Food Service Workers Picket for a Fair Contract and No Strikebreakers on CT State University Campuses
NEW HAVEN, CT—September 17, 2025—Union members and allies rallied on Southern Connecticut State University’s campus to demand a fair contract for Sodexo workers at CT State University campuses. In addition, workers called on university leadership to advocate for a peaceful resolution and forbid all strike-breaking tactics from CT State University campuses.
At the rally Nicholas McDonald, a food service worker at SCSU, emphasized the hardship he and his co-workers are facing. ““I’ve been talking to my coworkers. We’re all talking about how times are hard and we need a fair contract,” he said. “We’re in this fight and we’re not going to back down, because this is about survival.”
Joshua Stanley, Secretary Treasurer of Local 217, framed the struggle within a broader national conversation about economic inequality. “It is food service workers like those at CCSU and SCSU who are saying enough is enough, we need a fair contract now.” He urged Sodexo to consider the quality of life for its workers.
A huge inflated Scabby the Rat caught students' attention and some took photos after learning about the contract fight of the food service workers who make their meals. Three huge billboards with photos of all the workers were headlined, “We Don't Want to Strike But We Will.”
After rallying in front of Connecticut Hall with union allies, New Haven Rising and elected officials the picket moved across campus for a second rally.
Two
hundred and eighty UNITE HERE Local 217 food service workers at SCSU,
CCSU, and WCSU have been negotiating a new contract with their
employer, Sodexo, since March. The $9 billion multinational company
is refusing to meet the workers’ demands of a real living wage and
negotiations for a fair contract have stalled.
As a result of these stalled negotiations, hundreds of Local 217 food service workers picketed Sodexo on CCSU’s campus in August to demand a fair contract. Workers and allies sent nearly 1,700 letters to university leadership calling on them to support the workers’ demands for a fair contract. And democratic leaders from around the state reached out to university leadership urging resolution of the labor dispute.
Instead of encouraging a peaceful resolution to the labor dispute on campus, after the August picket university leadership publicly endorsed the company’s “contingency plans” in the event that the company forces the workers out on strike. Endorsing strikebreaking tactics such as the use of replacement workers and meal tickets for outside venues and food trucks encourage a disruptive and wasteful labor conflict instead of resolving it.
Democratic elected officials from around the
state have already urged the company to work towards a fair contract
and encouraged the university leadership to support the workers.
Governor Ned Lamont and Lt. Governor Susan Bysiewicz attended the picket at SCSU saying “UNITE HERE has always stood up for workers’ rights, dignity, better wages and benefits at the University of New Haven, the Omni Hotel, the Hyatt and more—and from picket lines to rallies, we’ve fought alongside them.”
The went on to say, “ We support the members of UNITE HERE Local 217, who provide quality food service to our university campuses and ask Sodexo to step up and negotiate in good faith. These workers have kept our campuses running during challenging times, ensured students and faculty had access to food and now are simply asking for living wages that catch up with inflation. Let’s get this deal done.”
Senate
President Pro Temp;ore Martin Looney also joined the picket at SCSU.
Standing firm for the rights of the workers he said, “Public
universities must never endorse strike-breaking tactics that will
protract a dispute that would damage the academic community and
divide our campuses. Especially when the dispute is between a
multibillion-dollar company and workers who pay taxes that fund the
universities and live in the university communities,”
“The
universities need to be clear with Sodexo that the only solution to
end this labor crisis is to bargain a fair contract with Local 217.”
Looney saaid.
Nick McDonald, a food service worker at Southern
said, “I’ve been talking to my coworkers. We're all talking about
how times are hard and we need a fair contract. We’re in this fight
and we’re not going to back down, because this is about survival.”
“We are sending two messages today,” said Stanley. “First, we want to get this done, but if the company is not ready to do that, we are setting strike votes. Second, public university leadership in Connecticut must take positions in line with the Democratic Party and basic respect for workers by saying no scabs on campus. Saying yes to plans for strikebreakers is not only going against moral principles, it makes a prolonged labor conflict more likely.”
As negotiations remain at a deadlock, the food service workers are not backing down. They continue to rally for a contract that provides a living wage and better working conditions, asserting their fight is about survival and economic justice.
SCSU food service employees are scheduled to vote on whether to authorize a strike on September 24, 2025.
No comments:
Post a Comment