Virtual Ministry Archive


 

Arthur T. Demoulas had run Market Basket, a New England supermarket chain, the way his father had built it: generous profit-sharing for workers, low prices for customers, and a management philosophy that treated warehouse employees by name and remembered their families. He knew cashiers and truck drivers personally. Workers who had been with the company for decades described him as someone who showed up at funerals, called people when their parents were sick, and distributed bonuses that other CEOs would have redirected to shareholders. Market Basket, under his leadership, was profitable. In June 2014, the company's board of directors voted to remove him anyway. The board wanted different financial priorities. They had wanted them for years. The Demoulas family had been locked in a legal and governance war for decades, split between two branches with different visions for the chain. The faction that won the board vote got rid of Arthur T. and began a search for his replacement. What happened next had no precedent in American retail history. Within days of his firing, store managers, assistant managers, warehouse workers, and truck drivers began organizing. They were not represented by a union. There was no formal collective bargaining mechanism. They simply stopped. Warehouses fell silent. Deliveries slowed. Store shelves went from full to empty. Employees showed up at work and refused to stock anything. The walkout spread to all 71 Market Basket stores across Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine. Customers joined the boycott voluntarily, driving past Market Basket locations to shop at competitors rather than cross the employee picket line. Sales dropped by an estimated 90 to 95 percent within six weeks. The company was hemorrhaging tens of millions of dollars per week. The new management hired to replace Arthur T. began firing the protest organizers, which only intensified the demonstration. Thousands of workers who had not previously walked out joined after seeing colleagues terminated. Politicians from both parties inserted themselves into the dispute, publicly calling for Arthur T.'s reinstatement. The board, which had fired him for being insufficiently focused on profit, was now watching the business collapse. In late August 2014, after eight weeks of boycott, Arthur T. Demoulas purchased the controlling share of Market Basket from the board faction that had ousted him. He returned to the company, walked into the warehouse, and was met by workers who had refused to leave the picket line for two months without pay. Stores reopened within days. Shelves were restocked. The boycott ended. It remains, a decade later, the only case on record in which a workforce of 25,000 non-unionized employees successfully forced a board of directors to reverse a CEO termination, not through legal action, not through negotiation, but through standing outside and refusing to move. #DidYouKnow #BusinessNews #ViralStory #WorkerPower #corporateamerica


 

There's nothing going on here u old bitch

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