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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Is Whole Foods Just Another Evil Corporation?

By Sharon Smith, CounterPunch. Posted May 11, 2009.


Beneath the surface of Whole Foods' fuzzy, progressive image is a company hell-bent on preventing its workers from unionizing.
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Whole Foods Market is a highly profitable corporation that far outperforms its competitors, while maintaining an aura of commitment to social justice and environmental responsibility.

Its clientele is attracted not only to its brightly lit array of pristine fruits and vegetables, organically farmed meats and delectable (yet healthy) recipes, but also to the notion that the mere act of shopping at Whole Foods is helping to change the world.

In 2007, Whole Foods launched its "Whole Trade Guarantee," stating its aim as advancing the fair trade movement -- encouraging higher wages and prices paid to farmers in poor countries while promoting environmentally safe practices.

In addition, Whole Foods announced that 1 percent of proceeds will be turned over to its own Whole Planet Foundation, which supports microloans to entrepreneurs in developing countries. Meanwhile, the company's Animal Compassion Foundation seeks to improve living conditions for farm animals, while stores periodically hold "5 Percent Days," when they donate 5 percent of sales for that day to an area nonprofit or educational organization.

Whole Foods also has a distinctive reputation for rejecting traditional corporate management models in favor of decentralized decision-making, described as an experiment in workplace democracy.

There are no departments at Whole Foods stores, only "teams" of employees. And Whole Foods has no managerial job titles, just team leaders and assistant team leaders. Nor does the company admit to having any workers, only team members who meet regularly to decide everything from local suppliers to who should get hired onto the team.

Generally, the company strives to achieve consensus at team meetings, where workers brainstorm about new ways to raise productivity. And new hires need to win the votes of at least two-thirds of team members to make the cut.

The liberal dress code at Whole Foods allows nose rings, Mohawks, visible tattoos and other expressions of individuality to help promote its stated goal of "team member happiness" for its relatively young workforce. Each team takes regular expeditions, known as "team builds," to local farms or other enterprises to educate themselves on how to better serve their customers.

When team members show extra effort on the job, team leaders award them with "high fives" that can be used to enter an on-site raffle to win a gift card. When a team member gets fired, it is sadly announced as a "separation."

For all its decentralization, the "unique culture" so beholden to Whole Foods' supporters bears the distinct stamp of cofounder and CEO John Mackey, who declared in 1992, a year after Whole Foods went public, "We're creating an organization based on love instead of fear."

The former hippie is known for shunning suits and ties and wearing shorts and hiking boots to meetings -- and for insisting that before the end of every business meeting, everyone says something nice about everyone else in a round of "appreciations." In a 2004 Fast Company article, business writer Charles Fishman favorably quoted a former Whole Foods executive calling Mackey an "anarchist" for his eccentric executive style.

* * *

But something sinister lurks beneath the surface of Whole Foods' progressive image. Somehow, Mackey has managed to achieve multimillionaire status while his employees' hourly wages have remained in the $8 to $13 range for two decades. With an annual turnover rate of 25 percent, the vast majority of workers last no more than four years and thus rarely manage to achieve anything approaching seniority and the higher wages that would accompany it. If Whole Foods' workers are younger than the competitions, that is the intention.

But another secret to Whole Foods' success is its shockingly high prices. When Wal-Mart began promoting its own organic products last year, Whole Foods' Southwest Regional President Michael Besancon scoffed at the notion that Wal-Mart could present serious competition.


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Yes, Virginia
Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy on May 11, 2009 12:08 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods is just another evil corporation.


FREE AMERICA

VOCA, NOW !!

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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» parasitic Posted by: Moore Hognutz
» RE: parasitic Posted by: wrinklemomma
» RE: parasitic Posted by: Natasha_W
» Pathetic unions! Posted by: 2thepoint
» Correction: Pathetic management! Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: Yes, Virginia Posted by: flymulla
Just for more info on this organic = good company misconception,
Posted by: and_abottleofrum on May 11, 2009 1:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I used to work for an organic food company; we produced and distributed product to organic retailers, Whole Foods among them. Anyway we occasionally shipped expired food bars after "re-labeling"/"re-stickering" the original expiration dates on them. Basically we just put new stickers, with a newer expiration date, over the old expiration date in such a way it wasn't visible anything had been altered.

I was low on the totem pole so was often the one who did the actual re-stickering - on orders from my boss, who was acting on orders from his boss, who was acting on orders from one of the company's owners (it's not a big company).

As a note, expiration dates are not a matter of federal regulation. There's no law requiring them, the FDA doesn't regulate expired food according to stated expiration dates but rather according to whether it stinks or shows other signs of obviously being unfit for healthful consumption, but rather expiration dates are a public relations custom voluntarily engaged in by food suppliers.

The issue with what I was doing - and I objected but was just re-told to put the new labels on - is falsifying pertinent information about the product's production date, and if the buyers (retail distributors and individual consumers) had this information it might have affected their purchasing decisions. Thus falsifying the expiration dates, which reflect the production dates, might have constituted fraud. But Whole Foods and the other buyers never knew.

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Is Whole Foods Just Another Evil Corporation?
Posted by: mmckinl on May 11, 2009 1:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes ...

They just have a better PR program than Walmart ...

BTW ... Where is the Employee Free Choice Act these days?

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» RE: Employee Free Choice Act Posted by: realmuzik
» RE: mployee Free Choice Act Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS
To add to what I wrote, the products we re-stickered were not the hot sellers.
Posted by: and_abottleofrum on May 11, 2009 1:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The more popular flavors would often be produced and then shipped out within a week - sometimes the same day. The shelf life this company had determined for these food bars was a day and a week from their production date. Some of the less popular flavors sat in the warehouse for longer than that, so we had a few pallets worth of expired food that had gone through it's entire shelf life without selling out.

Each pallet of this stuff cost almost $5,000 to make, so when orders came in for a cases of the less popular bars, rather than ordering a new production run on the production lines, management saw it was more cost effective to send out the expired leftovers after falsifying their expiration dates.

Even on the order lists that the truck drivers took with them when hauling the product to the distributor we falsified the lot numbers (which express the production and hence expiration date) of the cases of these re-stickered bars that were supplied to the buyer. One time I slipped up and recorded the old (real) lot number of some re-stickered cases on the packing slip and thought the buyer might notice this funny business. Apparently they didn't, and I doubt the guys in their receiving department (or any warehouse receiving department) look that closely at the details of received merchandise. It's customary just to give a cursory look-see at the newly arrived pallets, make sure there are no obvious defects, sign the paperwork verifying everything's in order, and put it the pallets in their proper section of the warehouse until they're needed.

Anyway that's how this re-labeling phenomenon at the company I worked for works. It's about saving money on production costs.

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Whole Foods Critics Beware ...
Posted by: realmuzik on May 11, 2009 1:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods CEO John Mackey is known for using various pseudonyms "trolling" defenses of his profiteering free enterprise on any message boards or web sites criticizing his for-profit free enterprise. Should Mackey appear as a pseudonym screen name on here at any given time, be prepared!

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» I'm so tempted. Posted by: Ayla87
Prop 8?
Posted by: Erik1968 on May 11, 2009 2:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Direct democracy has its problems, too y'know...

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» The problem there... Posted by: buffeliscious
» RE: YUPPIES ARE THE PROBLEM Posted by: joeocho88
» Actually, we know. Posted by: Eddie Van Helsing
WHOLE FOODS PROVES THAT BIGNESS BECOMES BADNESS
Posted by: kunndunn on May 11, 2009 2:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a twenty-year loyal shopper at Whole Foods I have become totally disllusioned with their slick image as "progressive." My "love-affair" idealism with Whole Foods has ended in an abrupt "divorce." The amount of food returned for not being "quality" (my observation) has risen astronomically. The C.E.O's antics were enough for anyone to be "turned-off." If we are going to vote with our money, we need to support local alternatives to Whole Foods corporate, congolomate mentality. The young and progressive thinkers and workers are dedicating their ideals to companies such as New Flower Natural Market. New Flower's emphasis on "good customer relations" far exceeds Whole Foods, in-action. I will never set foot in Whole Foods again. They need to be humbled in my humble experience.Their bigness has become badness.

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» Multiple Troll Alerts Posted by: PaulK
» Die Yuppy Sucm, the rest of y'all moonbats are welcome in Buffalo Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars
Interesting
Posted by: PJAW on May 11, 2009 2:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So Mackey is a Libertarian, eh? I can't say that I've ever met one that isn't an asshole, but then again, I'm not sure how far that sets them apart from the rest of us. I think primarily, they tend to be self-centered assholes, whereas we Progressive assholes are more group oriented.

I like Thom Hartmann's evaluation of Libertarians, "They're just Republicans who want to smoke dope and get laid". And we know there are two kinds of Republican assholes, flaming assholes and self-igniting assholes. Examples in the political realm would be Orin Hatch and John Boehner, the latter definitely being self-igniting. I guess Mackey would have to be considered an alternative fuel, flaming asshole.

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» *LOL* Thanks for the wit Posted by: Parcival01
» Clever, clever Posted by: gellero1
Does buying out another "natural foods" supermarket count?
Posted by: jpom22 on May 11, 2009 3:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We had a perfectly divine Wild Oats market going strong here in Reno, NV until Whole Foods bought the place, then closed it down, replacing it with absolutely nothing but prime real estate. About a half mile south, WF opened their store, which feels more like a warehouse than anything else. Had they any integrity and respect for our "free enterprise" system, we'd now have a choice. But no, once again, we're stuck with a monopoly. Walmart put our K-Mart out of business in much the same way. CVS bought out Long's Drugs, which bought out Rite Aid (which was the only place that sold Licorice Altoids). We have one cable company, which charges whatever the hell they please and one oil refinery in the whole Northwest, which is why we pay the absolute highest gas prices in the United States of Fascist America.

This was the first year this cradle Democrat voted for the Green Party candidate and I ain't sorry about it. Bam-bam's in bed with the only power as great as the multinational war industries: the multinational financial oligarchy - the IMF, World Bank, Bank of England, etc.

"Yes We Can"... who are "we" anyway?

Unless the working class wises up and becomes 100% unionized, and then all the unions merge worldwide, into One Big Union... wage slavery and exploitation will just get worse. Labor is our only truly 100% renewable energy source, our only true value, not the US petro-dollar. Labor is not a commodity, to be measured in dollars per hour. Workers make the whole thing possible, not fake currency that's based on nothing at all. The land can still grow crops without money.

Workers united can accomplish anything, but divided, we're at the mercy of greedy, soulless demons, the Cheneys of the world, whose sick, diseased minds think only of acquiring more power to mass murder the hungry, the sick and the poor that just "get in the way."

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Whole Foods isn't perfect but they do carry more local and regional organic produce.
Posted by: maxpayne on May 11, 2009 4:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's hard to find hemp foods, grass fed milk and buttermilk, and stevia to name a few in most grocery stores. Plus, I love the organic clothing. I'll admit that my wife does not quite take the fair trade labels seriously and thinks that it's all cover up and green washing. Ok, so maybe Whole Foods is what one could call the organic Walmart if you will. I would gladly support the local organic small mom and pop stores except there there are too few and they're limited to what they carry.

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» I agree to a degree. Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» I beg to differ! Posted by: dazzle59
Whole Foods is probably the best...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on May 11, 2009 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...we can expect, until the workers are truly united and can make a real difference.

The union busting era that Reagan started is still alive and well. Just wait to see how Bam Bam waters down the Employees Free Choice act.

Amerikkkans are soooo dumbed down now with religion and corporate brainwashing that it will take a real revolution or leader to kick start a REAL union movement again.

I for one will buy local when I can, (I know not everyone can) but it is a start. In the meantime people should at least make Mackey aware that we are on to him.

Maybe once he realizes he is truly exposed, he will regain the conscious he once had when he started the company and cared for the humane treatment of animals, including this time humans.

We can begin by sending a copy of this article to :

Whole Foods Market - National Corporate Office
601 N Lamar Blvd Suite 300
Austin, TX 78703

or calling:

512.477.4455
512.477.5566 voice mail

or even better yet, faxing a copy of this article with your opinion. Can you imagine the excitement at Whole Foods when the fax machine overheats.

512.482.7000 fax

This info is found at their website

http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/company/national.php

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» RE: Whole Foods is probably the best... Posted by: warmmdaddycatt
» RE: I wrote "...the best we can EXPECT..." Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
» "Bam Bam"? Posted by: Beck
» RE: "Bam Bam"? Posted by: thepuffin
» Very, very insightful Posted by: and_abottleofrum
» RE: In my heart I know you are correct... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
wild oats...
Posted by: ellie on May 11, 2009 4:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
had to go to the 'big city' a few weeks back and stopped to shop in the way home... our wild oats was taken over by whole foods a few years back and we had never been in one, so how different can it be???

walked in with a LONG shopping list and left with a bag of carrots, some flat parsley and nothing else... was totally turned off, but the cashier was really sweet, nice and efficient...

never going back... lost customer here... couldn't find the stuff on my list that wild oats carried on a regular basis...

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Pay attention
Posted by: srmtdome on May 11, 2009 5:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a supporter of most of the journalism on Alternet, but articles like this give the rest of the content, as well as liberals and progressives, a bad name. Hysterical name calling and fudging of the facts do not advance a case, they kill it. I have 3 family members who work for Whole Foods, all of whom started in the $8-$13 range of hourly pay that you mention as the only possibility. All of them were subsequently given raises/promoted to above the $13 ceiling that you claim, and all in less than 2 years.

The so-called union-busting in Madison is a myth as well. The local organizers attempted to initiate a voting process in the store by having their operatives take jobs in the store (jobs that could have been held by real employees), and push for a vote...they then quit their jobs en masse with no notice, leaving their wannabe union brethren in the lurch.

Finally, independent studies have shown that Whole Foods pricing is in line with other "A" level grocery stores on the majority of items. Meat and seafood and luxury brand names are more expensive, but their provenance is transparent and proven. This is a HUGE point that you fail to even mention. Americans spend less money on food as a percentage of their income than any other industrialized nation, and we have more health problems than any other industrialized nation...hmmmm. Whole Foods does not allow any additives, preservatives or artificial ingredients in products that they sell, and they have much higher standards for their meat and seafood purveyors than traditional grocery stores. If some people are willing to pay a premium to know where their food comes from, that is their choice. Demonizing the seller of those products is childish and short-sighted. There is not a city on the planet in which there is a Whole Foods that does not also have other grocery options. If people think Whole Foods is too expensive or irresponsible toward their employees, they can shop elsewhere, but that choice is no more or less valid than any other.

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» RE: Pay attention Posted by: Shehova
» RE: Pay attention Posted by: Careowhacked
» The problem is... Posted by: buffeliscious
» RE: Pay attention Posted by: ranger1
» RE: Pay attention Posted by: rayne
» RE: Pay attention Posted by: rayne
BA
Posted by: mnstra on May 11, 2009 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cynicism is a healthier diet than any product from a corp. food chain.
Were you born yesterday or something?

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High Prices/Low Wages
Posted by: aonghus36 on May 11, 2009 6:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think they believe that organic foods is for the elite. Everybody else can just go eat at McDonald's or Wendy's.

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» RE: High Prices/Low Wages Posted by: Ladywolf55
Whole Foods Is Incredibly Expensive and A Monopoly
Posted by: kunndunn on May 11, 2009 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods has become a monopoly in my experience with them for over 20 years. I will from now on, only buy from alternative stores to stop Whole Foods pricing out working people's chance for good food. When I go to my neighborhood alternative, New Flowers Natural Market, I an buy everything I can buy at Whole Foods at exactly half-the-price. We need to support alternative stores to stop Whole Foods from buying up the competition and creating a monopoly.

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Somewhere Between
Posted by: PaulK on May 11, 2009 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ultimately, workers should have some rights, not gifties or handouts which can be yanked away. Workers should be recognized as investors in the company. They bought into the company, and they put their sweat into the company's future.

At the same time, everybody else involved should have some rights in a company. Customers become steady too. They have something riding on the company. So does the local community. So do suppliers. Finally, the investors will walk if they don't get some rights too. Lots of rights.

I have seen nonprofits run into the ground by the executives and sometimes also by the lower-paid staff that they hire. I've seen fantastically wealthy presidents of nonprofit hospitals. No, they don't compare to some of the real investor gougers over at Bank of America and Citigroup, selfish types who take the wow bonuses as they crush the investors. Talk about your five person stifling unions!

One suggestion: we're going to need corporations where workers, customer representatives, the community, and suppliers vote for one or two board members on a corporation's board of directors. Hash problems out early where the real power is in the board room, and don't let issues escalate to the need for a six month strike.

I accept and understand that Whole Foods doesn't live up to all of its ideals. It looks like a pretty good place to work. Across town at Mall-Wart they suck the employees dry and on top of that get caught enslaving illegal humans, locking them in the store at night.

The "elitist yuppie" argument doesn't wash with me. A number of Whole Foods customers will get physically sick if they eat pesticides. These specific people don't shop Mall-Wart for too many organics because Mall-Wart has only a moderate pretense of honesty, and the organic stickers on veggies are easily switched by a 16 year old worker.

I've been writing under the PaulK name far too long to be Mackie.

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» Yuppies really are a problem. Posted by: and_abottleofrum
» Talk about non-critical thinking Posted by: and_abottleofrum
» Actually ... Posted by: LeftWright
» Defining a yuppie Posted by: and_abottleofrum
WF is just another "organic" grocery store and it smells. WALMART RULZ !
Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS on May 11, 2009 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although I hate their slave labor and low wage shit, I'm still happy to shop at Walmart because prices are dead cheap compared to most stores most of the time and I can enjoy all my favorite foods. If you don't like Whole Foods, then shut up and find another organic store to shop around in. Besides, the food's super yummy at Papa John's Pizza, Taco Bell, Mcdonald's, etc ... MORE FOOD AND MORE TAX CUTS !!

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Shop at your local farmer's market
Posted by: progressiveview on May 11, 2009 7:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best way to avoid Whole Foods is to shop at your local farmers market or buy direct from your local small farmers. Another option is to join a CSA. You can find a lot of local producers at:

www.eatwild.com

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» RE: Shop at your local farmer's market Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
It's become a GOP fantasyland
Posted by: Parcival01 on May 11, 2009 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shortly after college, I was talking with an old friend. He suggested, at the time, that we could come up with some ideas, e.g., crossing a suitcase with a backpack. Naively, I said that'd be mixing two incompatible subcultures.

How wrong I was.

My spouse was more inclined to shop at Whole Paycheck than I was. Now we have some smaller shops in which we indulge. Part of the reason was that in 2000 and in 2004, I'd see in the Whole Paycheck parking lot Mercedes Benzes with Bush/Cheney bumperstickers.

I thought, again, how wrong I was those many years ago. The "organic" market had lefty overtones in the old days. Now it's the meeting place for trendy neocons!

Well, this article put the nail on the coffin of my every doing business with Whole Paycheck again.

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Amazing
Posted by: GoKanuks on May 11, 2009 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OMGosh I had no idea! That is amazing, I will NEVER buy anything there again, EVER.

TT
Privacy Center

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Whole Fools
Posted by: QQOblivion on May 11, 2009 7:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the brand-spanking new Whole Foods opened up near me in a ritzy shopping district, I stopped in to take a look. Even though they had just opened, they were selling expired food! (They must have trucked it in from other stores.)
And that is just the food that still had the correct expiration label on it!
(Or maybe the food was WAAAYYYY over expired.)

My brother, years ago, worked one summer here in Colorado on two "organic" farms.
One farm was small, was run by a nice guy, and played by the rules.
But while my brother was working on the big farm one day, he caught them spraying the vegetables with pesticide. My brother asked his boss about that, and he said that "every organic farm does it".
Well -- surprise surprise -- the smaller farm was struggling, while the bigger farm sold its "organic" produce to Whole Foods.

I will never shop in a Whole Foods again. They never have what I am looking for, and when they do, it is expired. Now that they have bought out Wild Oats here in Denver, I am too angered to shop there as well.

I say to everybody, shop at the smaller organic markets near you, IF THERE ARE ANY AVAILABLE -- if Whole Foods has yet to buy them up.

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» ... or run them out of business Posted by: QQOblivion
» For-Prophit is naive Posted by: QQOblivion
» Why do you have to do that? Posted by: Prophit
» I dare say Posted by: Bliss Doubt
Here's the Wild Oats Story
Posted by: clvngodess on May 11, 2009 8:06 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/12/business/12foods.html

I liked Wild Oats. Liked the products, the prices (comparable to Trader Joes, less than Vons) and the people who worked at my local WO.

When I learned of the nasty takeover and buyout, I decided to boycott Whole Foods. I've been in WF, out of line pricing. Not the best lines of product. Wrong vibe all the way around. I may as well shop at Gelsons or Bristol Farms.

I will never set foot in Whole Foods again. I now shop in three locations, one of which is a small mom and pop health food store operation just down the street from WF. I prefer the intimacy, care and service of the employees, and prices for quality products.

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Whole Foods Hype
Posted by: Gaubladt on May 11, 2009 8:15 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole foods hasn't lived up to it's hype; mass produced health and organic food with blanket distribution.
When they moved into my neighborhood, they replaced the best health food store in Texas. Then they started selling massive amounts of wine. They also sell meat and fish. And you can smell it when you walk through the front door.
P.S. But, it is now the only place where I can get nutritional yeast flakes in bulk.

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» uhmm order it online. Posted by: rafaeltoral
WHOLE FOODS IS A STORE BY YUPPIES, FOR YUPPIES, TO YUPPIES
Posted by: joeocho88 on May 11, 2009 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have family members who live in Austin,Texas which is the headquarters of Whole Foods. And I can remember when Whole Foods started out as a "hippie" co-op grocery on North Lamar a few blocks north of the infamous Threadgills. I avoided the place like the plague then and I was wanting to stay out of it now until a couple of my cousins wanted to go inside.
If there is good PR, it is like working for a kindly MASSAH ( who is still better than you and you "darkies damn well better know your place in the cotton patch"-mentality on the old PLANTATION.) A lot of nice warm and fuzzy talk but the usual YUPPIE EXPLOITATION of lower eschelon workers.
Just because there are no whips and chackles and jsut because the boss dresses exxentrically does not mean that there is NOT YUPPIE ETHOS AT WORK.
A YUPPIE IS A YUPPIE IS A YUPPIE AND BY THEIR ACTS SHALL YOU KNOW THEM.
They are the ones who invented the interchangeable, disposable worker and reinvented the worst excesses of the Guilded Age robber barons. They are also the ones who began outsourcing American jobs. They are the ones who invented real estate "flipping" and whose legendary greed has nearly destroyed this country!
Talk about people who need a SERVICE WORKERS UNION! I talked with a few of the workers and succinctly, THE SAME OLD KIND OF STUFF --THE PR MACHINE TALKS A GOOD GAME BUT IT IS STILL MASSAH AND FIELD HANDS. Wal-Mart treats their people with more respect and dignity!
This is a YUPPIE store. All of the shoppers I saw here were YUPPIES with all of their sneering arrogance and HATEFUL ATTITUDE! I also notice quite a few of these SHOPLIFTING since I have a few years in loss prevention but that is to be expected of yuppies --as noted THEY TALK A GOOD GAME but what they really DO is entirely different. Of course when you see there is a whole lot of PRICE GOUGING going on here like yuppie merchants are wont to do, I gotta wonder why so many people want to even be here. The stupid, eating -disorder challenged yuppie females and their yuppie spawn that I saw were particuliarly disgusting as they let their unruly, overindulged brats run around raising hell, bite on things, tear the packages and non-chalantly and sneakily put it back on the shelves or put the empty wrappers back...
After what I saw and read here, IT WILL BE A COLD DAY IN A WARM HELL BEFORE I EVER GO BACK THERE!
Strange that Michael Dell seems to run his business along the same lines BUT AT LEAST HE HAS A FOUNDATION THAT TRIES TO DO SOME GOOD FOR THE COMMUNITY.
Which is more than I can say for Whole Foods with their loose cannon YUPPIE guy at the helm.
it is one thing to turn a decent profit and pay your employees a living wage without expecting them to bow and scrape to these horrid YUPPIE a**holes and something else entirely to PRICE GOUGE TO THE MAX... But the yuppies have it coming to them.

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Birds of a feather flock together
Posted by: pfm on May 11, 2009 8:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is Whole Foods Just Another Evil Corporation?
By Sharon Smith, CounterPunch ... Beneath the surface of Whole Foods' fuzzy progressive image is a company hell-bent on preventing its workers from unionizing.

I must confess while I would like to feign surprise, but deep in my heart I feel Sharon Smith's article is unfortunately correct. Her final remark is like a spear into my heart, and a jolt to be forced to consider that Wal-Mart and Whole Foods are truly joined at the hip in their union busting belief.

I would like to believe the climate is changing and that such deviousness will no longer be tolerated, but, on the other hand, with little or no DISCLOSURE by corporate owned mass media, the American public will remain oblivious to the action of Whole Foods and its employees (oops, team members)in need of employment will most likely remain silent, too.

Thank you, Sharon, for putting some light on a dark place which corporate America wants to remain hidden.

Respectfully,

Paul F. Miller
striving to promote sustainable awareness

BLOG SITE NAME ... AUTHENTICALLY WIRED

BLOG SITE ADDRESS ... http://waterman99.wordpress.com/2009

... everyone has the right to clean & accessible water, adequate for the health & well being of the individual & family, and no one shall be deprived of such access or quality of water due to individual economic circumstances ...

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Evil? Maybe. Typical corporation? Definately.
Posted by: monkeywrench on May 11, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods' prices are outrageous, their quality is dubious (it is the only place in 10 years where I have bought packaged chicken breasts [free range, they claimed] and found ALL of them to be rotten when I opened the packaging), and I question whether their "organic" fruits and vegetables really are pesticide free.

I will never set foot in a Whole Foods again. I have a tiny local market nearby that has lower prices and that I KNOW buys their fruits and vegetables locally (they put out the produce in the original, locally-labelled, lug boxes.)

The only thing "green" Whole Foods cares about are the leaves of "produce" with pictures of presidents on them.

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I loved working there
Posted by: djinn423 on May 11, 2009 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I worked at Whole Foods Market in Austin Texas for almost 5 years, it was a great place to work and one of the best jobs I've ever had. I got paid better than I had ever been paid previously (mostly bakeries, fast food and even a couple of Union grocery stores). We were treated fairly, got monthly, quarterly, and yearly bonuses, plus a lot of cheap produce and store discounts. I've also worked in smaller Mom & Pop natural food stores since then and was paid less and treated worse than I ever was at WFM. One thing that was mentioned in the article was turnover rate, to me 25% doesn't sound too bad for a grocery store and 9-13$ an hour isn't bad either considering that most of the folks who work there are teenagers and twenty-somethings that wouldn't normally stay in the same job for over 4 years anyway. By all means support your local CSRs and Farmer's Market, I do! But there is a lot worse evil out there than Whole Foods.

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» Why Posted by: tw0rkman
all corporations are evil.
Posted by: rafaeltoral on May 11, 2009 8:55 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow a three percent profit margin!!! I'll bet those hedge fund boys are scrambling to figure out how.

On a more serious note. As a lowly team member at whole foods I can tell you most of this article is full of shit.

I have worked at numerous corporations, and whole foods by far offers more to, and treats its employees better.

The main problem with whole foods now is its far too large. They are perpetually "green washing" to maintain its image.

Some of the items we sell are overpriced. Most are not. I shop at Krogers from time to time and their prices are higher than whole foods. Their prices are higher, their employees have a union, and they make less than employees at whole foods.

We get alot of benefits and alot of freedom that you simply do not find in other retail settings. The slightly higher prices translate to me earning a livable wage, getting health insurance, paid time off, 401k matching.


So in closing yes whole foods is an evil corporation, but they are far better than most others. Their image is bullshit but they do treat their employees well.

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Wildman
Posted by: Wildman on May 11, 2009 9:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm on the board of a natural food cooperative store in Mendocino County CA. I have been a member of three other cooperatives in the past. Folks who live in a Whole Foods monopoly town just need to form a coop. It is very doable and highly rewarding.

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» "Form" something? Posted by: gellero1
What Whole Foods is about is pretty obvious
Posted by: chariotdrvr14 on May 11, 2009 10:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I worked at Whole Foods in Berkeley, California for two years back in the mid' 1990's.
Just before I started there they'd been regularly picketed by a local AFL affiliate union. The pickets ended but I already had a good idea what I was getting myself into.
It was exactly what I'd heard with their 'I'm-a-Pepper' weekly store/team enthusiasm meetings. But I liked the diversity and how we were allowed to be ourselves in what was sometimes a very stressful job.
I worked in the bakery/drinks section which meant people with every dietary restriction would come to us for their snacks. Berkeley customers can be very demanding...and very unpredictable in temperment.
The money was quite good...for me anyway used to mostly service industry wages. And the fact that I was willing and capable of taking on more and varying responsibilities earned me a bit extra. It had an excellant model for profit sharing where each section was in charge of their budgets purchasing and waste control so that if the section earned profits and kept costs down then the workers got something extra (a share of the profits, both of the team section and the store) in their paycheck. Like that it encouraged efficiency.
But there was a certain facade maintained which no doubt was owed to their morbid fear of the workers becoming discontented and demanding a union. I came in one day for my paycheck and before they'd give it to me I had to sign something that said that they could fire me for any reason and without any notice. A move I'd seen before in other chain businesses which were designed specifically for abrogating the rights of workers to collective bargaining. I signed it but it left a sour taste in my mouth.
I did well there and it was a place that seemed to encourage people to find what the breadth of their organisational skills are; but to the point of them breaking sometimes; ...and there was always this underlying tension and falseness both unsettling and annoying.
They're not on the same scale of evil as Wal Mart but they're still a corporate run chain business subservient to models of growth and far from ever being the perfect worker/management hegemony.

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Short answer - NO
Posted by: mrxls on May 11, 2009 10:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods is in the business of promoting a far better quality of food, household cleaning items, sundries etc than the standard grocery chain. They are more a part of the solution to what ails the world than most coprorations out there.

That being said, we have Whole Foods and independents in my city and I shop the independents almost exclusively (Whole Foods has the best hot and cold salad bar). I prefer to vote differently with my dollar but that doesn't mean I see Whole Foods in the same light as brain dead unionized Safeway.

Would a union help the staff at Whole Foods? Unions are based in an adversarial mind set and bring in uncreative inflexable rules (like seniority - just because you've been there longer doesn't mean you're more valuable). Unions may well extract more cash from management for staff, some for the union and some for the staff - but the staff also pays in a more restrictive environment.

There is a world of difference between non- unoinized Wal-mart and WF in pay scale and in the level of participation in management offered the staff.

I think you should keep your liberal wrath focused on the bigger villans. WF is no angel but they are way closer to heaven than most in their multi billion dollar league.

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» RE: Short answer - NO Posted by: maddasein
» RE: Short answer - NO Posted by: Robot Claws
Magic Word- Texas
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 11, 2009 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's cut this state loose. Let them go their own way. Removing th Texas delegation from Congress would triple it's IQ.

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» RE: Magic Word- IDIOT Posted by: joeocho88
» More Texas bashing? Posted by: J-
Unions are a necessary evil...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on May 11, 2009 11:13 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...today because there is not an alternative. Yes unions have their evil and dark side too. But the worker is left no other choice today.

An answer would be profit sharing in all ways. When times are good, you are paid well and you take a hit along with EVERYBODY else when the company falters for whatever reason.

And there is NO reason the average CEO in the United States should earn 262 times the pay of the average worker, the second-highest level of this ratio in the 40 years for which there are data.

In 2005, a CEO earned more in one workday (there are 260 in a year) than an average worker earned in 52 weeks. Call me a socialist, but that somehow does not seem moral.

The 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s have been prosperous times for top U.S. executives, especially relative to other wage earners.

This can be seen by examining the increased divergence between CEO pay and an average worker’s pay over time. In 1965, U.S. CEOs in major companies earned 24 times more than an average worker; this ratio grew to 35 in 1978 and to 71 in 1989.

The ratio surged in the 1990s and hit 300 at the end of the "recovery" in 2000. The fall in the stock market reduced CEO stock-related pay (e.g., options) causing CEO pay to moderate to 143 times that of an average worker in 2002. Since then, however, CEO pay has exploded and by 2005 the average CEO was paid $10,982,000 a year, or 262 times that of an average worker ($41,861).

If a corporation would level THIS field alone, there would then be no need for unions or a god for that matter.

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» RE: Unions are a NECESSARY evil...READ!!! Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
It's good to know the good, the bad, and the ugly of any huge business such as this one.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on May 11, 2009 11:33 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Good - Lots of organic products.

The Bad - Like any other big size corporation, it's not about quality but getting that turnover rate going. As I learned from finance, the first lesson they brainwash you with is that selling in volumes somehow improves sales and boosts the company while selling in not as high a quantity and yet higher quality is somehow to be ignored at.

The ugly - It's that whole-sale volume sale bad model that they use and out of desperation crush local organic stores for fear that higher quality will make their volume selling plans fall apart in a flash.

Whole Foods can be a good starter for getting into organic products in life but if there's an organic store in your area, give it a chance as well please.

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Boycott of Horizon Foods and Whole Foods
Posted by: wireup on May 11, 2009 11:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I shop in Whole Foods in the city where I live. On at least one occasion I brought to their attention the boycott of Horizon Organics Foods which they sell in their dairy department.

Go to the Organic Consumers Association to read about it.

That boycott is ongoing and Whole Foods in my city (and I assume elsewhere) continues to sell those products.

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Whole Foods is Wall Mart spelled backwards
Posted by: Jaffe on May 11, 2009 11:43 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Astronomical prices and hypocrisy. In a San Diego chain even the organic apples are waxed, as they are in mainstream supermarkets, for good looks and a long shelf-life.

But when I try to verify that with one of the underpaid workers, he or she always denies it.

Keep smiling, John Mackey.

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Thank You for this Article!
Posted by: Robot Claws on May 11, 2009 11:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you thank you. I was beginning to think that this day would never come, and that all the white lefties that read ALTERNET had bought into the hype. Whole Foods IS another evil corporation and that comment about "love instead of fear" is complete BS. WFM loves to keep employees afraid for their job and they create an environment where there is ALWAYS someone looking at your position with hungry eyes, because everyone is overworked and underpaid. They get a shit load of people to work off the clock this way, by providing more work than they can reasonably handle and a "just make it happen wink-wink" attitude while providing zero resource (time/labor) to do so. There are a zillion other reasons why this place is not what it is promoting itself as, but I'll leave it at that... A big vegan hug goes out to all my friend who work there who are over-worked, underpaid, over-educated and under-loved. peace.

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ALSO: WFM Trolls will be on this site!!!
Posted by: Robot Claws on May 11, 2009 12:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They already know about this article (the link is posted on the internal web site) and the VP's have nothing better to do than to troll and blog. laters.

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Who says?
Posted by: dockboy on May 11, 2009 12:26 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who says resisting unions is an evil practice? That's not an assumption I'm willing to buy into. Look what unions have done to GM, Ford, and Chrysler. Also, so what if people only work for Whole Foods for two to four years? Being a bag-boy, a produce clerk, broom pusher, etc is not something one should strive to make a career of. Those jobs don't warrant $20 to $30 an hour. Get a life. Get a real job!

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» RE: Unions did not destroy GM... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
» Keep living the dream! Posted by: etvaugha@mtu.edu
» RE: My dream includes... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
» RE: My dream contiues... Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal
soyfoods
Posted by: soyfoods on May 11, 2009 12:40 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I lived in San Diego county, I shopped at Henry's market which I loved! It sold both organic and non organic and the staff there,were always eager to help with picking a ripe watermelon, etc.
Here in columbus ohio, WF is packed all the time so I shop at smaller stores that offer organic produce. It would be nice if lots of people stopped buying at WF, but I don't see that happening anytime soon.
Regarding unionization, it would be nice to see all the unions get together for the common good;; however seeing Andy Stern's methods for trying to take over other unions, I don't see that happening in my lifetime. Too many egos in the union movement. Too bad since we need unions.

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Same-Old Same-Old in Westport, CT
Posted by: johnblossom on May 11, 2009 1:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods took over Wild Oats in our local area, which in turn had acquired a rival that had union help just a few hundred yards away and drove it out of business. I can't speak for Whole Foods' practices on union issues directly, but clearly retail establishments in general are not fond of them. What IS clear is that the merchandise in Whole Foods largely reproduces much of the same junk that you get in mainstream grocery stores - only with better lighting and panache. In some aisles there's nothing but wall-to-wall junk food. Organic, yes, but junk food all the same. It's in essence a place where people can pretend to be healthier when in fact it's really about status - spending more when you can now get good organic brands at Stop & Shop or other major markets. Kind of like buying a Cadillac SUV when you can get a GMC for much less. Eat healthy, yes. Support rip-off supermarts that are catering to our egos, no.

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There's an old Navy expression
Posted by: willymack on May 11, 2009 2:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good ship, good crew
Merry Christmas, turn to.
The "turn to" means get to work.
No silly twaddle about workers' rights or democracies.
The Armed Forces are, by necessity, autocracies, with the Marine Corps and the Navy having the harshest discipline.
There's absolutely no excuse for this line of reasoning in the civilian community, and NO reason for workers not to have the right to collective bargining.

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» Unionize the Marines! Posted by: PaulK
» Wonderfully said. Posted by: Bliss Doubt
Clear proof
Posted by: Perry Logan on May 11, 2009 2:21 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole Foods stands as clear proof that capitalism destroys whatever it touches.

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The problem really is not Whole Foods, but America's whole economic system!
Posted by: Quist on May 11, 2009 2:41 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A agree with the posters who realize that this is a moot point. It seems that many here are ignoring the elephant in the room and the real culprit...and that is the U.S.'s present economic system.

Why are we debating about one stupid corporation, instead of discussing the real issues and ideas that are affecting our economy, our society, and our well-being.

Like I have been saying for a while, America is moving towards the era of idiocracy. The people in power and wealth realize that they must keep their citizens arguing over the scraps and the little things as they rob them blind of their wealth and freedom.

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» RE: Thanks Jen. :-) Posted by: Quist
Look to the past
Posted by: jsa9 on May 11, 2009 3:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When i was in High School in the late 60s,companies and jerks like Mackey were called "PIGS'. For good reason. This man is an insult to all the good men and women who grew up in my generation.After their first million they seem to forget where they came from, and how hard it was to come up with a few bucks just to put some gas in your run down car.There is a Whole Foods near me, but i read about their crap years ago, and wont even go in with a friend or my girlfriend{she is a lot younger then i am}.She also goes to Starbucks every morning, which she secretly loves more then me.My point--some things {companies} never change. So sad.--PS- there are some CEOs and companies run by boomers who are doing great things for the people who work for them, and the country.

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unemployed deadhead economist
Posted by: bigfoot 13ee on May 11, 2009 4:04 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
corporations...few understand the development of business...capitalism depends on the accumulation of wealth...finding someone who will work to produce a product...the surplus goes to the "employer"...

Image has a lot to do with the economic success of Whole Paycheck....ear rings and tattoos...there has been a marketed campaign of encouraging young to mark their bodies, where they are unable to get a job elsewhere...this is not like long hair and beards as existed in the 70's...these are permanent markers...they can be rounded up very easy...

I am hip, I have these marks all over my body...I am a drop out, refusing to learn to advance myself...X generation...or maybe Y...but I can get a job at Whole Paycheck...think global as being ignorant of the history of the labor movement, and how the 8 hour work day came about...better ignorant that educated...yes boss...thanky thanky thanky for letting me ipod in these DR Martin boots and ear rings about my ass whole...

As another market chain gets hip as to how to market "natural foods...HEB in Texas has started an approach...Whole Paycheck will be hurt...at least those of us who started "community market/ 76 in Santa Rosa there on A street" have memories as to how to keep a independent co-op market fourshing...and out of this came Alvarado Street Bakery...proud to have been a part of this...the strange character from Lou Ana...yall know me...and to have worked on the 24th street market in SF, and Flatlands in Berkeley...

Berkeley now has the bowl to get fresh foods/green things...but so many have to march to the mass drummer...the pied piper of Whole Paycheck/Starbucks...wonder why...a generation who have failed to getting an education...better ignorant, some of us just KANT....
bigfoot 13ee.............rhymes with Cherokee

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» RE: the Berkeley Bowl, oh Posted by: beijaflor
Rule of Thumb
Posted by: JSquercia on May 11, 2009 3:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A good rule of thumb for a worker is that if they refer to you as ANYHTING but an Employee
it is BAD news for you . Being called a team member or associate sounds nicer but it is just another way of pretending you are viewd as something other than an interchangable gog in the machine . The truth is you ARE viewed in exactly that manner .
The article pointed out that the wage was between 8 and 13 dollars an hour . That is nowhere near a living wage . The turnover rate
ensures that the rate will be skewed toward the lower end .

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» RE: ule of Thumb Posted by: etvaugha@mtu.edu
Don't blame Whole Foods...
Posted by: wireup on May 11, 2009 4:15 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I owned a natural food store through most of the 1980s. That decade was truly the garden of eden for natural foods. I had a 1200 square foot store, wall-to-wall food that contained NO sugar, white flour, chemicals, caffeine or garbage of any kind. Customers knew they could safely shop in my store and not even have to read the labels, that's how clean it was.

Today, it is IMPOSSIBLE to have such a store. Corporate America discovered how much money they could make by buying up companies that once were pioneers and bastardizing the food. So, where once you have products that contained NO sugar, NO white flour, NO caffeine, and NO chemicals - well, they pretty much don't exist any more. Because they've been taken over and changed into the same CRAP that you find in your local supermarket, minus some chemicals.

One day when I was shopping in my local health food store, after getting out of the business, I noticed a product that I had been buying for some time. The label looked quite a bit different. When I checked the ingredients, it now contained sugar and white flour.

Infuriated, I called the company and kept the customer service rep on the 'phone for about 20 minutes trying to understand what had happened. When I mentioned the owner of the company and his commitment to quality products, there was silence. Then I was informed by the rep that the owner had sold the company 3 years before!!!

Surprise, surprise!!!

Natural foods no longer exist. Whole Foods is not responsible for what is in the products they buy. Like every other health food store and natural food store in America, they buy their products from jobbers who purchase them from corporate America. And those products are the results of what corporate America has done to what were once fine companies but no longer are so.

So, don't blame Whole Foods.

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» What's your solution then? Posted by: LeftWright
die yuppy sucm! While in Flyover Buffalo
Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars on May 11, 2009 4:29 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I felt like saying that. Really today I just came from the Broadway Market in Buffalo. Yes it is kind on the rough side of town however I got some fresh chives and Pierogies. Tons of fresh Western New York produce, meat market and fish market. We don't have a Whole Foods in this area (Wegmans and Tops keeps them at bay). I try to avoid Whole Foods like the plague back in Boston and I was more of a Trader Joe's type of guy anyway.

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This story needs to be on mainstream TV like 20/20
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on May 11, 2009 4:31 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This story needs to be on mainstream TV like 20/20. Maybe that publicity would shame WFM execs into allowing their workers better compensation ...

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I Used To Work There
Posted by: GWong on May 11, 2009 5:07 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I worked at the corporate office in the flagship store in Austin, Texas for several months. I had to quit because of the back stabbing and politics--it was very disillusioning. I refused to shop there for a year afterwards because of how upset I was at how poorly office workers were treated. Not surprisingly, the corporate office has a high turnover. What the public doesn't know is that the benefits package there is pretty lame. No paid holidays. The health plan is slightly below average. Most people work there for the prestige of working at Whole Foods and the 20% employee discount.

However, I will say this...they are committed to selling pure, quality products. I personally knew the staff in the quality assurance department and they took their work seriously. If something was found to be bio-engineered or of inferior quality, WF takes action to eliminate the product or company immediately.

The store workers at the flagship store seemed a lot happier than the office workers. I have gone back to shopping there reluctantly because I know they do have quality stuff. The recent downturn humbled them a bit and I've noticed slightly better customer service. If there were a Trader Joe's in Austin, I would shop there exclusively!

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» RE: I Used To Work There Posted by: etvaugha@mtu.edu
» RE: I Used To Work There Posted by: gimmie shelter
here in new york city
Posted by: tazdelaney on May 11, 2009 5:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a worker for whole foods here in our town was fired for having taken a sandwich from a bunch which were being thrown away as past their expiration date anyway. WF relented only after it became a hot item online. hope the worker told them where to shove their slave-wage job. the same kind of fascist treatment you'd expect from a sweat-shop capitalist or a stalinist... little difference, authoritarian goons whichever. time for a food riot. mackey might make a good stew.

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It's the "slack" that's missing from Alternet these days
Posted by: J- on May 11, 2009 5:56 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Whole Foods near me has a pretty stable staff.

$13 dollars an hour is WELL about minimum wage. Without overtime, that's about $27k per year. That's not CEO money, but it's about 1st year teacher money.

About that CEO money, keep in mind, Mackey started the company. Is he doing a perfect job? Probably not, but then again who does? Whole Foods is Mackey's "baby", and yeah, I can see him not taking a liking to Unions telling him how to run his store. And, having worked in very large corporations for most of the past 20 years, Whole Foods is at least trying. Most of the companies I've worked at are not.

Here's an example:

John Mackey 2008 payout

I make more than that.

And some companies, like fast food and some restaurant companies expect 200% turnover. 25% for retail is just about miraculous.

Here's a question, why aren't the pro union people up in arms about the fact the Cisco Systems, or Oracle, or Juniper or Microsoft not unionized? What about the financial service companies or banks? Don't they need unions, too? Would some of the spectacular banking failures have been prevented with good union oversight?

Whole Foods: not perfect, but definitely not the worst either.

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I hope you guys get your way
Posted by: etvaugha@mtu.edu on May 11, 2009 6:40 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Then Whole Foods can go out of business like all union companies eventually do. And this will help those in poorer countries afford food, as organic food is a luxury good that drives up the price of regular food. Why? Because less organic food can be produced per arable acre of farmland, thus reducing overall supply and driving up prices. Now, for many of the brie-eating, wine-sniffing, enlightened liberal elites that patronize Alternet, a small increase in food or coffee house prices may not make a big difference. But a Phillipino family living on $2 a day disagrees...

I'm waiting for your hateful attacks, Alternet enlightened ones. Sigh.

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» RE: I hope you guys get your way Posted by: gimmie shelter
Scott
Posted by: Scott Warrow on May 11, 2009 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The commodification of Whole Foods as just another big business is why moving to a local/regional food economy is so important. Corporate business is not inherently evil, but it is by its very nature irresponsible. A local food system--CSAs, farmers markets, urban gardens, cooperatives--with regional distribution networks can circumvent food neoliberalism for a system that is structured to respond to the interests of its consumers. This isn't just progressive, it is what capitalism is supposed to be.

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gimmie shelter
Posted by: gimmie shelter on May 11, 2009 6:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whole foods is not the worst but is instead the second worst. Any company that is next inline behind Wall Mart has accomplish a lot against its workers to find itself in such a position. I wonder if Whole Foods instructs its employees how to apply for public assistance also, or locks its workers in until morning or even checks to see if they are in fact legally in this country.

Businesses that deal in mostly cash are a breed unto themselves and in many instances attract the worst forms of organized crime to run their money through their books. Now while I do not know if this is happening at Whole foods if it were it would be a pretty good reason for their workers not to organize while years ago this trend would have been opposite.

Alas the information that I have gleaned from this article just tells me to add Whole Foods and Wall Mart together as places I would not be caught dead shopping in. Old Hippies can be just as exploitative of its workers as any other. Fuzzy does not mean without the ability to bite.

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Stay Non-Union? Who can blame them.
Posted by: AJR Journal on May 11, 2009 7:18 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If they allow union thugs to "organize" the firm, they might as well kiss te whole business good-bye.
Unions are solely interested in their members' hours, wages, and working conditions, nothing more or less.
Whole Foods business and its customers will suffer as a result.
Organized Labor is Organized Crime!!

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» RE: Stay Non-Union? Who can blame them. Posted by: gimmie shelter
» Then the jobs will be gone! Posted by: AJR Journal
» RE: Then the jobs will be gone! Posted by: gimmie shelter
Whole Foods Not Fair or Healthy Foods
Posted by: LoK on May 11, 2009 9:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) In San Rafael, CA, there were two perfectly good natural foods stores about 2 1/2 miles of each other; workers knew the customers and they were small enough to feel comfortable. Whole Foods plopped itself down in between them with its huge glossy 'natural foods' supermarkert and the other two went out of business quickly. The new supermarket used young, glib careless types who weren't interested in getting to know the customers and didn't know anything about the food. It was a great loss to community cohesiveness.

2) Whole Foods' foods are for the most part laced with sugar. Sugar in all the bakery goods, sugar in things one doesn't expect to see sugar in. Produce is for the most part dry and not fresh -- potatoes and yams are light-weight, indicating age. (This is the Sherman Oaks Store.) There never seems to be a manager or someone who takes responsibility for anything.

3) There are no prices on items. No way to tell how much one is going to pay. The prices are on tags or signs in front of the bins or shelves, but they are sometimes so small they are unreadable. Of course this leads customers to pay more at checkout than they might otherwise do.

4) Items like tofu are scattered around the store, one brand in one section, another brand across the store, another in a different place. No comparison possibilities.

5) There is a security guard but he is off in a corner talking with a worker, his back to the parking lot.

6) Prices are indeed too high. Unnecessarily, amazingly, high. (And, to read the article, pay for workers is unnecessarily low.)

7) Most of the breads are made of white flour, equal to sugar in causing fat, inflammation, lowered immunity and general ill health. Not whole at all.

8) 'Not-organic' foods have edged out organic foods at 'Whole' Foods. There is little care about selling foods good for the body, only a cosmetic gloss of 'healthy foods'.

This store concept is scandalously ruthless, unfair to workers and customers, and basically unhealthy for living beings.

Any large conglomerate, low-wage entity which effectively bans unions is to be shunned. Fortunately we now have many alternatives for finding organic foods.

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Whole Foods is just . . .
Posted by: yesman on May 11, 2009 10:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . another yuppie "feel good" outlet. They peddle an image of social responsibility to gullible yuppies, so that said yuppies can feel good about their egregious consumerism.

When Whole Foods came to town, they attempted to buy or otherwise shut down the competition--that is, all of the locally-owned health food stores. Fortunately, they were not entirely successful, and we still have some local markets, including a community co-op. Whole Foods is just another mega-corp with a "green" whitewash. If you want change, support local markets which sell as many locally-produced goods as possible. Giant corporations are evil, no matter how they advertise themselves.

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If you
Posted by: wormfarmer on May 12, 2009 1:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
have the opportunity, join a co-operative.

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What GARBAGE!!!
Posted by: wireup on May 12, 2009 8:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am ASTOUNDED to read the anti-union CRAP I am reading on this website.

You people call yourselves progessive?

Apparently, the people posting on this article have never picked up a history book and know nothing of working conditions in this country before the advent of unions.

LONG LIVE UNIONS!!!!

UNIONS HELP PEOPLE and make work bearable and dignified and make it possible for people to make decent salaries.

If you wish to be a slave and work for slave wages with no benefits - then by ALL means put yourselves on the side of the anti-union corporations.

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» RE: What GARBAGE!!! Posted by: rayne
» RE: What GARBAGE!!! Posted by: gimmie shelter
» RE: What GARBAGE!!! Posted by: warmmdaddycatt
Allisonthebaker
Posted by: Allisonthebaker on May 12, 2009 9:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I own a home based bakery and sell at a farmer's market as well as privately-licensed by dept of Agriculture here in MI. I MUST use sell by dates as well as list ingredients in order of precedence. Being a small biz I don't have to use nutritional labels. I do use a software app that can do an analysis if customers request-that hasn't happened but many seem to appreciate the careful listing of (mine are wholesome and no preservatives) ingredients in the labels I make though.
Anyway-I would never relabel-I might have a sale to move what I could and dispose of what's left (donate it to a deserving cause) I have a very short shelf life-well I don't but my bakery products do ;) Who ever that company is that re-labels is setting themselves up for a lawsuit! Just thought I'd clarify that sell by dates are mandatory-at least in Michigan!

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I don;t think Unions are the panacea everyone thinks they are
Posted by: rayne on May 12, 2009 11:07 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A year ago, I was forced to join the union where I work (that's right, forced- there was no choice on my part) and they haven't done shit for me except take dues from my paycheck. I gave them a softball to handle for me recently, and they fucked that up and left me high and dry. As far as I'm concerned, they're outdated and useless.

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Rhetoric
Posted by: obliu222 on May 12, 2009 11:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Armed with those weapons," Mackey argued, "you will see unionization sweep across the United States and set workplaces at war with each other. I do not think it would be a good thing."

Anytime people lazily use the rhetoric of war over economic policy and workplace policy one should smell a whiff of bipartisan, truly conservative business-party paranoia. Of course war is not a good thing. Luckily, having an open exchange about unions is nothing like a war, not even remotely. Even at its most bitter it comprises a dominant narrative of the conflict over workers rights as a somehow amoral combat zone reserved for any expedient solution rather than the moral struggle for respresentation (even at the cost of productivity) that it is, albeit inconvenient to power-brokers and executives. I wish people would interrupt the weird zealots who speak in this way and make it sound moderate. Somehow lost productivity = battleground. There is all the proof you need that corporate culture is morally toxic.

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When WF goes co-op, then we can retire the evil corp moniker
Posted by: DaBear on May 12, 2009 11:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Until then Whole Foods is just another corporate shill and a shell for the rich boy CEO.

If he was serious about the love and consensus WF would be a co-op. That it's not is very very telling, especially about the rich boy boss.

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Just a side comment...
Posted by: rayne on May 12, 2009 11:54 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it's disheartening and frankly surprising to see just how nasty some of you are towards each other. is it not possible to disagree in a civil manner? and we wonder why nations go to war. here are a handful of people doing vicious battle on an online comments page where they are anonymous. maybe the anonymous status is the main factor- you seem to think that you can say any rude thing you want without worrying about each other's feelings or about whether the rest of us care to scroll through your childishness for pages and pages. if you hate each other so much, take it offline or go to a chatroom and beat the crap out of each other. leave the thoughtful and civil discourse to the rest of us.

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Real Change
Posted by: sysgirl on May 12, 2009 2:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why not get outside the box stores and chains and find a real local grocer? Support your local businesses and patronize a local farmer's market in season and smaller grocers for your dried and canned goods. You won't see Wal-Mart prices, but you won't be giving Wal-Mart your money, either.

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Unions Are Necessary. Period
Posted by: f2411 on May 12, 2009 3:19 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as there are employers who do not believe that every working person has the right to earn a decent wage that allows him/her to live a decent life, Unions will be necessary. The massive Union busting that has occured in North America is very much responsible for the increase in poverty and decrease in quality of life that is sending us rapidly toward Third World status. If you work for an employer who recognizes your worth with a decent wage without Union backing, then I applaud you and your employer.

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Well, duh
Posted by: Gitaiba on May 12, 2009 4:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After reading about the destruction of rainforests for soy, I asked where the soy in 365 products came from. The response was, "We can't tell you, but trust us, because we're an ethical company." I'm not stupid, so I didn't buy any soy products from them. That was a week before the stock manipulation story came out, which only solidified my less than cheery view from them. In the meantime, I shop at QFC, a Kroger owned store, and during the last round of negotiations, helped one of the shop stewards argue for higher raises, which the company granted. The prices are better, too.

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email from a whole foods employee
Posted by: rjs0 on May 13, 2009 1:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the following is a first person comment on this article from a friend to whom i emailed the link to the article...

Keep in mind WalMart does not have organic food as approved by the Organic commission, rather by the FDA.
ummm...lots of what was posted is untrue, even tho u know i have my grievances.
for example we do have mandatory union "meetings" where our supes are quite careful to not give opinions either way, but to tell us the facts--if someone gives you a union card, and you sign it---it takes half the store to become mandatorilly then, a union. so far not a single whole foods has gone union, but that is all it would take. who wants a union? on a union, for example there are automatic raises. pammy who makes 12 cupcakes an hour would get a raise just like mikey who makes 24 cupcakes an hour. i got a shitty raise in a bad economy with my boss knowing a cple mnths down the line id get another. it was for bullshit reasons--but lets point out another untruth--8 dollars? to start? the lowest our store starts at is 10 dollars an hour for the dishwashers. the cashiers start at 10.25 (even tho they say when you apply it is 11). the lowest peon in my dpt begins at 11.50
they say 8-13 is the median, but the supervisors, which we have six of, make between 15-20 dollars an hour, depending. i make 12.50 and in a month that will be higher, likely to exceed this ceiling they refer to, at 13.
the prices are much cheaper for all items except meat and seafood, than they are at my local nonorganic stop and shop. yoghurt is 20 cents cheaper, same brand. blueberry juice is 3.25 yes----3.25 cheaper same brand at whole foods than it is at my store one block away. these lozenges of potassium and mag i bought were 80 cents cheaper than they were at the cvs next door.
what high prices?
on organic lemons? yes--organic lemons are expensive at whole foods. so's rack of lamb. but when a meat or seafood caught ethically goes on sale at whole foods it is the same price as the nasty prole meat at stop and shop--and ours tastes alot better.
i agree its bullshit the team leaders--why not say manager? why not call it firing--instead of separation?
why did mackey go on yahoo and pretend to be someone else while taking down wild oats? i read all about that when i got the job.
the place is bullshit in so many ways but so is every company. you think working as a teacher in cleve school systems is a fair and ethical source of treatment to its workers? you think unions dont pick and choose whom to defend? whom to screw?

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Antitrust Monopoly is the issue here
Posted by: cromagnet on May 15, 2009 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If they keep buying up all the smaller organic stores, that are trying gain market share, to dominate/monopolize the niche they will attract negative press and regulation. The negative press is obviously starting.

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farmerboy
Posted by: jrgjniew on May 16, 2009 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have some questions:

1. Why do people want to pay exhobitant dues, and then be beholden to the corrupt union bosses who will then tell them what they must do, when they must strike, etc. They are just changing one boss for another (or perhaps 2?).

2. Unions don't really represent their employees--just the ones on the negotiating committee etc.---just ask our local school support employees who thought joining the teachers union would get them the world.----guess what?????

3. How is "card-check" fair. Why shouldn't employers be allowed to tell employees how joining the union might be detrimental to the company and to the employees. Unionization has plusses and minuses, and you are demeaning the intelligence of the employee not to let them listen to both sides and make an informed decision. The Unions will use strong-arm tactics on some--just like the employer might. Let it be a fair election based on what the employees hear and determine to be:a. truthful and accurate, b. best in their longterm interest.

4. How is it "right" to force all employees to join the union just because 51% think they want one, or to force them to pay union dues, even if they disagree with the union. The union should have to "prove their worth" on an ongoing basis. That does not mean they always need to protect all employees, good and bad, and to constantly seek higher and higher benefits/wages/time off/pension, etc., until it ruins "the hand that feeds". Just ask UAW workers for GM, Chrysler. How could they possibly have expected to continue to make 2-3X what most workers make, work 20 yrs, then retire and make nearly as much, health benefits, etc. for the rest of their lives. What were they, and their union bosses thinking? (our gov't employees are the same!)

5. Why do union folks think that once they work for a company, the company is beholden to them for life? If you don't like your job, doesn't pay enough, etc.---move on. There are lots of companies looking for "good" people. Is this easy---no. But certainly more sustainable than what has happened to the big three. I feel sorry for those folks who were counting on the rest of us to fund their great retiremnt lidestyle---but they should have kjnown, and saved a little. Many of us self-employed struggle to save for retirement---why shouldn't they. We pay for high-priced vehicles, which takes away money we could have saved for our retiremnt. The world really can't afford to pay for 2-3 workers income, when only one is really working.

Sorry--I guess I went fromm questions to opinions---but it will give you all fodder to shoot at, as I explained my reasons for the questions.

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Collective Bargaining is a Basic Right!
Posted by: pmbb321 on May 16, 2009 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Without collective bargaining we would still be working 12-16 hours a day, have no paid vacation and sick days - and no health insurance.

Those of us who care about such basic rights there is only one thing to do: Spread the word and BOYCOTT Whole Foods!

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farmereweness
Posted by: farmereweness on May 16, 2009 2:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I lived in Texas for over 10 years, and moved there about the time whole foods opened their flagship store. In the beginning, it was very friendly to local farmers--they even had a farmers market in their parking lot. However, a lot of farmers warned me about selling directly to the operation. Unfortunately, I did not follow their advice. We were the first ones to commercially grow broccoli sprouts, and found the wholesale relationship to be very dangerous, and ultimately, we lost too much money trying to bring them a good product at a reasonable price. If we raised our price 10 cents because of increased production prices, whole foods would increase the retail cost of the product by a dollar--an outrageous mark-up.

Also, they brought in a bunch of gangster types from New York, fired a lot of dedicated locals who had helped build the store, and fired their organic produce manager who worked directly with farmers and managed the farmers market. She fortunately started and opened a great farmers market which is still operating today, some 13 years later....

I got very fed up with them and the whole state of Texas and have moved to Montana where there is a great health food store in Missoula that still sells lots of products in bulk --but I order all of my vitamins, supplements and natural bath products online from places like Vitacost, of the Vitamin Shoppe, as well as herbal suppliers. I am not endorsing either of these outfits, rather just citing them as an example---- I save lots of money----the mark up on things like Stevia is well over 100%

If you don't live near a big box health food store and want to save money, consider shopping online. There are many suppliers worth checking out and I probably save about a thousand dollars a year...

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awalley
Posted by: kp on May 16, 2009 5:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all, there are a lot of "educated" young people that actually believe unions are illegal! I experienced this phenomenon while attending a popular university this year. Also, check out the Trader Joe stores; they typically locate near a Whole Foods. They don’t have the fancy selection, but they do have a lot of practical natural food items at a good price. Also, co-ops are also a healthy alternative to the Whole Corporate Foods chain. Pass the word and boycott Whole Foods!!!

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awalley
Posted by: kp on May 16, 2009 5:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all, there are a lot of "educated" young people that actually believe unions are illegal! I experienced this phenomenon while attending a popular university this year. Also, check out the Trader Joe stores; they typically locate near a Whole Foods. They don’t have the fancy selection, but they do have a lot of practical natural food items at a good price. Also, co-ops are also a healthy alternative to the Whole Corporate Foods chain. Pass the word and boycott Whole Foods!!!

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Grow your own food, get to know you farmers, and join CSAs (community supported agriculture)
Posted by: avl1090 on May 16, 2009 11:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no reason we have to buy food from grocery stores at all. Sure its convenient, but it doesn't support the local economy or people.

Join a CSA and support your farmers!

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having a hard time
Posted by: lindalee on May 18, 2009 11:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm having a hard time with this article. I'm a devoted VP of my local union with a pet peeve about the food I eat. I live in New England and try to buy as much local/natural/organic as I can. That said, I have a Whole Foods Market, Trader Joe's, Stop and Stop and Big Y within 5 miles of each other at my disposal. They all compete to work with local farmers because that's consumers want and we have plenty of farmer's markets and farm stands. The changes I made in my diet are almost impossible to maintain at places like Big Y and Stop and Stop, the chain grocery stores. Our Whole Foods brings in local vendors almost weekly to showcase their products. The folks here don't want their food overprocessed and filled with chemicals and we especially don't want it to travel across continents to get here.

I talk to the workers in all places and the happiest, friendliest and committed workers are at Whole Foods, with Trader Joe's a close second. The big chains, like Walmart, have alot of unhappy workers getting state aid.

Maybe they are a big, bad corporation but they appear to be committed to natural and whole foods with a good attempt at stocking local products. It's a shame that eating healthier can cost more, but if we all start to insist on it more, things may change for the alternatives.

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when you get that raise...
Posted by: Denver2tom on May 18, 2009 9:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
when you get that raise... kiss your job good bye, the next time your team leader looks to get his labor budget in line (the only code he lives by) you're replaced with someone happy to start at ten dollars an hour, gee maybe you should have voted for a union

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Food For Thought:
Posted by: jakeyoda on May 29, 2009 12:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Christiana Wyly of FLOW wrote a rebuttal to this article on Huffington Post:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
christiana-wyly/
is-whole-foods-market-jus_b_208848.html

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