KEY POINTS
  • The organizers of a recent walkout of retail pharmacy staff helped launch a national push to organize those employees.
  • A new partnership between the organizers and IAM Healthcare aims to help pharmacy staff unionize to address what many employees call unsafe working conditions throughout the industry, including at major drugstore chains such as Walgreens and CVS. 
  • The majority of pharmacists and technicians from those chains have no union representation, while pharmacy staff from a handful of grocery retailers such as Kroger do.

In this article

A small number of employees and supporters picket outside the headquarters of drugstore chain Walgreens during a three-day walkout by pharmacists in Deerfield, Illinois, November 1, 2023.

The organizers of a recent retail pharmacy staff walkout are helping to launch a national push to organize those employees on Wednesday, a potential step to wide-scale unionization of thousands of pharmacists and technicians across the U.S. for the first time.

A new partnership between the organizers and IAM Healthcare – a union representing thousands of health-care professionals – aims to help pharmacy staff unionize to address what many employees call unsafe staffing levels and increasing workloads throughout the industry, including at major drugstore chains such as Walgreens and CVS

In this article