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Food Service Workers Rally For Unionization In Connecticut

Despite rainy weather, fast food workers held rallies across the state on Wednesday, including at an I-95 plaza stop in Darien.
Davis Dunavin
/
WSHU
Despite rainy weather, fast food workers held rallies across the state on Wednesday, including at an I-95 plaza stop in Darien.

Food service workers at 23 state-owned travel plazas in Connecticut announced Wednesday they’re unionizing and filing a wage theft complaint with the state.

“Keep your burgers, keep your fries! Make our wages supersize!”

Workers are joining 32BJ SEIU, a property service workers’ union.

“The workers in this facility have zero rights. They terminate them any time they want. I believe that in the state where the Constitution was born, we need to be aware that workers’ rights, people’s rights should be one priority,” said union member Juan Hernandez. He spoke at a rally at a travel plaza off I-95 in Darien.

U.S. Rep. Jim Himes was also there. The plaza is in Himes’s district.

“I see the hard work, serving the coffee, working in the kitchens, all hours, rain, snow, in storms. The people who work here, who serve us so well, deserve good wages and good conditions, and 32BJ is going to make that happen,” said Himes.

The union filed a complaint with the Connecticut Department of Labor saying food service companies at travel plazas haven’t paid wages at the rate required for companies contracted with the state.

Dunkin’ is the only vendor to operate in all 23 Connecticut travel plazas. The company said its franchisees set wages, and it supports the rights of employees to unionize.

Copyright 2019 WSHU

Davis Dunavin loves telling stories, whether on the radio or around the campfire. He fell in love with sound-rich radio storytelling while working as an assistant reporter at KBIA public radio in Columbia, Missouri. Before coming back to radio, he worked in digital journalism as the editor of Newtown Patch. As a freelance reporter, his work for WSHU aired nationally on NPR. Davis is a proud graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism; he started in Missouri and ended up in Connecticut, which, he'd like to point out, is the same geographic trajectory taken by Mark Twain.

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