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Apr 15 21 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Seattle's Hearing Examiner just blocked WinCo Foods from opening in the old Sam's Club at 13550 Aurora Ave N, a building that's been vacant since 2018. The SEPA appeal was filed by a group called "Lake Washington Working Families."

Sounds like concerned neighbors, right? Let's talk about a pattern. /1
WinCo is the 2nd-largest employee-owned company in America. 145 stores across 10 states. 20,000+ employee-owners. Over 500 employee-owners are millionaires through the company's ESOP (employee stock ownership plan).

They sell groceries cheaper than Walmart. No credit cards. No frills. Bag your own. /2
There's one thing WinCo doesn't have: a UFCW contract.

The United Food and Commercial Workers union has been trying to organize WinCo for decades and failing. WinCo employees repeatedly decline unionization because they don't want to risk their ESOP.

So the UFCW adopted a different strategy: if you can't organize the workers, block the stores. /3
The playbook is always the same:

1. A new-sounding "community group" appears shortly before a SEPA or environmental appeal deadline

2. The group files on traffic, environmental, or "community character" grounds

3. The group denies any union connection

4. WinCo says it's "thinly veiled union opposition"

Here's the exposed history, city by city. /4
FOLSOM, CA (2000): UFCW Local 588 ran a full campaign -- leafletting, picketing, rallies, door-to-door canvassing, phone banks -- and successfully pressured WinCo to withdraw its plans entirely.

This one they did openly. It didn't go well for the PR, so the tactics evolved. /5
FEDERAL WAY, WA (2001): UFCW members picketed, publicly vowing to keep going "until WinCo left or joined the union."

WinCo said picketing didn't hurt profits. Store still operates today. Direct confrontation wasn't working. /6
BRENTWOOD, CA (2002): The local planning commission approved WinCo's construction. Then the UFCW appealed the project. The commission reversed and voted it down.

First documented case of the union using the land use appeals process rather than direct action. /7
TRACY, CA (2007): WinCo accused competing grocery chain Save Mart of directing a lawsuit filed by a neighborhood group called "Tracy First" to block city approval of a WinCo store.

The community group template was now in play. /8
MT. VERNON, WA (2009): A man named Michael Frazier formed "Citizens for a Sustainable Mount Vernon" just days before the SEPA appeal deadline.

When asked what he does for a living, Frazier declined to say.

His attorney was from Bricklin & Newman LLP, the same firm that handled a prior SEPA appeal against Walmart in the same city. /9
TACOMA, WA (2011): Picket lines at WinCo's grand opening. WinCo's own Facebook page responded: "The people picketing don't understand that WinCo is owned by the very people that work in the company, therefore we do not need a union to 'protect' us from the owners, because we are one and the same." /10
BELLINGHAM, WA (2012-2013): A group called "NO to WinCo in Bellingham" organized opposition because WinCo is non-union. The Bellingham Herald ran a column opposing the store -- written by two members of UFCW Local 21.

At least they put their names on that one. /11
MOSES LAKE, WA (2015-2016): "A Stronger Moses Lake" appealed the SEPA determination, focusing on traffic impacts.

One of the two appellants, Peggy Vines, turned out to be a vice president of UFCW Local 1439.

WinCo VP Michael Read: "thinly veiled union opposition... We've seen identical tactics in other places." /12
BOZEMAN, MT (2018): Six residents appealed WinCo's site plan, citing traffic impacts and "small-town character" concerns.

The city planning department noted that all six appellants were employed at Albertson's and Safeway -- both UFCW-organized grocery stores.

The city commission voted unanimously to approve WinCo anyway. /13
SEATTLE, WA (2025-2026): A group called "Lake Washington Working Families" files a SEPA appeal against WinCo's plan to occupy the old Sam's Club on Aurora Ave N, vacant for 7 years.

The Hearing Examiner sided with the appellants. WinCo is blocked. /14
Notice what every single one of these "community groups" has in common:

They appear right before filing deadlines

They focus on traffic/environmental pretexts

They never mention that WinCo is non-union

Their members, when identified, often have direct UFCW ties

They dissolve after the fight /15
Now consider what WinCo would have brought to north Seattle:

Low-cost groceries in an area with rising food prices

Employee-ownership stakes for every worker hired

Reactivation of 144,776 sq ft of dead retail that's been vacant since 2018

24-hour access for shift workers and families on tight budgets /16
Instead, north Seattle gets a continued vacant big-box, and UFCW gets one fewer non-union competitor in the Puget Sound grocery market. This isn't community advocacy. It's incumbent protection dressed up as environmentalism. /17
The AFL-CIO once published a blog post praising WinCo as the anti-Walmart: employee-owned, higher wages, better benefits, low turnover. Then the UFCW rejoined the AFL-CIO. The post was quietly deleted.

Even organized labor can't keep its story straight on WinCo. /18
If you're in Seattle and want to understand who "Lake Washington Working Families" actually is, start with the Hearing Examiner case file for the 13550 Aurora Ave N SEPA appeal. Look at who the named representatives are. Look at who the attorney is.
This pattern predicts exactly what you'll find. /19
A union using environmental review as a weapon against an employee-owned low-cost grocery store, to protect its own market position, while naming itself after "working families"...That's not advocacy. That's regulatory capture with better branding.

Seattle deserves to know who's really blocking their grocery store. Remember that next time you hear progressives complain about store closures and food deserts. /20
Sources for those interested:

WinCo Seattle project basics (tweets 1, 14, 16):

KING 5 coverage of WinCo filing plans: king5.com/article/news/l…
SeattleInProgress permit page (project 3042320): seattleinprogress.com/project/3042320
SEPA Notice of Decision (PDF, hosted by WA Ecology): apps.ecology.wa.gov/separ/Main/SEP…
DJC: Hearing Examiner says no (paywalled): djc.com/news/re/121753…
DJC: WinCo claims old Sam's Club (paywalled): djc.com/news/re/121696…

The Moses Lake pattern (tweet 12):

iFIBER One News deep dive on who's behind the appeals: ifiberone.com/news/ifiber-on…
NewsTalk 870: WinCo believes union behind opposition: newstalk870.am/winco-foods-be…

Mount Vernon (tweet 9):

GoSkagit: WinCo project stalled by appeal: goskagit.com/news/winco-foo…

Bozeman (tweet 13):

NBC Montana: Bozeman to get WinCo despite appeal: nbcmontana.com/news/local/boz…

WinCo company history covering Folsom, Federal Way, Brentwood, Tracy, Sacramento, Tacoma (tweets 5-8, 10):

Encyclopedia.com company history: encyclopedia.com/books/politics…
Company-histories.com: company-histories.com/WinCo-Foods-In…

AFL-CIO deleting the pro-WinCo post (tweet 18):

IBTimes: Is WinCo Foods Anti-Union? AFL-CIO praises competitor, then deletes post: ibtimes.com/winco-foods-an…
LaborPains: AFL-CIO Oops Moment: laborpains.org/2013/08/13/rec…

WinCo as employee-owned (tweet 2):

Wikipedia (well-sourced): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinCo_Foo…

Seattle Hearing Examiner case search (tweet 19):

seattle.gov/hearing-examin…

Joe Veyera tweet on the MUP application:

x.com/JoeVeyera/stat…

/fin

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More from @minty_hawk

Apr 16
Joe Mizrahi is the Secretary-Treasurer of UFCW 3000, the largest private-sector union in Washington state. He also sits on the Seattle School Board representing District 4.

For decades, UFCW locals have used front groups to block WinCo stores from opening. Now a Portland-based entity with no apparent Washington presence has derailed WinCo's first Seattle store, and Mizrahi's union, which has a direct financial interest in keeping non-union grocers out of the market, has said nothing.

All while publicly mourning the loss of grocery access in the same Council District (5). /1
First, the basics. UFCW 3000 represents more than 50,000 workers across Washington, mostly in grocery and healthcare. Mizrahi is the #2, elected to the Secretary-Treasurer role three times. He co-chairs a $2 billion pension fund. He's not a figurehead. He runs the operation.

(Source: , LinkedIn) /2joe4schools.com/about
Between August and September 2025, Kroger announced it was closing four Fred Meyer stores in the Puget Sound region: Lake City (Seattle), Everett, Kent, and Redmond. UFCW 3000 said 703 workers would be affected across the four stores.

UFCW 3000 was furious. Their statement called it a threat to "food access for working class communities" and noted that three of the four closing stores were in zip codes below median income.

(Source: Fox 13, 8/19/25) /3
Read 20 tweets
Apr 2
A Senate Majority Leader wrote a $2/gallon tax incentive for sustainable aviation fuel.
The company that benefited most from his legislation hired him when he left office.
He now earns $30K–$60K/year from them.
This is how apparent conflicts compound into public costs. /1 Image
Andy Billig (D-Spokane) sponsored SB 5447 in 2023 as Senate Majority Leader.

It created a $2/gallon tax incentive for sustainable aviation fuel producers and users in Washington State.
The bill passed. Gov. Inslee signed it. /2
SkyNRG Americas announced an $800M fuel plant in Walla Walla shortly after.

Their own statement cited “new business-friendly legislation” as the reason they chose Washington.

The tax incentive Billig sponsored is worth up to $100M in forgone state revenue on that plant’s projected output alone. /3
Read 9 tweets
Mar 30
Update.

We pulled the City of Seattle's consultant contract database. It's more interesting than we thought. /1
Noel Frame was the Director of Policy and Planning at BDS Planning when she won her primary in August 2016.

Before her election: 7 city contracts, 2 departments, $286,000 total. About $63K/year. After her election: 15 city contracts, 6 departments, $1,308,175 total. About $145K/year.

Her firm's city revenue more than doubled the day she took office. /2
The firm's single largest contract in its entire 14-year history with the city? $400,000 for "Comprehensive Business Improvement Area Support." Awarded May 2024. The same year Frame became Vice Chair of Finance on Ways & Means. /3
Read 8 tweets
Mar 26
A Washington State Senator runs a consulting firm. The legislature created a program at the Department of Commerce. Her firm got the contract to run it. She now controls Commerce’s budget. /1 Image
@NoelFrame has been at Uncommon Bridges (formerly BDS Planning) since 2016. In August 2025, she was formally named Managing Partner. The firm has 16 employees and specializes in government consulting. Her F1 shows she earns $60K-$100K from the firm. That’s more than her Senate salary. /2
@NoelFrame In 2022, the legislature passed HB 1724, creating a Permanent Supportive Housing Advisory Committee at the Department of Commerce. It passed 96-1. Frame voted yes. She didn’t sponsor it. She didn’t need to. /3
Read 10 tweets
Mar 21
@seiu775 paid @LizBerryWA 's firm $86,950 over two years. Two signed public filings describe that money. They don't match. /1 Image
Berry's Washington State F1 disclosure calls the work "Software Development." SEIU 775's federal LM-2 filing calls the same payments "Representational Activities." Both are signed under penalty of perjury. /2
"Representational Activities" is the LM-2 category unions use for lobbying and member advocacy. It is not the category for buying software. The category for that is "General Overhead" or "Office and Administrative Expense." /3
Read 8 tweets

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