Janitors at Target stores in Minneapolis, the site of the company’s international headquarters, will strike on Monday night in response to alleged workplace retaliation and intimidation on the part of their employers. The strike will only last one night, and one of the organizers working with the janitors said that it was not yet tied to a long-term strategy.
“Right now, the workers are focusing on that, and we want to see what kind of reaction comes from the companies,” said Brian Payne, an organizer for Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en la Lucha, the organization working with the non-union strikers.
The janitors work for three different maintenance companies which are contracted to service Target stores in the Minneapolis area. Last week, the janitors threatened a strike if representatives from the companies did not meet with them for negotiations by Sunday at noon. Payne confirmed to msnbc that the CTUL had received no response from the employers.
CTUL has filed two Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) charges with the National Labor Relations Board against the Target maintenance contractors. One alleges that two janitors were illegally terminated for trying to organize their co-workers, while the other says that a third worker was threatened with termination if he continued to agitate for unionization. (As of press time, none of the maintenance companies were available for comment.)









