Nabisco Factory Workers Fight Back Against Layoffs
Employees at the Nabisco plant on Chicago’s Southwest Side face an uncertain future as the company hands out pink slips and starts moving parts of its operations to Mexico.
Parent company Mondelez International announced earlier this summer that it was eliminating 600 jobs from the factory at 7300 S. Kedzie Avenue, one of the world’s largest industrial bakeries. The jobs are headed to Salinas, Mexico, where the company plans to invest $130 million to upgrade a facility there.
The Deerfield, Ill.-based company, which makes Chips Ahoy cookies, Wheat Thins crackers, and Oreo Cookies, plans to slash the factory’s 1,200-employee workforce by half. Last month it handed out pink slips to 277 workers.
Titus Banks, 53, was one of them.
“It will actually be devastating for me and my family,” said Banks, the father of three. “I have one daughter in college now and another aspiring to attend college.”
The company’s move to outsource jobs to low-wage countries like Mexico is not uncommon for Chicago’s shrinking manufacturing industry. State data shows that between 2001 and 2014, the number of people employed in Chicago manufacturing jobs shrank by nearly half. In addition, manufacturing jobs have moved from Chicago to the suburbs, making them increasingly inaccessible to city dwellers.
The impact of those job losses has hit African Americans especially hard.
Related article: Nabisco to Cut Chicago jobs, Send Work to Mexico
Last September, the Chicago Reporter examined how manufacturing jobs, such as those at Nabisco, allowed many African-Americans to enjoy a middle-class life. During the Great Migration, millions of Blacks fled the rural South seeking better jobs and better pay in the industrialized North.
Sabrina Pope, whose family has worked at Nabisco for generations, was one of those waiting last summer to find out if she still had a job. She’s still in limbo.
Retirement is not an option for Pope, 58, who doesn’t yet qualify for full Social Security retirement benefits. She and her husband have a son in high school who wants to become a doctor, and they take care of her elderly mother. Living on one income is a scary proposition.
“I can’t see it with just one check coming in,” said Pope, a processor and baker who has worked at the plant for 35 years.
Banks’s father came to Chicago from Louisiana in 1967 and landed a blue-collar job at a gas company, retiring 30 years later. “I was trying to do the same as my dad would do,” said Banks, whose last day at Nabisco will be March 21. “[He] took care of his family, sent his kids to college, bought his home.”
As uncertainty looms for Banks and other Nabisco workers, the union representing them is fighting back.
In January, the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers & Grain Millers Union Local 300 filed a federal lawsuit and an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint against Mondelez to stop the layoffs.
A spokesman for BCTGM Local 300, the largest of three unions at the Chicago Lawn plant, said Mondelez’s actions target the plant’s significant minority and older workforce, which is discriminatory and a violation of its collective bargaining agreements. The bakers’ union represents nearly 900 members, of which more than half are minorities, and 86 percent are over 40. The EEOC complaint alleges the company is forcing union members to pay for capital improvements, something not asked of workers at other Mondelez plants.
“Our contention is they dealt with Chicago differently because they want to downsize [the Chicago Lawn factory] based on demographics and its racial makeup,” said Ron Baker, strategic campaign coordinator for the International BCTGM Union.
A spokesperson for Mondelez denied that the company is discriminating and said the complaint is without merit.
“We do not comment on pending litigation, but we will certainly defend against BCTGM Local 300’s allegations both in the federal court action and in the EEOC complaint,” said Laurie Guzzinati, Mondelez’s senior director of corporate and government affairs.
Last year Mondelez announced that moving some operations to Mexico would save the company $46 million a year. In talks with the company, Baker said union members were asked to match that price difference in contractual givebacks to keep their jobs. Mondelez reported more than $29 billion in profits last year.
He called it unreasonable for union members to pick up any costs since Mondelez has paid for capital investments such as new technology and equipment like “super ovens” at its plants in Fair Lawn, New Jersey, and Richmond, Virginia. Matching that savings would amount to 60 percent of union members’ wages and benefits, Baker said.
“We got 86 percent of the people over age 40; we got 70 to 75 percent that is minority,” Baker said. “This is the only plant with numbers like that where they asked these people to pay for their capital investments. When they didn’t, they sent their jobs away.”
Pope is not the only one who could be affected by the layoffs. At least five relatives work at the plant, including Pope’s 57-year-old sister, who has 35 years on the job. Pope’s 36th anniversary at the factory is approaching in July.
Employment at Nabisco helped many of her relatives attain a middle-class lifestyle, including her mother, Minnie Pope, who bought a two-flat apartment building in North Lawndale and raised eight boys and girls. She retired from Nabisco after 46 years.
“You were able to work,” Pope said. “You were able to do overtime. You could put your money away and have a nice down payment for a house … and a nice car. You were able to live comfortably.”
Banks, who still owes half of the mortgage on his Brainerd home, was laid off from his job at a bank in 2011.
He started at Nabisco as a part-timer in 2012 in the re-pack division before being promoted two years ago. Seeing opportunities for advancement, Banks hoped to retire from the company, collect his pension, and live out his “glory years.”
“But now they’ve thrown this at me,” he said. “Now I have to start this whole process all over again.”
Very sad to hear this. We all grew up with Nabisco products and they owe their success to our patronage. I have already had a terrible experience with Nabisco graham crackers. I opened a pkg and noticed a strong chemical smell. Then I took a very small bite and it had a strong chemical taste. I called Nabisco thinking that they surely would want to know about these seemingly contaminated crackers. Nope, they didn’t want us to send the crackers back so they could test them, nope, they haven’t had similar complaints and they gave me 4 or 5 dollars worth of coupons for my trouble. I was flabbergasted. Then I did a Google search and found that MANY, MANY people have complained about the same problem AND As it turns out, Nabisco had moved the manufacturing of their Honey Grahams to Mexico. Imagine that. It is hard to find alternatives to my previous favorite Nabisco products, but After that experience, I have decided to boycott Nabisco. Just think of all the CHILDREN who eat Nabisco graham crackers….and yet Nabisco is nonplussed by all of these reports about their honey grahams. What do they do? They move even more products to their Mexico plant.
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Hello Ellia – Thank you for weighing in! This is big news. Would love to discuss this further, and write up an article in response to this; letting our readers know about Hydrox Cookies. I think it would go over really well. Email us at Info@themadeinamericamovement.com and we can get started! Thank you, and the Leaf Brands team for keeping Hydrox Made in USA.
The MAM Team
First Philly now Chicago. Remember smelling the buttery Lorna Doone cookie growing up, now a vacant building. Good luck Chicago
What is our wonderful politicians doing now????? They make me sick.
Corporate GREED at it’s finest! BOYCOTT I won’t buy another product. Thank you Nabisco, this is going to save me a lot of money. Because I won’t buy anything from your company again and I will encourage everyone I know to do the same.
Hope Mexico keeps them in business because I will no longer buy their products.
Well, Donald Trump promises to bring jobs back to America. Wish I new if he would keep his word once he was in office.
It’s NObisco in this household from now on
I like that Mickey! That would make a great slogan for bumper stickers, etc.
Time to quit buying Nabisco!!
I’ll not support corporate greed… when will it get to a point when no one has a job to buy these products. Nobisco
Let the Mexicans buy their product….because this American will no longer
Since Nabisco is now moving, based on profit the American consumers should learn to boycott all companies that leave the US soil in the name of profit. These companies do not care about the workers and their family obligations it’s all about profit. So, we should as consumers stop purchasing items that leave this soil I do and so do others as listed below. We must want to support our citizens working and our companies that help these citizens to work, but if we don’t have jobs then “how can we make the purchases of Nabisco?”. WE MUST BOYCOTT, THOSE WHO DECIDE TO LEAVE THIS COUNTRY WITH OUR JOBS AND STILL LOOKING FOR PROFIT, SINCE THEY WILL MAKE MORE MONEY OFF THE AMERICAN CONSUMERS, DUE TO THE $ AGAINST OTHER M0NEY.
I to bought graham crackers & they smelt & taste funny.I will never buy anything from Mexico mainly food products.Shame on these American companies that sell or lieve U.S.& go out of the country.NO LOYALTY.REMEMBER HISTORY UNIONS BUILT THIS COUNTRY!