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San Francisco Giants Concession Workers Authorize Strike After Three Years With No Pay Increases

AT&T Park

The last three years have been good to Major League Baseball’s San Francisco Giants, who won two World Series crowns and emerged as a contender to win another in 2013. But they haven’t been as good to the roughly 800 workers who staff AT&T Park, the ballpark on San Francisco Bay the Giants call home.

Those workers, who staff AT&T Park’s concession stands, restaurants, and kitchens, haven’t had a pay increase since their contract with Centerplate, the company that staffs and maintains concessions at the stadium, expired in 2009. The workers, affiliated with Unite HERE Local 2, say negotiations have stalled, leading them to authorize a strike in a vote held across the street from the stadium Saturday afternoon.

The vote won’t automatically result in a strike; rather, it gives the union the choice to begin one at a later date. Both sides are set to return to the bargaining table this week for their sixth round of negotiations — and workers will continue to fight for pay increases and against changes to their health care and pension plans, they told ThinkProgress.

“I started here in 2010, and I haven’t seen a raise since I got here,” Anthony Wendlberger, a kitchen worker at AT&T Park said. “We’re not asking for an extravagant lifestyle. Just the basics. And a little respect.”

Negotiations center on three major issues, according to workers and union officials. Workers want pay increases they haven’t received for more than three years, and they are fighting changes to their pensions and health care coverage. They also want increased job security from the Giants in case the franchise doesn’t renew its contract with Centerplate. That would come in the form of a “successorship clause.”

The average AT&T Park employee earns $11,000 a year, according to union officials. The jobs are seasonal, and many hold second jobs, but they receive their health care through Centerplate. Under the current plan, a worker who staffs 10 events in a month receives health care for the next month, but Centerplate wants to increase that to 12 events per month under a new contract, workers said (A Centerplate spokesperson would not confirm that detail). That would make it impossible to obtain health coverage in months like June, when the Giants have just nine home games, and making health care harder to obtain is a major sticking point for the workers.

Gina Antonini, a spokesperson for Centerplate, said the company viewed the strike vote as an “unfortunate step” in the process, adding that it remains “confident the situation can be resolved at the bargaining table.” While Antonini would not offer specific details of Centerplate’s offer, she said it would “provide a pay increase that would keep the workers among the highest paid in the industry.”

Giants’ workers start at $10.45 an hour for their first 50 games and make between $13.52 and $19.44 an hour after that, according to Unite HERE. But in a city like San Francisco, where the cost of living is among the most expensive in the nation, being among the highest paid in the industry doesn’t mean as much as it would in other cities. Wendlberger said he doesn’t make enough to live in San Francisco; instead, he lives near Sacramento, a two-hour drive without traffic. “A lot of times, I might not go home” after games, he said, even though he has a wife and two young children at home. “Gas is expensive, so I stay with my brother or my mom.”

“Some people are saying we’re being greedy,” Wendlberger said. “We’ve got members living in public housing, we’ve got people on public assistance. There’s nothing greedy about wanting a basic lifestyle.”

The ultimate fight may not be with Centerplate but with the Giants franchise, which takes 55 percent of all concession sales, according to Unite HERE. On a $10 concession sale, the Giants’ cut amounts to $5.50, while workers’ salaries and benefits and operational costs are covered by the remaining $4.50. That money “goes straight into their pockets,” Patricia Ramirez, a kitchen worker who has worked Giants games for 13 years, said.

A Unite HERE release said the Giants team value has risen by 40 percent in the last three years, and concession and ticket prices have risen during that time too. Even reducing their share of each sale by 50 cents “would be huge,” Wendlberger said.

“We feel a major part is how much the Giants are taking, and I feel like it would be different if they would just step up to the plate and do the right thing,” he said. “We work for the Giants and their fans.”

“The Giants are the ones with the deeper pockets, the ones who could help,” Ramirez said.

Ultimately, Wendlberger said, the workers are hoping to avoid a strike, a sentiment Centerplate echoed in a Friday release calling on the union to “come to the table to find a solution that is win-win for both sides.”

“None of us want to strike,” Wendlberger said. “We enjoy our jobs. We want our jobs. We just need the basics.”

VIEWPOINT: The Radical Economic Experiment That’s Quietly Keeping The Economy Afloat

It hasn’t really made the front pages, but the United States recently began carrying out a massive and nearly unprecedented economic experiment, and 2013 looks to be the year when the results come in. The question is straightforward: When the economy is in a deep slump, and the government makes things worse by cutting spending, how much can monetary policy do to help? The answer could reshape the way we argue about economic policy, with profound implications for progressives’ economic priorities — and big opportunities, if they can seize them.

First, a quick refresher. Just like blood carries nutrients to the cells of the body, enabling them to function, the flow of money through an economy enables people to keep buying, selling, and earning incomes. Keeping the supply of money in line with the economy’s changing needs is the job of the Federal Reserve, and normally it does so by adjusting interest rates. Raising them sucks money out of the economy and reins in inflation. Cutting them pumps money into the economy, boosting wages and job growth. And most of the time, most economists agree this is the primary tool for guiding the economy out of its periodic slumps.

But with the 2008 crash the United States entered largely uncharted economic waters, and that agreement blew apart. That’s because the Great Recession was so deep that cutting interest rates all the way to zero still wasn’t enough to boost the economy into a recovery. Economists call it the “zero lower bound.” And while it’s a wall that modern western economies don’t hit often, 2013 will be the fifth year running the United States has been up against it.

So far, progressives have tended to side with economists like Paul Krugman and bloggers like Mike Konczal. They argue that monetary policy is severely weakened at the zero lower bound, when government must take over the job of pumping money into the economy by borrowing and spending. They point out that economic growth was a measly 2.5 percent for 2013’s first quarter, and market data suggests the Fed has failed to convince anyone it’s willing to let inflation get unusually high before it hits the brakes. This despite multiple rounds of “quantitative easing,” an attempt by the Fed to get around the zero lower bound by purchasing huge numbers of financial instruments, thus injecting money into the economy

But economists like David Beckworth and Scott Sumner countered that the economy’s 2.5 percent growth rate stuck around despite blows from multiple rounds of spending cuts, the European crisis, and worries about China. In fact, as Beckworth pointed out, government spending began shrinking by the start of 2010 — yet the economy just kept puttering along at 2.5 percent.

Other points in Beckworth and Sumner’s favor: Before sequestration, the latest round of across-the-board spending cuts, began, the group Macroeconomic Advisors projected growth for the first quarter below 2.5 percent if sequestration didn’t happen. Then the May 3 jobs report, which came out after Konczal’s piece, was so good it was almost shocking. Matt Yglesias and Ryan Avent, two other fans of monetary policy’s salutary effects, pointed to other data sources that suggest the Fed actually has been able to raise long-term inflation expectations.

So this looks like at least a preliminary win for team monetary policy. Granted, the evidence is also very preliminary. Getting economic data in real time is tough, and the full force of sequestration still hasn’t hit. So at a minimum, we won’t have a better idea until at least the second half of this year. But there’s a real possibility monetary policy has put a floor under economic growth — despite the government’s demented insistence on spending cuts and sequestration — and might even be able to do more if the Fed gets more ambitious.

So what if QE3 continues apace, sequestration remains in effect, and economic growth just keeps chugging along around 2.5 percent? What should our take-away be?

Well, Beckworth and Sumner tend to be fans of austerity and small government, for obvious reasons: if fiscal drag can always be offset by monetary policy, why not cut away? But this logic can be turned on its head, because recessions drive up spending and drive down revenues, even when policy itself remains unchanged. Far more than the real-but-modest imbalance between tax and spending left by the Bush presidency, the 2008 crash is what drove the federal government deep into the red. Employment and incomes dropped, so tax receipts dried up. But more people became impoverished and unemployed, thus qualifying for safety net programs, meaning spending automatically increased. Conversely, nothing balances a budget like economic growth. If monetary policy really has the power to guide us back out of even the steepest recession, then that is the way to reduce deficits, not austerity.

Progressives need to make monetary policy something politicians have to answer for. The Fed’s policy is set by the 12 voting members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), seven of whom are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. This process, and the views on monetary policy of the people who are appointed by it, deserves every bit as much scrutiny from activists, organizations, and politicians as Supreme Court nominations. Republicans and Tea Partiers have relentlessly warn of runaway inflation and denounced quantitative easing, even in the midst of the slump. But outside a rarified group of bloggers, there’s been no serious pushback from the left, or even any real sense that monetary policy is understood as a specific issue worth getting mad about.

Unfortunately, the other five voting members are not vetted by democratically elected officials, and are instead drawn from the Fed’s district banks. That means they come from a social and professional milieu likely to bias them in favor of the worldview of the financial industry, business owners, and the wealthy. Those groups all have vested interests in minimizing inflation while ignoring job growth.

Still, the Fed’s recent announcement — that quantitative easing will be open-ended, with an eye to getting unemployment below 6.5 percent, and allowing inflation to go as high as 2.5 percent — was step in the right direction. But the inflation threshold is too low. Arguably, 4 percent would better balance stable prices with the need for job growth. The Fed is also limiting its purchases to the same amount every month: $85 billion. It’s hinted it might start varying that based on how it reads the economy’s needs, and progressives should pressure it to do so. As Beckworth put it, buying the same amount every month is like putting the same amount of pressure on the gas pedal, no matter what sort of terrain you’re driving over.

Finally, we need a wholesale reform of the way the Fed does business, making the institution more accountable to the needs of everyday working Americans. The simplest way, as Matt Yglesias recommended, would be to cut the five un-appointed members out of the FOMC’s decision-making process. That, or find some other way to bring the entire board under direct accountability to elected officials.

The Fed’s mandate could use a touch up as well. Right now, it merely instructs that inflation be kept down, and employment be kept up. All the Fed’s actual targets are of its own devising, and it can change them as it sees fit. It’s not obvious when economic trends are above or below where the Fed wants them to be, or how it intends to move in response. So Fed watchers pour over its pronouncements in a recurring act of glorified tea leaf reading, parsing the statements for clues of intent or disagreement amongst the FOMC members.

The process is so absurdly vague that, as Konczal noted, the bursts of news from the FOMC’s internal divisions undermine the Fed’s ability to credibly promise sustained monetary stimulus. In the vacuum of certainty, economic players often assume the Fed will put the brakes on the economy as soon as inflation begins to tick up. (There’s that bias in favor of the wealthy again.) The Fed’s targets and its obligation to hit them should be explicitly given to it by law. That could be an explicit inflation target, or a nominal gross domestic product target — which combines the level of inflation and GDP growth — as Sumner and Beckworth have suggested.

Zooming back out to the big picture, the fact is that the political forces pushing for fiscal austerity are the same ones pushing for monetary austerity. Movement in progressives’ favor on one issue is likely to bleed into the other. So while Krugman was wrong to dismiss the case for monetary policy as quickly as he did, his final conclusion was right: we should be throwing every policy tool we’ve got at the economic slump.

It’s just that up until now, progressives haven’t been giving monetary policy the respect it deserves. 2013 is the year they should start.

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