A small variety of employees and supporters picket outside the headquarters of drugstore chain Walgreens during a three-day walkout by pharmacists in Deerfield, Illinois, November 1, 2023.
Vincent Alban | Reuters
The organizers of a recent retail pharmacy staff walkout are helping to launch a national push to organize those employees on Wednesday, a possible step to wide-scale unionization of hundreds of pharmacists and technicians across the U.S. for the primary time.
A latest partnership between the organizers and IAM Healthcare – a union representing hundreds of health-care professionals – goals to help pharmacy staff unionize to address what many employees call unsafe staffing levels and increasing workloads throughout the industry, including at major drugstore chains resembling Walgreens and CVS.
The push to unionize, dubbed “The Pharmacy Guild,” also calls for legislative and regulatory change to establish higher standards of practice in pharmacies to protect patients.
Notably, the overwhelming majority of pharmacists and technicians from Walgreens and CVS haven’t any union representation, while pharmacy staff from a handful of grocery retailers resembling Kroger do, according to Shane Jerominski, a walkout organizer who helps to launch the hassle through his pharmacy advocacy platform on social media, The Accidental Pharmacist.
The push to organize staff who aren’t currently represented by a union only adds to what has been one of the lively years for the U.S. labor movement in recent history.
A spokesperson for CVS said Wednesday that the corporate is engaging in a “continuous two-way dialogue” with pharmacists to directly address their concerns, and is making some changes in response to recent feedback.
CVS has productive relationships with unions who represent its employees and “respect our employees’ right to either unionize or refrain from doing so,” the spokesperson added.
A spokesperson for Walgreens previously told CNBC that the corporate has taken several steps in its pharmacies “to make sure that our teams can consider providing optimal patient care.” Each Walgreens and CVS also said last week that the walkout of their pharmacy staff last week had a minimal impact on their pharmacy operations.
Jerominski said the brand new partnership specifically allows pharmacy staff who’re inquisitive about unionizing to fill out a public form on a latest website, which can ask for his or her name, employer, pharmacy location, contact information and message they need to pass along. IAM Healthcare and the walkout organizers will then launch unionization campaigns in certain districts or areas with high support for organizing.
The Pharmacy Guild hopes to get 100,000 pharmacists and technicians to fill out the shape, Jerominski said. He also predicted that 90% of pharmacists working for Walgreens and CVS shall be unionized in five years.
Jerominksi called the push for unionization the “next logical step” after the walkout last week, and earlier work stoppages by some Walgreens pharmacy staff across the U.S. and CVS employees from the Kansas City area.
Organizers haven’t got a transparent estimate of how many individuals participated within the walkout last week, but a poll they launched on the social media page for the hassle showed that no less than 200 employees across Walgreens, CVS and Rite Aid participated.
“Everyone has been asking me, what’s next? I feel that the time for walkouts is completed,” Jerominski, who can also be a former Walgreens worker, told CNBC. “I feel that so as to effect change from this point, we now have to organize. Unionization is just not going to change every thing, but it surely’s going to help us secure higher working conditions for pharmacists.”
The Pharmacy Guild’s founding statement also describes the hassle as a call to take “this powerful social movement of pharmacy professionals to the following level through developing organizational infrastructure and institutional influence essential to make real change.”
How is the brand new unionization effort different?
The Pharmacy Guild doesn’t follow the usual approach to organizing staff — but Jerominski believes that is why it would work.
Typically, a pharmacy location that wishes to unionize would reach out to a union, meet with a neighborhood union organizer and begin asking employees or neighboring stores in the event that they’re inquisitive about the hassle. Jerominski said one in all the problems with that approach is that “those efforts can find yourself getting out to corporate management, which might are available and suppress the entire thing from a whole district standpoint.”
“There’s numerous things corporations can do to combat unionization,” Jerominski said.
Meanwhile, Jerominski said The Pharmacy Guild could allow several unionization campaigns to launch at the identical time, which could make it harder to intervene.
He also called the brand new effort a better approach to unionizing.
“In the event you want to, all you might have to do is fill it out,” Jerominski said. “We’ll do the remaining. We’ll take it from there, with the backing from a national union.”
As well as to Jerominski’s account, two other social media platforms called RxComedy and #PizzaIsNotWorking are helping to launch the hassle with IAM Healthcare. Each platforms have long advocated for safer working conditions for pharmacy staff, and the founder and other members of #PizzaIsNotWorking helped to organize the recent walkouts.
The three platforms together have 300,000 followers, according to a release announcing The Pharmacy Guild.
The accounts will use their reach to bring attention to The Pharmacy Guild and supply updates on the progress of the unionization effort, Jerominski said.
“The ability of a extremely centralized audience and having the ability to push this on a regular basis – that is a giant a part of what our roles are,” Jerominski said.