Pickets forced a good man to close his Hubbard store
EDITOR:
I was disappointed to read in The Vindicator that Nemenz IGA is closed. A huge crowd showed up at the council meeting one week ago in support of the store and at least two dozen people spoke in support of Mr. Nemenz.
The city of Hubbard should be embarrassed that we have let a man like Henry Nemenz leave our town. He did more to help Hubbard than a lot of us put together. He supported every organization that asked him, including the two-a-day feeding of our football team and made it possible for a Little League organization to have a banquet after the money of the organization was stolen. Shame on us. I am not proud to say that I am from Hubbard.
The pickets protesting against Mr. Nemenz gave Rob Patton of Patton’s IGA a difficult time also. That is why he left Hubbard. He could no longer support the high cost of a union. The application process for a job at Nemenz IGA was not a closed door affair; it was opened to anyone who wanted to apply. And since the Patton’s IGA had been closed for a while, Mr. Nemenz did not have to rehire anyone. Most of his workers at the Hubbard store were from Hubbard. He was a new business coming into town and was not obligated to rehire Mr. Patton’s former employees. Some of the pickets, protesting against Nemenz IGA, were already retired and some did not work for Mr. Patton long before he closed. The pickets that I talked to said that their main goal was to close the IGA store and let a Sparkle store come in its place. No one has any interest in coming into that store to reopen it.
I am happy about one thing and that is I no longer have to see the picket sign carriers anymore and now they will be unemployed until they are sent somewhere else to cause problems at another unfortunate business. There are better ways to make a living instead of causing more unemployment. Mr Nemenz’s wonderful employees are without a job thanks to the pickets. Shame on all of you.
BONNIE HARRISON
Hubbard
Watch out for swindlers
EDITOR:
The Sept. 5 Vindicator reported that a man approached elderly citizens in Boardman and Poland to trick money out of them. Also the local TV news reported the same. Yet this exact crime occurred in Youngstown on my street over a month ago.
A man in a red car on a Wednesday around 2 p.m. went to two residences on Pointview Avenue with the intention of swindling money from the occupants, both elderly and living alone. I was told about the first situation the next day from a resident on South Heights who knew about it, so I wasn’t sure what to believe. Then two days later residents on Pointview one block from me told me about the second occurrence. None of them reported it to the police.
From a Block Watch meeting I attended a week before all this happened, I learned whom to report suspicious activity to. So I called him. To my knowledge, neither victim has been interviewed.
It seems that this “man in the red car” may have bothered many more elderly residents, and also in other parts of town, than what has already been reported. I urge everyone to call the police immediately and maybe he can be caught and put away before something much more serious happens.
DIANA MURAR
Youngstown
Comments
This is why no new companies will come into this area to re-locate and invest in its future. And to the idiots that supported the pickets that gave this businessman no option other than to close his doors (because he wanted to pick who he wanted to work in his store/investemnt); I say to you, LOOK NO FURTHER, YOU ARE THE REASON THIS AREA IS IN THE SHAPE ITS IN.
I know nothing about this particular story other than what I read in Bonnie's comments. When you own and operate an independent grocery (what IGA stands for) there are advantages and disadvantages. Main advantage is that the profits come to you rather than being shared with a corporation like Giant Eagle (some of which are also independently owned). Among the disadvantages are more costly benefits and lack of support (corporate legal teams, leverage from those in sister shops that have dealt with unions before, etc.) in instances like these. At some point the business owner made the conscious decision to allow a union to blanket his workforce in spite of the disadvantages; the notion that the business owner had no choice is flawed, he made his choice before his employees struck. Unions aren't exactly new to the area so one would think he knew what he was getting into...
A shame that it has apparently closed, yes. Unavoidable from the business owner's point-of-view, not at all.
Jeff... I believe they picketed IGA because it was non-union. They do the same thing to his Struthers store.... it's been going on there for years. All the time spent wasted picketing for a minimum wage job.... they could have gained a skill/trade or hell a degree! Mr. Nemenz doesn't deserve to have this nonsense day in/day out at every location because he chose non-union employees.
Maybe, just maybe, the people stop shopping there because they had an alternative site that provided better service and prices.
Or, God forbid, they actually agreed with the pickets. Unions were created for a reason. If you honestly believe that companies can be trusted and unions are no longer needed, congratulations they, say ignorance is bliss.
So then let me get this straight, it is okay in our USA to be afforded a "Land of the Free" to the picketers, but this same USA to afford its same "Land of the Free" does not apply to the Owner of the store. Okay, picketer's you made your statement (give them a Week to march up and down with their signs in front of the establishment), then after they've been afforded their "Land of the Free "Rights", then kick their behinds off the property and give the investor an opportunity to make his investment "work". doesn't seem to apply to the Owner. And now WE can all see why this area is backward...not moving forward.