Source: The Independent
As of midnight on 5 July, hundreds of employees at one of the nationās largest snack manufacturers went on strike, demanding better workplace protections and an end to forced overtime that has pushed Frito-Lay workers in Topeka, Kansas to the brink.
For nearly two weeks, roughly 600 workers at the Frito-Lay plant have been on strike, calling for better pay, stronger workplace protections and an end to unpredictable overtime schedules and staff shortages that workers say have endangered their lives on the job and stretched them too thin despite years of warnings.
Workers have reported what they say are stagnant wages that have not kept pace with the cost of living and no meaningful raises in more than a decade despite the company reaping billions of dollars in profits during the coronavirus pandemic.
Their claims of hazardous working conditions have allegedly been met with indifference, according to workers.
When a worker died on the line, āyou had us move the body and put in another co-worker to keep the line goingā, said Cherie Renfro, a Frito-Lay worker writing to the companyĀ inĀ The Topeka-Capital Journal.
On 27 June, the Local 218 chapter of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union notified local labour leaders that its membership authorised a strike by a vote of 353-30.
Frito-Lay said it was āshockedā by the vote.
āWe believe a strike would be the most harmful outcome for everyone involved, especially our employees,ā the company said in a statement.
Ms Renfro told the company she is āshocked you are so out of touch with your employees you didnāt see this comingā.
āThis storm has been brewing for years,ā she said.
Frito-Lay ā the ubiquitous industry giant and subsidiary of Pepsi Co, with more than two dozen brands under its umbrella, including Layās chips, Cheetos and Doritos ā operates more than 30 facilities in the US.
In her letter to the company, Ms Renfro accused the company of dismissing workersā concerns about inhaling smoke and fumes after a fire at the facility. She also said she did not receive any hazard pay while management worked remotely during the pandemic, and reported that a co-worker was denied bereavement leave when their father died in another state.
Workers struggled to keep warm through a deep freeze, she claimed, and inexperienced temporary workers have been involved in ānumerousā accidents.
āYou have pushed us into a corner and we came out swinging,ā Ms Renfo told the company.
The Topeka facility has been fined in several recent casesĀ involving an employeeās amputation, according to reports filed with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The agency also is investigatingĀ an incident from MayĀ involving a forklift.
The plant has remained operational through the strike, and the company is hiring temporary workers ā it plans to host a career fair later this month to recruit more workers.
āWe continue to welcome any employees who are part of the bargaining unit on strike to continue to work as they are legally entitled to do,ā a company spokespersonĀ toldĀ The Topeka-Capital Journal. āWe are currently not permanently replacing employees who are on strike.ā
Anthony Shelton, international president of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union,Ā saidĀ the strike āis about more than wages and benefits. It is about the quality of life for these workers and their families.ā
āThis strike is about working people having a voice in their futures and taking a stand for their families,ā he said.
The union has ārepeatedlyā asked the company to hire more workers to meet the pace of their demands against the current staffing levels, āand yet despite record profits, Frito-Lay management has refused this requestā, Mr Shelton has claimed
Workers are āleft with no choice but to strike to defend the livelihoods of themselves and their families,ā he said. āWe simply ask that management recognize the sacrifices our members have made, and work with us to find a solution that promotes the well-being of our membership and their families.ā
Earlier this week, Pepsi reported that its quarterly revenue rose by more than 20 per cent from 2020, with recent stock increases giving the company a market value of more than $211bn.
Its growth is also fuelled by sales from Frito-Lay, which recorded more than $4bn in sales in 2020 as Americans hunkered down during the pandemic.
Mark Benaka, Local 218ās business manager, hasĀ called on labour leadersĀ to ādiscourage the purchase of any Frito-Lay, Pepsi, Gatorade, Starbucks, Lipton, Tropicana and Stacyās productsā under the Frito-Lay and Pepsi umbrella āuntil a resolution or agreement in place to protect our members and their familyās financial livelihoodsā.
The companyās two-year agreement with the union expired in September 2020 and was extended through the end of June, but the union voted against a new contract with a two per cent wage increase and 60-hour work week cap. Members rejected the wage increase as insufficient, and the overtime cap would mean more senior workers would be forced to work weekends, according to workers.
āWe want to go home and see our families. We want to have our weekends off. We want to work the time that we agreed to work ā and hopefully not much more than that,ā factory worker Monk Drapeaux-StewartĀ told Labor Notes.
Mr Drapeaux-Stewart said his wages have increased by only 77 cents within the last 12 years.
āFifteen, 20 years ago Frito-Lay had a really good reputation ā all you need is a high school diploma and youāve got this job with good pay and benefits,ā he said. āBut slowly all of that has been whittled away.ā
On 19 July, the unionās contract negotiating committee will reconvene with the company to hash out better terms, though it is unclear whether Frito-Lay will update its last offer.
In aĀ statement issued by the companyĀ on 14 July, Frito-Lay said it is ācommitted to providing a safe and fair workplace for all of our employeesā.
āWe believe our existing two-year offer addresses the concerns that have been raised at our Topeka facility,ā the company said. āThat good-faith offer, which was recommended by the entire union bargaining committee, accepted the unionās proposal for across-the-board wage increases and improved work rules that would reduce overtime and hours worked.ā
The statement added that the company believes the strike āunnecessarily puts our employees at risk of economic hardship, and we are focused on resolving this matter as expeditiously and fairly as possibleā.
The strike is among several high-profile organising efforts and strikes across the US amid a pandemic that has underscored a widening wealth gap in the US while the nation endures a lingering economic fallout from the public health crisis despite the growing fortunes of Americaās largest employers.
Hundreds of Volvo workers are on strike in Dublin, Virginia, and a months-long strike is still underway among miners in Alabama. After aĀ high-profile union voteĀ among workers at an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, failed to join the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, labour organisers accused the retail giant ofĀ busting a campaignĀ to create the first-ever union in the companyās history.
A potential union at the nationās second-largest retailer, founded by the worldās wealthiest man, marked a turning point for US labour; The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, one the largest labour unions in the US,Ā passed a resolutionĀ committing to āsupply all resources necessaryā to help unionise workers at Amazon as a ātop priorityā for the union.
The Frito-Lay strike also comes as members of Congress revive debate over the White House-backedĀ Protecting the Right to Organise Act, or Pro Act, which would constitute one of the largest labour provisions since the New Deal era, taking aim at so-called āright to workā laws in 27 states.
US Senator Bernie Sanders has confirmed that parts of the measure ā which has broad support among Democrats, including moderate Joe Manchin ā are included in proposals for a $3.5 trillion budget bill, a measure that can be passed in a marginally Democrat-controlled Senate through a reconciliation process on a simple majority vote.
Union membership has neared all-time lows across the US, while income inequality has widened, according to theĀ Economic Policy Institute, a progressive think tank.
A report from the organisation earlier this year found that the annual median income for a full-time worker is $3,250 less than similar work in 1979 amid declining union enrolment.
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