back to the table with an improved wage offer.

In a statement on Tuesday, Local 414 of Unifor said picket lines have been set up at the 27 stores from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

"Members remain focused on achieving a fair collective agreement that addresses the significant affordability challenges they face. Frontline grocery workers need Metro to come back to the table with an improved wage offer so they can get back to work doing what they love, supporting their communities," the union said in the statement.

"Members simply cannot accept an agreement that leaves them scrambling to make ends meet."

Metro 'extremely disappointed' by strike

In a news release on Friday, Metro Ontario Inc. said it was"extremely disappointed" a strike went ahead despite Unifor's initial endorsement of the proposed deal.

"The Company has been negotiating with the union for the past few weeks and reached a fair and equitable agreement that meets the needs of our employees and our customers while ensuring that Metro remains competitive," the company said in the release.

Unifor Metro strike
Two members of Unifor walk the picket line at a Metro grocery store in Toronto as the strike entered its fourth day. (Doug Husby/CBC)

"The settlement provided significant increases for employees in all fouryears of the agreement, as well as pension and benefits improvements for all employees, including part-time employees."

Maria Guardado, a student whose apartment isacross from a Metro grocery store, said she has sympathy for the workers and said they have a right to earn a decent living.

"I get that it's a minor inconvenience for me, but I totally understand that these workers deserve an equal right to fair wages, fair living," she said.

Stores affected by the strike include locations in Toronto and its suburbs, Brantford, Orangeville, Milton, Oakville, Brampton and Mississauga.

Metro says the affected stores will be closed for the duration of the strike, but pharmacies will remain open.

With files from Idil Mussa, Muriel Draaisma and The Canadian Press