LOS ANGELES (AP) — Workers at seven CVS pharmacies in Southern California have gone on strike for better pay and health care and to protest what they say is bad-faith contract bargaining by the company. The walkout, which affected four stores in Los Angeles and three in Orange County, began Friday morning and continued into the weekend. On Saturday outside one of the LA stores, strikers urged customers not to cross the picket lines.
Melissa Acosta, a pharmacy technician who is on the contract bargaining committee, accused the company of “intimidating workers, observing them, getting in the way of them speaking to union representatives.” The CVS locations affected have remained open, staffed by managers and nonunion employees. Workers planned to continue picketing until negotiations resume Wednesday.
The strike was authorized by a vote of the two local United Food and Commercial Workers unions involved on Sept. 29, with more than 90% in favor. “We're disappointed that our UFCW member colleagues have gone on strike at a few select locations in the Los Angeles area,” company spokesperson Amy Thibault said in a statement.
Thibault said CVS has made progress on getting to a final contract and reached “tentative agreements” to raise pay and increase the company's health insurance contributions. Acosta said she cannot meet the cost of the insurance CVS offers and instead is enrolled in the state-run program Covered California. “In my nine years of working with CVS, I.