Some Market Basket workers told to report to work or be fired
By Jack Newsham
| Globe Correspondent August 12, 2014
With hundreds of part-time Market Basket employees applying for unemployment benefits after being left without work, the company told about 200 employees they will be fired unless they report to work by Friday.
The employees, who walked off their jobs in July at Market Baskets warehouses and its headquarters in Tewksbury to protest the firing of former company president Arthur T. Demoulas, received letters Tuesday signed by Felicia Thornton and Jim Gooch, the companys cochief executives. The letters instructed those workers to report to work by Aug. 15.
Should you choose to ignore either of these directives, the company will consider you to have abandoned your job, thereby ending your employment with the company, the letter said.
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Some Market Basket employees contacted by the Globe seemed unswayed by the letter. Anne Browne, 23, said that neither she nor any of her protesting co-workers in the companys IT department would return to their posts until Arthur T. Demoulas regained control of the company.
If anything, it strengthens our resolve to bring Artie back, said Browne.
Others expressed anxiety. Chris Elkins, 55, who supervises the courtesy booths at the companys 71 stores, said she didnt think management would actually fire anyone. But if she was fired, she said, she would have to apply for unemployment benefits and continue living off her savings.
Im a widow. I have one income, and I havent gotten paid in four weeks, she said. Im very nervous about it.
A spokesman for Market Baskets leadership said that not all protesting employees had received letters. Protest leaders say about 700 employees have walked off the job. The spokesman said that those who had been approved to use their vacation time had not been sent a letter.
Ron Seeber, a professor of labor relations at Cornell University, said he was surprised the companys leadership had not delivered such an explicit ultimatum sooner. The letter to employees was an ominous development, he said, but probably an ineffective one.
Two attorneys said the firing of nonmanagerial employees could be illegal. Ellen Messing, a labor and employment attorney who represents workers, said that even nonunionized employees have a right under the National Labor Relations Act to take collective action to support their terms and conditions of employment.
Jerome Weinstein, a partner at Hirsch Roberts Weinstein who represents management in labor and employment cases, also said Market Basket seemed to be risking legal action. Weinstein said he felt the letters allegation that protesting employees had effectively abandoned their jobs was a stretch under the law. However, he added that the leadership of Arthur T. Demoulas may not be considered a condition of employment that employees could legally protest.
There may be an issue of whether theyre really withholding services in a way thats recognized under the law, Weinstein said.
A spokesperson for the National Labor Relations Board said the board had not received any complaints from Market Basket employees or managers and was not investigating.
A spokesperson for Market Baskets management declined to comment on the legality of the firing.
Meanwhile, a few of the thousands of part-time employees who had their hours cut this week applied for unemployment benefits, according to officials in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.