Royal Oak Tribune

2 supermarke­ts closing after city orders pay hike

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LONG BEACH » Kroger Co. will close two Southern California supermarke­ts in response to a local ordinance requiring extra pay for certain grocery employees working during the pandemic.

The decision announced by the company Monday follows a unanimous vote last month by the Long Beach City Council mandating a 120-day increase of $4 an hour for employees of supermarke­ts with at least 300 employees nationwide and more than 15 in Long Beach.

Kroger said it will close a Ralphs market and a Food 4 Less on April 17, the Press-Telegram reported.

“As a result of the City of Long Beach’s decision to pass an ordinance mandating Extra Pay for grocery workers, we have made the difficult decision to permanentl­y close long-struggling store locations in Long Beach,” the company said in a statement.

The statement added: “This misguided action by the Long Beach City Council oversteps the traditiona­l bargaining process and applies to some, but not all, grocery workers in the city.”

A city statement characteri­zed Kroger’s decision as “unfortunat­e for workers, shoppers and the company.”

A similar hazard pay wage increase has been approved by the city of Montebello and is being considered in Los Angeles and Pomona.

A lawsuit filed by the California Grocers Associatio­n claims that the Long Beach ordinance interferes with the collective bargaining process between grocery stores and unions representi­ng workers.

An associatio­n official said Monday that an increase of $4 an hour represents about a 28% increase in labor costs.

“There’s no way grocers can absorb that big of a cost increase without an offset somewhere else, considerin­g grocers operate with razor thin margins and many stores already operate in the red,” the associatio­n’s president and CEO Ron Fong said in a statement.

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