Supermarket
take-over | | Price
wars - Asda Walmart is at the forefront. Photo: PA Images |
Asda
is one of Yorkshire's very own supermarkets. These days it's owned by global
retail giant Walmart. But, seven years since the Americans took over, what's
really happened to Asda?
Job losses
Inside Out spoke to
two former employees about their personal experiences of being made redundant
by the company.
Between them Erana Grice and Ann Burke have clocked up
nearly 50 years service at Asda's Rotherham store.
Both were made redundant
last summer in a wave of 1,400 managerial job losses at Asda stores countrywide.
Now, they won't even shop there anymore. Ann says, "I worked
for Asda for 29 years straight from school. It's a long time to be with a company
and then just get finished like that." | "I won't go in to Asda anymore. I need to try and move
on." | | Erana Grice |
Erana
feels the same way:
"I was 200% behind that company - because I helped
to build it. "And to be treated so callously is very difficult to
deal with." Although the two women can't speak on behalf of the whole
of Asda's redundant staff, they feel it's been hard to come to terms with being
made redundant. After all, they were there throughout the company's phenomenal
growth to become one of the UK's top four supermarkets
Yorkshire roots The
Asda story started in Castleford when a group of Yorkshire farmers got together
and opened their very first supermarket back in the 1960s.
The first Asda
store - the Queens - was convenient, cheap and incredibly successful.
A
new one-stop way of shopping in Britain was born.
 | | The
old Asda based on a farmers' collective. Photo: PA Images |
Asda
traded heavily on its friendly farmer image even as it grew to become one of Britain's
biggest supermarkets.
Then, in 1999, the Americans moved in. Erana
remembers it well, "Things really started to change when Walmart came on
board... "They came into the store and hit us with the bombshell. "I
went on sick because I couldn't cope. I went on anti depressants.
Ann says,
"We'd been loyal to the company and thought we were safe. "You
were called in to be told your job wasn't there anymore... I'd given loyalty,
but I got none back. "There was no compassion, no aftercare. With
the old Asda we'd have got more compassion. With Walmart it's all a bit cut and
dried." Staff concerns
The GMB union claim that Asda
is one of the most autocratic employers that it deals with.
At a GMB union
meeting of Asda shop stewards, Inside Out heard concerns about staff pay, pressure
to work despite sickness, and worsening working terms and conditions.
Neil
Derrick from the GMB says: "If you're like any other business and you
put profit first, don't portray yourself as the best employer in the UK - be honest
about it."
In February 2006, in an employment tribunal in Newcastle,
Asda was penalised to the tune of £850,000 for offering wage increases to
workers if they gave up collective bargaining rights. Walmart - lifting
the lid? Walmart is the world's biggest retailer, with a turnover in
2005 of $312 billion.
It raked in a profit of $11 billion.
The Walton
family who own Walmart are among the 13 richest people in the world - with around
$100 billion of personal wealth between them.
It is the largest employer
on the planet - with over 1 million workers.
A documentary film called
Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price is soon to be released in cinemas worldwide,
which claims to lift the lid on the true nature of the Walmart corporation.
His
film lists a catalogue of concerns over the Walmart operation worldwide, claiming
a widespread use of sweatshops in the Far East lies behind many of its low prices
in the US.  | | Walmart
leading the retail revolution. Photo: PA Images |
The film accuses
the company's aggressive expansion plans of wrecking small town American economies
by pricing out the competition. It also claims an anti-union Walmart pays
US workers so little, they have to rely on state benefits to supplement their
income and make ends meet. The film's Director Robert Greenwald says of
Walmart:
"Their image had been squeaky clean, but it's no longer.
"They're
destroying lives. And they're destroying lives of people who are hard working,
and who have done nothing wrong.
"Do you want to have your choice
of where to shop being taken away from you?
"Do you want all the local
shop owners driven out of business?" He says that Asda Walmart
is a corporation bent on expansion: "They're not going
to change their policy or their approach... and they have one thing on their minds
which is more, more, and then more."
Business sense
But isn't this common business sense? After all, aren't all businesses
driven by maximising their profits? In their defence Walmart says: "Asda
is still very much a British retailer run by home grown talent. "Being
part of Walmart has enabled them to be a better Asda. They've introduced an all-colleague
bonus, and flexible working schemes."
It says the Greenwald
film verges on propaganda, and maintains much of its content is flawed.
However,
it says Walmart is engaging with its critics and is addressing concerns and changing
for the better. Price wars
When Walmart bought
Asda, Britain's entire retail market went into a spin.
Fearing Walmart
size and power would wipe them out, the other supermarkets began a battle for
low prices - which they're still fighting today.
Lincolnshire farmer Peter
Lundgren reckons farmers bear the brunt of the supermarkets price wars: "I'm
rearing these pigs and selling them to restaurants and individuals because I just
cannot get a viable price by selling to supermarkets."
We've
seen the other supermarkets respond to the challenge from Walmart by driving down
the price they pay to the farmer, and pushing up the price the consumer is expected
to pay.
The problem is, the supermarkets dominate the food chain - 70%-80%
of food goes through supermarkets.
The four main supermarkets are now
so powerful, farmers really have very little option as to where they can sell
their product.
Asda is often the first to announce big rounds of price
cuts pretty much every January. This then triggers price wars between the
other supermarkets keen keep their competitive edge. "One of the nastiest
tricks pulled by the supermarkets is the 'Buy One, Get One Free' offers,"
says farmer Peter Lundgren.
It's not the supermarket being very generous
and nice to its customers - they actually only pay the farmer for every second
cauliflower or cabbage.
One retail analyst told Inside Out that it
isn't just Asda that we should be blaming: "Asda has won
plaudits for how it treats it employees, so you can't say they're any worse than
the competition. "Yes, they have problems with the unions, but that's
part and parcel of the retail business for you, they all have to deal with this.
"So you can't point the finger at Asda - in fact in some ways they're
superior to how they treat their employees and suppliers."
We
approached Asda over concerns about its workers and suppliers here in the UK,
but the company declined to be interviewed on camera.
Links relating
to this story:The
BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites |  | | Free email updates | Keep in touch and receive your free and informative Inside Out updates. Subscribe Unsubscribe |  |
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Emergency
vehicles and accidents | | Race
against time - but at what cost? |
Theyre a lifeline
the difference between life and death. Whether its fire, ambulance or police,
when you dial 999 you expect help to arrive within minutes. Inside Out has
discovered worrying new evidence which suggests your emergency services are taking
longer to reach their destinations, and a startling number of emergency vehicles
will never actually arrive because theyre involved in accidents themselves. Our
researchers discovered that there were more than 1,000 accidents involving emergency
vehicles responding to an emergency on Yorkshire and Lincolnshire roads last year
- thats more than three accidents every day! Tough job Inside
Out goes out on shift with South Yorkshire Fire Service and South Yorkshire Ambulance
Service to find out why.
These drivers answer tens of thousands of emergency
calls every year and have one of the toughest jobs you can imagine. But
everyday they're held up by other vehicles getting in the way and acting unpredictably.
They say the public's reaction to blue lights and sirens can drastically
increase the amount of time it takes for them to reach an emergency - and in this
line of work, seconds count. One South Yorkshire Fire Crew has damaged
over half a million pounds worth of machinery, and only a couple of months ago
was forced off the road and into a house. Risk of accidents But
these new figures are of great concern to people like Drs Roger Higson. His
daughter Emily was killed by a police car driving at over 60mph in a 30mph zone.
 | | Speeding
fears - action required for emergency drivers |
He says that
there are numerous discrepancies between the training given to full-time traffic
officers and constables driving 'squad' cars. He believes that all drivers
sanctioned to drive under blue lights and sirens should be subject to personality
tests to ensure they are able to cope in stressful response driving. Road
safety charity Brake is similarly worried by our figures. They told us
that no emergency vehicles should break a speed limit, and the blue lights and
sirens should be enough to ensure they get to they're destination quickly and
safely. They also think the training of emergency drivers needs to be examined
and tightened up for the safety of the drivers themselves and for members of the
public. Police accidents The police in particular have come
in for criticism. Last year the numbers of people killed by police vehicles
increased by 70% and injuries increased by over 60%. But West Yorkshire
Police have a new revolutionary tactic to help - their new recruits beat the traffic
and those moving obstacles. When approaching busy junctions or red lights,
rather than racing through unannounced, they're trained to switch off all the
lights and sirens to allow the situation in front to develop. This is a
a tactic they hope will help to reduce accidents without increasing response times.
Links relating to this story:The BBC is not responsible for the
content of external websites |
Rockin'
the north | | We
predict a riot of bands following the Kaiser's success |
The
Kaiser Chiefs and Arctic Monkeys are amongst the UK's hottest new bands.
They're just two of the latest wave of rock acts produced by Yorkshire's booming
music scene. So why are Yorkshire's bands top of the pops again? We
asked veteran rocker Rick Wakeman to find out. Capital of cool So
just where is the UK's capital of rock and roll? It's not Liverpool or London,
it's not Glasgow or Gateshead, it's Leeds and Sheffield - it's Yorkshire. And
this shift in the axis of power is hugely significant. For the last 20 years
the music industry has been completely dominated by the success of bands from
Manchester - Stone Roses, New Order, Happy Mondays and Oasis. | YORKSHIRE ROCKS | | Sheffield
Dave
Berry - '60s success with The Crying Game.
Joe Cocker - 1968 hit with With
a Little Help from my Friends. The Human League, Comsat Angels, Cabaret
Voltaire, ABC - '80s rock revolution. Def Leppard - the city's biggest sellers
rocked the world in the '80s and early '90s. Robert Palmer - soul man born
in Batley - scored a huge hit with Addicted to Love in 1986. Pulp - beloved
'90s Britpop purveyors of fine music for the Common People.
Leeds
Gang of Four, Scritti Politti - late '70s stars moved south.
Soft
Cell - formed in Leeds, 1980. Tainted Love hit. The Wedding Present - '80s
success on the indie circuit. Chumbawumba - agit rock took a swipe at John
Prescott at the BRITS in 1998. The Music - formed in Kippax, Leeds in 1999. Kaiser
Chiefs - Leeds' head boys and BRIT winners. Arctic Monkeys - internet sensations
look good on the dance floor. |
But even Tony Wilson, the
godfather of the Manchester music scene, begrudgingly admits that perhaps his
lot have had their day, and the new young bands from Yorkshire have taken centre
stage. Take the Kaiser Chiefs - their album Employment has sold a million,
they've won three BRIT awards, and they're great performers. They've cracked
it. The Kaisers play no-nonsense, quirky, no frills, sing-along-a-rock
n' roll. So who better to explain their sudden rise to fame than the Kaiser's
singer, Ricky Wilson: "The band had been playing around
the Leeds scene for a few years when they decided to change tack from a sort of
grungy indie thing to a style that is all their own."
This
change in tack has obviously paid off handsomely with the band becoming flavour
of the year. The phenomenal success of the Kaiser Chiefs is based on good
songs and hard work - and this work ethic has undoubtedly rubbed off on other
young bands from Yorkshire. A thriving live music scene has also helped
with local venues putting on a large number of up and coming bands from the region. As
a result the music moguls have been hurtling up the M1 looking for new talent
to sign. But they are too late - the fans have already sorted it. Arctic
Monkeys Arctic Monkeys from Sheffield did it their way - building up
a solid fan base and leaping a step ahead of the music industry with their own
clever marketing. Every teenager with access to a computer has a share
in this band. The band gave away CDs at gigs, the fans dowloaded the tunes
for nothing, and the buzz just got bigger and bigger. At last this was
a band that the fans felt that they could be at one with. The band's success
is all the more remarkable because of the way they've achieved their record sales. Watch
Arctic Monkeys playing on BBC Collective Although most people under
the age of 18 already had their songs on their mp3 players, the fans still chose
to pay the band back. Arctic Monkey's two singles - both number ones - and
their debut album flew off the shelves. The album, Whatever People Say I
Am, That's What I'm Not, has become the fastest-selling debut album in UK chart
history.
Released on January 23, 2005 it has already sold more than 360,000
copies. Some retailers have likened its impact to that of The Beatles 40
years ago. Music cities Of course Sheffield has been
centre of the musical universe before.  | | Cock-a-hoop:
Sheffield becomes a sensuous, cinematic city |
It is one of
those place that breeds unique music - a village in a city. Like now, the
bands spoke to the generation of the time about the things that mattered to them. Bands
like Pulp wrote about the virtues and virtues of Sheffield in songs like Sheffield
- Sex City: "Intake, Manor Park, The Wicker, Norton, Freshville,
Hackenthorpe, Shalesmoor, Wombwell, Catcliffe, Brincliffe, Attercliffe, Ecclesall,
Woodhouse, Wybourn...
"The whole city is your jewellery-box; a
million twinkling yellow street lights.
"Reach out and take what you
want; you can have it all."
Today Arctic Monkeys' songs
also draw on the Northern cultural landscape with references to bars, bouncers
and dance floors. Jarvis Cocker has said that the Monkeys' success is a
lesson for the music industry - they have got to the top on their own terms. Leeds
leads the way  | | Only
human - in a different league |
Leeds has also come a long way
since Dexy's Midnight Runners sang: "Lord have mercy upon
me - Keep me away from Leeds".
Today it's a thriving hotbed
of new bands. But who is top of the pops when it comes to Yorkshire's pop
and rock bands down the years? Inside Out has put together its own chart
based on Rick Wakeman's whimsical top five. Bubbling under we have Black
Lace, Beautiful South, Robert Palmer, Smokey and Def Leppard.. At number
five it's the Human League, at four - it's Pulp. The Arctic Monkeys are
currently at number three, with the Kaisers at two. So the new boys haven't
made it to the very top just yet. They've got to stand the test of time
- Yorkshire's number one so far is '60s Sheffield star, Joe Cocker. Links
relating to this story:The
BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites | | Readers' Comments - Yorkshire's
music scene | | Your comments on
the music scene in Yorkshire At last people are realising that music from
London, Liverpool and Manchester is not the only thing on offer. But, like so
many before, Rick Wakeman's piece concentrated on Sheffield and Leeds and overlooked
Hull (apart from a brief reference to The Beautiful South: bland and hardly cutting
edge).
We may not have bands with the awards and international fame of
the Kaisers etc, but the Hull scene is stronger than ever. His comment that Sheffield
is like "a village within a city" would be a more than appropriate description
for Hull too. Many bands maintain friendships with each other and their audiences,
especially through the growing phenomenon that is www.myspace.com. Without doubt,
the flagship band of the Hull scene is the Paddingtons, signed to Alan McGee's
Poptones label, who have had two singles in the top 40 and whose debut album looks
set to become an underground classic among the army of fans built up on their
recent UK tours. Other promising acts include Turismo, The Landaus, The City Chosts,
Sidewinder and The Dirty Dreamers on the indie/rock scene, and Mr Beasley, Randomlee
and Concrete Breaks in the field of hiphop, electro, etc. not to mention established
alternative/dance producers associated with Hull's own Pork Recordings label,
many of whom have gone on to sign for well-respected alternative labels like Tru
Thoughts, Different Drummer and Big Chill.
While I realise that the tone
of the article was indeed celebratory of the D.I.Y. Yorkshire scene, I feel that
more could have been said about the undiscovered gems, waiting to be discovered,
rather than to point out what most people who are interested in music have known
about for a while. As well as Hull, I would assume that there are a number of
good bands in the other cities and towns of our fair county. Weren't Shed Seven
from York? I know Terrorvision were from Bradford but they were pants.
Perhaps
Rick would like to visit Hull for a follow-up. You can find reviews and listings
for Hull, as well as Leeds, Sheffield, Nottingham and York, in the free scene-zine
Sandman, www.sandmanmagazine.co.uk.
As for the Yorkshire top 5 acts, I'd
say see above for Hull bands, Human League, Pulp, Arctic Monkeys and Rick Wakeman!
Also, up and coming Leeds band Stateless are definitely one to watch. Keep
up the good work. Will in Hull
Got to admit Joe Cocker is the man.
Not being a Jam fan i dont like the new Jam tributes which seem to be all the
new bands around now. (Must be an age thing). My top 5 would be JOE COCKER, CHARLIE
SPEED. BOY ON A DOLPHIN (even tho the singer has been imported from the other
side), FRANK WHITE and JON STRONG. Wonderful,soulful singers, guitar players,
songwriters. I dont like being force fed with this recycled POP music. Malcolm
Liptrott. I just thought i should remind Rick about Kiki Dee, she still
has a great voice and i shall be seeing her live in Gainsbrough on friday night.
Andrew Lauder Rock luminary Rick Wakeman's list... should have been
Def Leppard at 1, Pulp at 2, and Arctic Monkeys are not yet proven enough to be
number 3. Mr S Douglas. I'm glad Inside Out highlighted the Yorkshire
music scene - it was refreshing to see the rest of the UK being part of scene
that has been growing for years. In Yorkshire we have so much untapped talent
from musicians to producers. My top 5 Yorkshire band list: 1. DVA a.k.a
Clock DVA - Dean Dennis. Dean Dennis a former member of Clock DVA who inspired
us with The Act, Sound Mirror, The Hacker and the album Buried Dreams. In parallel
DVAs experimental alter-ego The Anti Group generated Big Sex II &
Broadcast Test. Dean is now working as Nohno and collaborating with his partner,
artist & film maker Jose at Out 2 Lunch Records - http//www.out-2-lunch.co.uk 2.
Heaven 17 3. Human League 4. ABC 5. Moloko V Dennis.
As
a young person, and frequent rock patron, Ii have to say that the only new band
worth mentioning is ASBG (or All Sexy But Ginger). They have not yet been discovered
yet, but anyone who has seen them perform has to agree that they deserve to be
signed. they play mainly Ska music, and are a Hambleton or North Yorkshire band
that really should be made famous - they deserve it. Andrew MacArthur. Some
of Yorkshire's hot bands have been building up their heads of steam for a while
- check out this one - Owter Zeds. The band has a fabulous live set featuring
great, original songs (you can sample four on the website), and is available for
interviews, radio and TV shows, fame, and glory!!! There aren't many bands
like the Zeds - they span three generations, soaking up influences from decades
of popular music and blending them into an energetic evening's entertainment.
Their next couple of gigs are at the Brown Cow, Bingley on Saturday 4 March, and
the Trades Club, Hebden Bridge on Friday 10 March. Richard Woodcock.
Disappointed
to find Def Leppard so briefly mentioned on the programme tonight. As you say
on your website - "Def Leppard - the city's biggest sellers rocked the world
in the '80s and early '90s" and yet you didn't mention that in the programme,
no photo, no video clip. And they're still around making good music today. As
always, it's the perceived 'fashionable' bands like The Human League and ABC who
get the mentions even though they were much less successful. And on the
subject of Sheffield musicians, you missed out Paul Carrack, not only a very successful
solo artist, but also vocalist with Squeeze and Ace. Heather Young, Sheffield.
You
didn't mention some of my favourite bands/artists from Yorkshire!
1. Embrace
(Leeds) 2. The Mission (Leeds) 3. Marc Almond/Soft Cell (Leeds) 4. The
Hall Brothers (Skipton) 5. Sisters of Mercy (Leeds) Doug.
You
forgot Be Bop Deluxe and Bill Nelson, Wakefield's finest! Great show. Keith,
Halifax.
Just thought I should add Terrorvision and LaikaDog to your
list. They don't come much more Yorkshire as they're both from Bradford. Tony
Wright. |
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