A lot of workers on strike or are about to strike..... John Deere, TV & Film, Kaiser Permanente, Kellogg's, Nurses UPDATE: Kellogg's workers settle

lightbright

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John Deere the first of several large walkouts coming


Deere & Co. workers go on strike; first major walkout in 30 years

AP21284502447039.jpg

In this April 9, 2019, wheels are attach as workers assemble a tractor at John Deere’s Waterloo, Iowa assembly plant. The vast majority of United Auto Workers union members rejected a contract offer from Deere & Co. Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021 that would have delivered at least 5% raises to the workers who make John Deere tractors and other equipment.

MOLINE, Ill. (AP) —
More than 10,000 Deere & Co. workers went on strike Thursday, the first major walkout at the agricultural machinery giant in more than three decades.

The union had said its members would walk off the job if no deal has been reached Wednesday. The vast majority of the union rejected a contract offer earlier this week that would have delivered 5% raises to some workers and 6% raises to others at the Illinois company known for its green tractors.

“The almost one million UAW retirees and active members stand in solidarity with the striking UAW members at John Deere,” UAW President Ray Curry said.

CONTINUED:
Deere & Co. workers go on strike; first major walkout in 30 years | WGHP FOX8 (myfox8.com)
 
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BigATLslim

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Man, that Kellogg’s strike is something else.

They do documentaries on these companies really focusing their humble beginnings and innovation to mask these companies become behemoth MNC’s and ruin the citizens economy.
 

michigantoga

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Look at a GM parking lot for the assembly workers, cars falling apart, while they build vehicles that cost 35K+ Thats for a small car, most trucks & SUV are 50K
 

Quek9

K9
BGOL Investor
The boomers threw the millennials under the bus in the 90s with John Deere

That truck driver will be punished. After John Deere settles look for them to start slowly transferring shit to Mexico. The same thing happened in the HVAC industry.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Back From The Brink: How Crippling IATSE Strike Was Averted (For Now)

Nellie Andreeva
October 22, 2021 10:04PM PDT


It is ironic since Fraturdays were a focal point in IATSE’s contract demands that it took a Fraturday to thwart a potentially devastating Hollywood strike. The virtual negotiations between the union representing roughly 60,000 members covered by the locals, and AMPTP, the trade association representing the major Hollywood studios, had a marathon bargaining session last Friday that spilled well into the night.

It was not a true Fraturday — a work jargon referring to the fraught practice of Friday on-set production shifts stretching to early Saturday — but by the time talks wrapped late Friday night, the two sides had come to an agreement on the key points, including yearly scale wage increases of 3% in each year.

According to sources, Saturday morning was spent largely communicating with the individual locals on points specific to them. One of the biggest was raising minimum wage for Local 871 members (they include writers assistants and various coordinators), from $16 an hour to $23.50 next year, $24.50 in 2023, and $26 in 2024. Other sources argued that the tentative agreement was not reached until mid-day Saturday. In the end, a contract was approved by all 13 West Coast locals and announcement was made in early afternoon, more than a month after the previous IATSE deal had expired on September 10.

While a work stoppage was averted, “I think we were pretty close to a strike,” one participant said about the negotiations.

Contrary to popular belief, talks did not go down to the wire because the companies underestimated IATSE’s willingness to follow through on their threat to strike because the union had never done so in the past. Instead, it was the unusual course of negotiations that led to the drama, sources said.

“In every union negotiation, the other party does not ask on the first day what they ask on the final day,” one observer said. The two sides traditionally trade things until they reach compromise — it’s called bargaining for a reason. But that was not the case this time, insiders say, with IATSE staying firm and not budging on their initial demands even an inch.

While the WGA did some of that during the most recent negotiation before it started bargaining, IATSE took the strategy to another level, surprising the studios by its unwillingness to give up any ground and bargain.

Observers believe the stance at least in part was due to the hardship brought upon by the pandemic of the past 18 months, with IATSE members among the hardest hit as many are hourly employees with little financial protections who struggled when production shut down for months. The pandemic also made many reexamine their work-life balance, making grueling long shifts with very little turnaround time no longer acceptable. That change in perspective helped turn sufficient rest time into a main cause members rallied around.

It wasn’t until a week or 10 days before the previous contract was to expire that the companies realized the unions were not going to change their positions and start making concessions.

“Then we had to look and ourselves and have an honest conversation,” one studio executive said. “Some of the practices have been pushed along for too long. Occasional 14-hour days had become too common 14-odd days.”

With small exceptions, the new basic agreement now guarantees 54 hours of rest for those working five consecutive days in a week, and 32 hours of rest when you work six days.

Quietly taking a lead role in bringing the two sides together in the final stretch were super lawyer Ken Ziffren, Disney General Entertainment Content chairman Peter Rice and the DGA’s former executive national director Jay Roth.

During the crucial final days of the negotiations the trio played mediators, spending time in a virtual room with one of the sides then with the other to help bridge the gaps and get over speed bumps in the talks.

While early euphoria among union members upon getting the news of a tentative deal on Saturday turned to skepticism — and even disappointment — in the hours and days to follow amid scarce details about the agreement beyond the main terms, sources on the companies’ side are optimistic the pact will be ratified by union members.

IATSE is amalgamation of various locals whose presidents all supported the deal. Locals that have addressed their members already have recommended ratification. But lingering questions remain over the gains — or lack there of — in the new contract as the complete agreement is yet to be released to members. It will come down to the vote to determine whether a strike threat has been eliminated. The steps in the ratification procedure were announced by IATSE on Thursday, with dates of the voting still TBD and the process possibly stretching to mid-November.

If confirmed, the new contract will increase cost of production, impacting entertainment companies’ profit margins. Due to pattern bargaining, there will be a ripple effect, with the gains achieved by IATSE factoring into the main guilds’ upcoming negotiations. While that is considered inevitable as those who help make content seek a fair share of the revenue, the companies at least are hoping the upcoming negotiations will feature more bargaining and fewer lines in the sand that lead straight to the brink.

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blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
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Kellogg pushes union to restart negotiations as strike wears on

Kellogg is trying to get union leadership back to the negotiation table.

 

lightbright

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Kellogg's workers end 11-week strike with a new contract

NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with HuffPost labor reporter Dave Jamieson about the announced end to the Kellogg's strike in Michigan.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

After more than two and a half months on strike, 1,400 Kellogg's workers now have a new contract. The strike took place at four plants in four states responsible for making breakfast cereals like Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies and Froot Loops. It was one of the longest strikes this year in the U.S. and attracted national attention amid a surge in organized labor activity. Here with us is HuffPost labor reporter Dave Jamieson.

Welcome.

DAVE JAMIESON: Hi, Ari.

SHAPIRO: What does this new contract look like? Does it improve on the old one?

JAMIESON: So there's a lot of good stuff in here for the workers. Some people are going to get pretty significant raises right off the bat. Everyone's going to get cost-of-living adjustments over the course of the contract, which is really important in a time of inflation like this. And nobody's health care costs are going to go up.

One worker I spoke with thought the contract was a real win. Another worker I talked to was a little less thrilled about it, and that's because of this two-tier compensation system they have at Kellogg's. Workers are divided into two categories. On the higher tier, you get a better pay scale and better health and pension benefits than the lower tier. And a lot of workers wanted to eliminate that system or at least really scale it back so that it was harder for Kellogg's to put new workers into that lower tier.

This contract does do some things on that front. It's going to immediately graduate workers who've had four years at their plants into the higher tier. And each year of the contract, 3% of each plant are going to move into that higher tier. But that's not a very high percentage, so some workers are concerned that Kellogg's will be able to kind of exploit the system and keep...

SHAPIRO: Yeah.

JAMIESON: ...A lot of workers in the lower tier.

SHAPIRO: I imagine that in addition to the specific opinions about the contract, workers are just relieved to be back on the job after the strike that went on for two and a half months, particularly just before Christmas and New Year's.

JAMIESON: That's right. That's a long strike, and it's a big sacrifice. You're talking about workers who gave up thousands of dollars in wages to carry on this fight. And people I talked to today were frankly a bit relieved to be heading into the holidays with this settled. They're going to go back to work on the 26. And so there is a bit of certainty now over all of this. And they know that financially, they're probably going to get back on better financial footing really soon.

SHAPIRO: Some people have criticized Kellogg's for threatening to permanently replace the striking workers when it looked like they might not agree on a contract. How serious was that?

JAMIESON: It's a very serious threat. Even President Biden weighed in on it. That's how big a deal this was. Legally, it's not clear if Kellogg's could have pulled that off. There are, under many circumstances - a company can permanently replace workers. And obviously, that's very devastating, if you're a striker, to wait years and possibly never get your job back. And someone I spoke to today really felt like that threat may have changed the course of these negotiations.

SHAPIRO: Just in our final 30 seconds or so, you cover labor, and it's been a really busy year for unions. How does this strike fit in with the bigger picture?

JAMIESON: I think a lot of these workers were comfortable going on strike in part because of this tight labor market we have. One of these plants is in Nebraska, where unemployment is below 2%, so it's hard for companies to find workers. And so I think workers who are willing to go on strike now know that some of the leverage is really returning to their side.

SHAPIRO: Dave Jamieson is a labor reporter for HuffPost.

Thank you for speaking with us.

JAMIESON: Thanks, Ari.

Kellogg's workers end 11-week strike with a new contract : NPR

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easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
Kellogg's workers end 11-week strike with a new contract

NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with HuffPost labor reporter Dave Jamieson about the announced end to the Kellogg's strike in Michigan.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

After more than two and a half months on strike, 1,400 Kellogg's workers now have a new contract. The strike took place at four plants in four states responsible for making breakfast cereals like Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies and Froot Loops. It was one of the longest strikes this year in the U.S. and attracted national attention amid a surge in organized labor activity. Here with us is HuffPost labor reporter Dave Jamieson.

Welcome.

DAVE JAMIESON: Hi, Ari.

SHAPIRO: What does this new contract look like? Does it improve on the old one?

JAMIESON: So there's a lot of good stuff in here for the workers. Some people are going to get pretty significant raises right off the bat. Everyone's going to get cost-of-living adjustments over the course of the contract, which is really important in a time of inflation like this. And nobody's health care costs are going to go up.

One worker I spoke with thought the contract was a real win. Another worker I talked to was a little less thrilled about it, and that's because of this two-tier compensation system they have at Kellogg's. Workers are divided into two categories. On the higher tier, you get a better pay scale and better health and pension benefits than the lower tier. And a lot of workers wanted to eliminate that system or at least really scale it back so that it was harder for Kellogg's to put new workers into that lower tier.

This contract does do some things on that front. It's going to immediately graduate workers who've had four years at their plants into the higher tier. And each year of the contract, 3% of each plant are going to move into that higher tier. But that's not a very high percentage, so some workers are concerned that Kellogg's will be able to kind of exploit the system and keep...

SHAPIRO: Yeah.

JAMIESON: ...A lot of workers in the lower tier.

SHAPIRO: I imagine that in addition to the specific opinions about the contract, workers are just relieved to be back on the job after the strike that went on for two and a half months, particularly just before Christmas and New Year's.

JAMIESON: That's right. That's a long strike, and it's a big sacrifice. You're talking about workers who gave up thousands of dollars in wages to carry on this fight. And people I talked to today were frankly a bit relieved to be heading into the holidays with this settled. They're going to go back to work on the 26. And so there is a bit of certainty now over all of this. And they know that financially, they're probably going to get back on better financial footing really soon.

SHAPIRO: Some people have criticized Kellogg's for threatening to permanently replace the striking workers when it looked like they might not agree on a contract. How serious was that?

JAMIESON: It's a very serious threat. Even President Biden weighed in on it. That's how big a deal this was. Legally, it's not clear if Kellogg's could have pulled that off. There are, under many circumstances - a company can permanently replace workers. And obviously, that's very devastating, if you're a striker, to wait years and possibly never get your job back. And someone I spoke to today really felt like that threat may have changed the course of these negotiations.

SHAPIRO: Just in our final 30 seconds or so, you cover labor, and it's been a really busy year for unions. How does this strike fit in with the bigger picture?

JAMIESON: I think a lot of these workers were comfortable going on strike in part because of this tight labor market we have. One of these plants is in Nebraska, where unemployment is below 2%, so it's hard for companies to find workers. And so I think workers who are willing to go on strike now know that some of the leverage is really returning to their side.

SHAPIRO: Dave Jamieson is a labor reporter for HuffPost.

Thank you for speaking with us.

JAMIESON: Thanks, Ari.

Kellogg's workers end 11-week strike with a new contract : NPR

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I support the striking employees……I’m glad they got a new contract but what really made Kellogg’s change their minds is that people started to boycotting them. I boycotted all of their products and it worked out for the best. My two favorite Kellogg’s things are the thick and fluffy waffles and Raisin Bran
 

blackbull1970

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Grocery Store Workers Approve New Contract, Avoiding a Possible Strike

Union members in the central and southern areas of California ratified a tentative deal that was reached last week.

NBC 4
Published 2 hours ago • Updated 38 mins ago


Tens of thousands of California grocery store workers have approved a new contract with major supermarket chains, avoiding a potential strike, it was announced Thursday.

Union members in the central and southern areas of the state ratified a tentative deal that was reached last week. It grants some 47,000 employees higher wages, stronger health benefits, increased guaranteed hours for part-time workers, improved store safety and a secured pension, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union said in a statement.

Most workers will receive pay hikes of $4.25 per hour over three years, the union said, with higher raises for some employees.

The contract also includes provisions to establish health and safety committees at every Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons and Pavilions store so that employees will have a say on safety issues, the union said in a statement.

Front-line workers, including at grocery stores, were hit hard during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“After more than two years of risking their lives to serve California’s communities as essential workers, reaching a fair contract with better wage increases, health care improvements, and protected pensions for these hard-working members could not have come at a more important time," said a statement by seven union locals.

“We made history!" Erika Bentzen, a food clerk at a Ralphs in Thousand Oaks who was on the bargaining team, said in a union statement. “This was the first time members were part of the negotiations and I believe it made a difference having us there. This is the best contract in the country."

The contract takes immediate effect and covers about 540 stores.

The previous three-year contract expired March 6 and workers had voted to authorize a strike if an agreement wasn’t reached.

In 2019, employees of Ralphs, Vons, Pavilions and Albertsons voted to authorize a strike but contracts ultimately were reached without a walkout.

A 2003-04 strike and lockout put nearly 70,000 Southern California grocery workers on picket lines for more than four months.

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blackbull1970

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Amazon workers just voted to join a union — here's what happens next

Amazon workers at a Staten Island warehouse voted to unionize, the first time that's happened at one of the company's U.S. facilities.

Ari Levy, Annie Palmer
PUBLISHED SAT, APR 2 2022 8:00 AM EDT


Amazon workers on New York's Staten Island just made history, becoming the first group to vote in favor of unionizing at a U.S. facility operated by the country's largest e-commerce company.

After a hard-fought battle, the result is a major defeat for Amazon, which has used all of its might to keep organized labor off its premises. As of Friday, the tally at the Staten Island warehouse, known as JFK8, was 2,654 votes in favor of joining the union and 2,131 opposed, with 67 ballots being challenged.

The fulfillment center doesn't flip to becoming a union shop overnight, and there's potentially a long road ahead. But the wheels are in motion for change.

Here's what happens next:

Delays, challenges and negotiations


The Amazon Labor Union didn't even exist until last year. Now, the grassroots organization that relied on a crowdfunding campaign to fund its organizing is responsible for negotiating a collective bargaining agreement on behalf of roughly 6,000 employees at Amazon's largest fulfillment center in New York.

The ALU is led by Christian Smalls, a former JFK8 manager, who was fired by Amazon in 2020 after the company claimed he violated social distancing rules.

Rather than getting to dictate pay, benefits and working conditions as it does across its massive network of offices, data centers and warehouses, Amazon will now have to negotiate those key details with union leadership when it comes to JFK8.

Contract talks between the ALU and Amazon could start soon. But don't bet on it.

"Amazon will delay," said David Rosenfeld, a labor lawyer at Weinberg, Roger and Rosenfeld, and a lecturer at the University California at Berkeley School of Law. "They’re not going to walk in and do the right thing because that will encourage organizing everywhere else. They'll do everything they can to avoid a contract, and it will be a big, long, nasty fight."

According to an analysis published in June by Bloomberg Law, it takes on average 409 days for CBAs to be signed between employers and their newly unionized workers.

If the goal is delay, Amazon has unlimited resources to hire the top lawyers and consultants. The company has already expressed its disappointment with the outcome and said it's considering its options, including "filing objections based on the inappropriate and undue influence" of the National Labor Relations Board. Amazon didn't specify instances of improper meddling, but said the National Retail Federation and Chamber of Commerce witnessed the same behavior.

Either Amazon or the union can raise objections over conduct during the election. Both parties have left that door open. Any objection must be filed to the NLRB regional office by April 8. The agency will investigate the claims and, if there's sufficient evidence, will schedule a hearing where each side can present its case.

Challenges don't have to end there. If they're unhappy with the regional director's ruling, either side can escalate its complaint to the NLRB board in Washington.

Why wait?


Precedent is Amazon's principal concern. JFK8 is one of 100-plus Amazon fulfillment centers in the U.S., and there are many truckers and delivery drivers who aren't part of those facilities. Workers in Bessemer, Alabama, just wrapped up a second vote on whether to unionize, and while the effort appears to have failed again, the count was significantly closer than the first contest last year.

Amazon has no interest in seeing the movement gain further momentum. And the company says there's no need for that to happen. Pay at fulfillment center starts at $18 an hour, well above minimum wage in every U.S. state. Amazon also offers health insurance, paid parental leave and educational opportunities.

That sort of package has proved enticing to many workers, particularly in parts of the country where older industries have died out and well-paying blue-collar jobs are scarce. But Amazon's warehouse model isn't built on retention. As The New York Times reported last year, the company has adjusted to a pattern that involves extremely high employee churn.

As it stands, Amazon gets to control everything. If employees are unhappy, they can walk out the door. Adding a union to the mix changes that dynamic completely, because employees get bargaining power and a seat at the table.

Amazon has the opportunity to embrace that reality, said Anastasia Christman, a senior policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project in New York.

"They have this choice they can make," Christman said. "They can either decide to continue to fight this in a very negative way or say that workers have identified problems in the workforce and let's hear them out."

While the enforcement mechanisms facing Amazon may be limited, public pressure is growing and the labor movement is gaining support.

Starbucks baristas in several locations have voted to unionize, and in late March Google Fiber contractors in Kansas City, Missouri, supported a union effort, becoming the first workers with bargaining rights under the Alphabet Workers Union.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders tweeted his congratulations on Friday after the Amazon vote and said "it's going to be a shot in the arm for this country's labor movement."

Amazon has thrived for almost three decades without the presence of unions in its U.S. operations. But in the last few years, the company has drawn the ire of politicians and regulators for alleged anti-competitive behavior, paying little in taxes and mistreating workers.

This may be a time for the company to play nice and avoid a protracted battle, said Tom Kochan, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management.

"I would expect now that there is this first victory on the part of a union that Amazon is going to have to reassess its labor relations strategy and begin to negotiate in good faith to reach an agreement," said Kochan, an expert on work and employment policies. "They will add fuel to the flames if they continue to stonewall in negotiations as they have so vigorously resisted in the organizing phase."

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blackbull1970

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Union wins right to represent workers at an Apple store for the first time

Apple workers in Towson, Maryland, have voted to form the first-ever labor union at one of the tech giant's US stores.


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