The Commercial Appeal

Teamsters: ‘We will organize at XPO’

Workers say conditions are terrible at warehouse

- Wayne Risher Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

Teamsters chief James P. Hoffa pledged Tuesday to back Memphis warehouse workers who complained about working conditions and their company’s response to an on-the-job death.

Hoffa told a union rally at LaRose Elementary that the Teamsters is determined to organize XPO Logistics, a global firm that operates facilities in southeast Memphis’s distributi­on hub.

The Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Teamsters general president and son of the late union leader Jimmy Hoffa was in Memphis to attend a commemorat­ion of the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. King was in Memphis to advocate for striking sanitation workers.

Hoffa decried “horrible” conditions and treatment alleged by current and former female employees at an XPO logistics center near Holmes and Malone.

“We’re standing with them,” Hoffa said. “There’s only one hope, the union, the Teamsters union. Hope is on the way. The Teamsters are on the way. We will be here for you … we will organize XPO,” Hoffa said.

The union is in the early stages of trying to organize workers at the XPO Memphis facility and has tangled with XPO elsewhere in the U.S. in recent years.

The rally coincided with the filing of sexual harassment allegation­s with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission on behalf of three women who formerly worked at the warehouse.

The complaints said the women were sexually harassed by supervisor­s, and that XPO management failed to adequately protect the employees.

XPO didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Three XPO employees and a former employee spoke at the rally. They complained about long workdays and lack of control over fluctuatin­g hours, shifts and work weeks.

They also spoke of the death of Linda Jo Neal, 58, an XPO worker who collapsed on the job last Oct. 17.

A Shelby County Medical Examiner’s report concluded Neal died of a heart attack caused by cardiovasc­ular disease.

Lakeisha Nelson, 45, recalled Oct. 17 as a “horrible day.” She said co-workers who wanted to help Neal “were threatened by management of terminatio­n if they touched her or tried to render aid to her.”

Neal’s son, Dean Turner, said he appreciate­d the workers having the courage “to tell the truth about the situation.”

Nelson said she supports the Teamsters’ organizing effort. “We’re trying to accomplish fair treatment, humanity in this building, (a) safe and healthy workplace. We should enjoy getting up and going to work. We shouldn’t be…treated like cattle.”

“We’re not livestock, we’re human,’” Nelson said. “Martin Luther King said, ‘I am a man.’ And I stand here and stand before you today and say, I am human. Treat me as such, give me that respect.”

James Curbeam, a Nashville-based Teamsters organizer who led the rally, said, “XPO is a worldwide company that has declared war on workers, and the Teamsters union has stepped in and said, ‘No more.’”

The workers also drew support from the Tennessee NAACP.

“We stand with you,” said Gloria Sweet-Love of Brownsvill­e, the NAACP’s Tennessee state conference president.

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