Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2020 02:56 PM
  • Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

DELTA, B.C. — Worrying about being infected with COVID-19 at the grocery store where she works has become part of the job for Kelly Ferguson, who lives with her 90-year-old mother.

"I'm terrified of getting my mom sick," said Ferguson, adding that her mother's caregiver stopped coming by five weeks ago so she and her sister ensure one of them is home from work to fill that role. 

Ferguson began working at FreshCo last December when Safeway rebranded the store as part of a restructuring by Nova Scotia-based Empire Co. Ltd.

Grocery store employees are considered essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ferguson said she earns minimum wage of $13.85 an hour, with a recent temporary top-up of $2 per hour after the first 20 hours.

Sobeys, which operates FreshCo and other stores including IGA and Thrifty Foods, is among employers that are temporarily offering so-called hero pay.

"I don't feel like a hero," Ferguson said. "I'm just trying to pay my bills."

She said the strain of constantly keeping her physical distance from customers weighs heavily on her, and other workers deemed essential may face an accumulation of mental health stress after the pandemic.

While most customers have been courteous, some have allowed their frustrations over the shortage of items like flour and paper towels to spill over, including one person who recently threw a jug of milk at a cashier, Ferguson said.

"They're impatient and they're pissed off because they can't get what they want," she said.

Ferguson said employers that are offering extra pay should remember grocery store workers' ongoing contributions after the pandemic by improving their wages.

Sobeys spokeswoman Jacquelin Weatherbee said 75 cases of COVID-19 were identified between April 1 and 20 in its stores across the country, 45 of them in Quebec alone.

She said employees at corporately owned stores, just over half the 1,500 stores the company operates, as well as those at 31 distribution centres are receiving an extra $50 per week, regardless of the number of hours they work, and a $2 an hour top-up after 20 hours.

Most of the franchisee stores, like the one where Ferguson works, are also providing those incentives, Weatherbee said.

"That was put in place so that employees who work minimal hours through a part-time schedule, maybe four hours a week, would still be recognized in a meaningful way," she said.

Sobeys will assess in mid-May how long the extra-pay measure will continue, Weatherbee said, adding the company is limiting the number of customers allowed in at one time and providing personal protection equipment to employees.

"We have been doing absolutely everything we can to increase our access to masks, gloves, hand sanitizer, everything that's needed to keep our employees safe. We were the first grocer to install plexiglass shields in all of our stores across the country."

Loblaw Cos. Ltd. said it has extended its essential pay premium of $2 an hour into May.

In Loblaws stores where an employee tests positive for COVID-19, it says a "deep cleaning" is done overnight. Employees who work closely with someone who tests positive can stay home in self-isolation with pay, it says.

"With the community spread of COVID-19, it's unfortunate but probable that some stores will be affected," the company says in a statement. "That's why we have enhanced our sanitization and protections."

Paul Meinema, national president of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, said some employers are limiting customer numbers but that's been inconsistent.

"We believe that this is one of the biggest difficulties we have and almost uniformly is not done as well as it could be," he said. "We have bunching up in the aisles. We have people who are required to stock shelves but there are other people coming down those aisles."

Loblaw says it has provided its stores with gloves and masks, but it is up to individual workers to decide whether they wear them. It has also installed plexiglass barriers at each cash, limited customer numbers and, like Sobeys, uses floor decals to encourage physical distancing.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, British Columbia's provincial health officer, recently said barriers installed at checkouts should provide sufficient protection for retail workers.

"I would reassure people that that is one of the simplest and most effective things we can do to prevent transmission," Henry said.

Prof. Rafael Gomez of the University of Toronto said as non-unionized stores like Costco and Walmart have expanded their food retail spaces, it has led to lower wages elsewhere in the sector.

"Keeping wages and conditions lower than they would be and prices higher for consumers set us up for this reckoning we've had under COVID," said Gomez, director of the university's Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources.

In food retail, employees at some stores operated by the same company are unionized while others are not, he said, adding that greater recognition of grocery store jobs should translate into higher pay.

"These are critical lifelines now for the rest of society so these people should be able to get a lot more than they're getting."

Companies in this story: (TSX:L, TSX:EMP.A)

Camille Bains, The Canadian Press

 

 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Museum of Surrey’s Latest Exhibition Explores How We’re All Connected to the Arctic

A scientific and cultural journey to the Arctic is the theme of a new travelling exhibition opening Thursday, March 5 at the Museum of Surrey.

Museum of Surrey’s Latest Exhibition Explores How We’re All Connected to the Arctic

Decade-Long Health Care Battle Draws To A Close Today In British Columbia

Dr. Brian Day began his battle a decade ago against the British Columbia government.    

Decade-Long Health Care Battle Draws To A Close Today In British Columbia

Pipeline Talks With Hereditary Chiefs Resume For Second Day In Northern B.C.

SMITHERS, B.C. - The hereditary chiefs of the Wet'suwet'en meet for a second day with senior federal and provincial ministers today as they try to break an impasse in a pipeline dispute that's sparked national protests and led to disruptions in the economy.

Pipeline Talks With Hereditary Chiefs Resume For Second Day In Northern B.C.

PICS: Sikh One Billion Rising Seva Initiative Prepares 2,300 Care Packages Across Canada

One Billion Rising began as a call to action based on the staggering statistic that 1 in 3 women on the planet will be beaten or raped during her lifetime. With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than one billion women and girls.

PICS: Sikh One Billion Rising Seva Initiative Prepares 2,300 Care Packages Across Canada

World Sikh Organization Welcomes Tabling of Sikh Genocide Awareness Week Bill in Ontario Legislature

The Bill recognizes that Sikhs continue to be impacted by the genocide and other atrocity crimes perpetrated by the Government of India both in 1984 and in the decade that followed.

World Sikh Organization Welcomes Tabling of Sikh Genocide Awareness Week Bill in Ontario Legislature

Tejwant Danjou’s Guilty Plea Withdrawn In Rama Guaravarapu Murder Trial

BC Supreme Court in Kelowna on Friday allowed Tejwant Danjou, 70, a real estate agent from Surrey to withdraw his guilty plea in the second-degree murder of Rama Guaravarapu.

Tejwant Danjou’s Guilty Plea Withdrawn In Rama Guaravarapu Murder Trial