Lodi News-Sentinel

Workers at General Mills plant vote to unionize

- By Kristen Leigh

More than 500 workers at a General Mills cereal plant in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, voted this week to unionize in hopes of protecting wages and benefits.

The 520 nonsalarie­d plant workers will now be represente­d by Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Workers Union (RWDSW), which also represents workers at the Quaker Oats plant in Cedar Rapids.

“Everyone is still very grateful and thankful for our jobs at General Mills,” said Tim Sarver, a worker at the plant for 36 years. “We decided to organize a campaign after ... we noticed there had been a trend over the years of slowly having benefits cut away.”

General Mills, headquarte­red in Golden Valley, has owned the plant for 49 years. It makes cereal, fruit snacks and desserts at the site. Company spokesman Rob Litt said the company has a great relationsh­ip with the plant’s workers.

“We respect our employees’ right to make this choice and will work to have a productive relationsh­ip with the (union),” the company said in a statement.

Over the years, RWDSW has been in contact with small factions of the plant’s workers, but the latest union talks began in earnest about four months ago, said Roger Grobstich, vice president of RWDSW Internatio­nal.

Sarver said workers noticed a gradually whittling away of their benefits. They were also concerned about the company’s growing use of temp agencies in supplying cheap labor that the General Mills plant workers feared would undercut, and one day, result in the eliminatio­n of their jobs. A recent change to the attendance policy — reducing the workers’ absences, including sick days and family medical emergencie­s, from five to three days a year — was the final blow, pushing the group to organize.

Nearly 60 percent of the plant’s production, sanitation and maintenanc­e workers voted for unionizati­on Wednesday, Sarver said. Organizers laid out guidelines for a “respectful campaign,” he said, promising the anti-union workers they’d never hand out fliers outside the gate or call workers at their homes.

“We are a very special plant. Through the process, there was no disrespect to either side,” he said. “Our goal is to put out great products for Mills and to make the company and all of Cedar Rapids proud.”

General Mills employs about 40,000 full- and parttime workers, both union and nonunion, globally. Last spring, the company eliminated 625 positions, through both layoffs and not filling open jobs. But the company also created new positions in different areas during that period, said Don Mulligan, chief financial officer of General Mills, at that time. That came more than a year after General Mills wrapped up several multiyear cost-saving initiative­s that led to more than 5,000 job cuts.

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