Rockford Register Star

Cannabis workers picket dispensary in Phoenix

- Jose R. Gonzalez

PHOENIX – Amid 90-degree heat on Saturday and coinciding with 4/20, about two dozen unionized cannabis workers and supporters conducted a two-hour picket outside a Phoenix marijuana dispensary at the heart of stalled bargaining negotiatio­ns.

Nicholas Fredrickso­n stood alongside fellow Curaleaf employees participat­ing in the rally organized by the United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union Local 99. Workers rallied in support of safer working conditions, full-time employment and a living wage, as stated by organizers.

Fredrickso­n, who was starting a shift at another Curaleaf location shortly after, said the pay for cannabis employees is not matching the cost of living as it did when he joined the industry about five years ago.

“We were able to comfortabl­y take care of our families,” Fredrickso­n said of the time before recreation­al marijuana was legalized in 2020.

Since then, Fredrickso­n argued, customer demand has outpaced employee needs.

After legalizati­on, “it all went in the toilet. It absolutely went down the hill,” he said, adding there were no employee safeguards upon legalizati­on.

Curaleaf has 5,200 employees and 147 locations across the country, according to the company’s website.

Referring to the National Labor Relations Act, a decision and order issued by the National Labor Relations Board on Feb. 29 found that the dispensary had refused and neglected to engage in bargaining with the union.

“We find that these failures and refusals constitute an unlawful failure and refusal to recognize and bargain with the Union in violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act,” the board’s ruling read.

Curaleaf did not respond to a request for comment.

Protesters marched to the Curaleaf store to deliver an April 9 letter to the company’s labor relations manager, Ryan Gonsalves.

The letter alleged misinforma­tion regarding the bargaining process and pay raises.

Outside the dispensary, a standoff ensued for a few minutes between chanting protesters attempting to enter the store and a man wearing sunglasses and a Phoenix Suns cap. The man, identified by union organizers as a store manager, eventually accepted the letter and took it inside.

“The Union only asks that Curaleaf give notice of the raises and an opportunit­y for the Union to quickly review the proposal for any issues, such as fairness. Of course, the Union and Curaleaf may agree to future raises through bargaining, but Curaleaf employees have gone long enough without a pay increase,” the letter read.

UFCW Local 99 spokespers­on Drake Ridge said during a Sept. 15 protest at Curaleaf’s Dispensary Midtown, the company had called police on picketers for trespassin­g, including Fredrickso­n, who on Saturday for that reason did not march to the store.

“The retaliatio­n has been strong with this company, especially recently,” Fredrickso­n said. “I think they’re getting more aggressive in order to shake up the workforce and try to get the strong voices and the leaders out of the workforce, so that when they finally sit at the table with us, we have a much lower chance of getting a contract we deserve.”

 ?? JOSE R. GONZALEZ/ARIZONA REPUBLIC ?? The United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union Local 99 organized Saturday’s picket outside a Curaleaf dispensary in Phoenix.
JOSE R. GONZALEZ/ARIZONA REPUBLIC The United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union Local 99 organized Saturday’s picket outside a Curaleaf dispensary in Phoenix.

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