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1,200 Workers Locked Out At American Crystal Sugar

1200 Workers Locked Out

DAVE KOLPACK   08/ 1/11 08:09 PM ET   AP

MOORHEAD, Minn. — About 1,300 union workers at seven American Crystal Sugar plants found themselves locked out of their jobs Monday, sitting outside company gates as a contract battle centered mostly on health care benefits and job security continued.

Workers were locked out of facilities in Minnesota, North Dakota and Iowa in the company's first labor impasse in 30 years. The union's contract expired at midnight Sunday after workers overwhelmingly rejected what the company called its final offer.

Replacement workers were on the job, although the company is currently in off-peak mode and not processing beets.

"It's not fun to be locked out," said Mike Haley, 52, a company mechanic who was holding a "No Lock Out" sign Monday outside the Moorhead plant.

The largest beet sugar processor in the U.S. had offered a 17 percent pay increase over five years during negotiations that began May 6, but workers were upset about provisions covering job security and health care costs. Although American Crystal accounts for 38 percent of the country's production of sugar from beets and 15 percent overall, the company said it doesn't believe the lockout will affect sugar production or the industry outlook.

"We don't intend to miss a beat," said Brian Ingulsrud, vice president for administration.

The union disagreed that employees were easily replaceable.

"The jobs we do, it's not rocket science, nor are we brain surgeons," union representative Mark Froemke said Monday. "But the jobs we do in the factory are very skillful jobs. I just don't believe they are going to be able to run factories with transient workers who have never been in a sugar factory."

The company has plants in East Grand Forks, Moorhead, Crookston and Chaska, Minn., and in Hillsboro and Drayton, N.D. and Mason City, Iowa. Replacement workers arrived before dawn Monday. Officials were specific to describe the new workers as temporary and said there were a few hundred of them on the job, but refused to provide further details.

The last negotiations came in in 2004, when the union approved a contract that raised salaries by 2 percent and locked in health care costs for the 7-year life of the pact.

Union officials in Moorhead said they will have members stationed at six gates, 24 hours a day. A couple of workers sat at each gate Monday afternoon, holding signs and waving at people driving by on a nearby street.

"Hang in there, guys. I hope you make it," yelled one man from his pickup truck.

Law enforcement reported no arrests and Moorhead city workers on Monday afternoon took down parking barricades placed to keep traffic from backing up in front of the plant. Union officials called the protest "informational picketing" and promised it would be peaceful.

Brad Byklum, 60, a 35-year employee who was seated in front of a sign marked "Sugar Loading Gate," said relations between workers and management has never been worse.

"It's terrible," he said. "I think the public has only heard the company's side of the story."

Union officials said its workers earn between $30,000 and $50,000 a year, without overtime. Ingulsrud said the average wage is $50,000 a year, or $75,000 including benefits.

Some of the highest-paid workers at the plant are electronic control technicians, who operate the factory from multiple computer screens. Other workers include with skilled welders, mechanics, boiler operators, pay loader operators and warehouse workers. Company officials said the plant needs "a very large contingent" of maintenance workers to keep the factory operating when it goes around-the-clock for about 250 days.

Sugar beet processing generally begins at the end of August each year and is wrapped up in May. The plant is currently in its so-called inner campaign, when workers spend most of their time retooling and replacing equipment.

Ingulsrud said the company is "shocked and surprised" that employees rejected the deal.

"We offered what we thought was a terrific contract," he said. "Where do we go from here? I'm not sure."

Froemke said employees are upset about language in the contract on job security, as well as increased costs in health care and short term disability.

"This is a brutal contract," he said. "This is the destruction of 70 years of negotiations."

Ingulsrud said workers are being asked to pay more for health care, but claims it's a better plan than most. He highlighted the 17 percent increase in pay over the five-year span of the contract, and a clause that would not allow the company to hire subcontractors if it meant the loss of any union employee's job.

"We went back and modified the language that caused them concern," Ingulsrud said.

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MOORHEAD, Minn. — About 1,300 union workers at seven American Crystal Sugar plants found themselves locked out of their jobs Monday, sitting outside company gates as a contract battle centered m...
MOORHEAD, Minn. — About 1,300 union workers at seven American Crystal Sugar plants found themselves locked out of their jobs Monday, sitting outside company gates as a contract battle centered m...
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Vinnster
The One=The Zero job creator!!
06:42 AM on 09/15/2011
Wonder why HP has not done any followup on this story could it be due to more union thuggery and racism:

Allegations of racial slurs and racist symbols directed at replacement workers and security personnel contracted by American Crystal have been leveled against union supporters picketing outside the company’s plants. A union representative disavowed reports of racist activity.

Traill County Sheriff Mike Crocker confirmed that “there have been racial statements made to security people” outside the company’s Hillsboro, N.D., plant.

Crocker also said he recently saw a monkey-like figure hanging from a noose attached to a large inflatable rat outside the plant. He said that by the next day the monkey and the noose had been removed.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:55 AM on 08/02/2011
Could someone please post the retail names of the products they sell. I like to express my opinion in these matters with my wallet.
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MANOFCOMMONSENSE
Bush Mission Accomplished? I Screwed up our Countr
07:46 AM on 08/02/2011
I sure would not like to have a Republican at my back during a time of Combat?? Stick together or shot in back??? ( United ) States?? LOL... Republicans United Mexico... Work to eat only
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MANOFCOMMONSENSE
Bush Mission Accomplished? I Screwed up our Countr
07:36 AM on 08/02/2011
Another example of a Company not happy with Millions$$ But they want Mega Millions..........................................................................................................................................
AG NOTES - ISSUE #543
Greater Profit with Quality Beets

American Crystal Sugar Company growers have set remarkable yield records in the last five years. Yields topped 25 T/A in 2006 and 2008 and 2010 yields look to set another record. A downside to this production success is the necessary reduction in planted acres due to factory processing and marketing allocation limitations. However there is still opportunity for more profit per acre with a better quality crop. The value of increased crop quality is shown in Figure 1.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending August, 2010:
Sales: $1,203.9M
One year growth: 0.3%
Net income: $526.1M
Income growth: (1.9%)



Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/american-crystal-sugar-company#ixzz1Ts2RtRLq
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sensimilla
You are not your body
02:26 PM on 08/02/2011
yeah but high yields mean low prices which doesn't necessarily help the workers, or corporate profits.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
YourNewNeighbor
Dancing with the Stones
06:33 AM on 08/02/2011
SweetToothGate will have far reaching ramifications.
03:58 AM on 08/02/2011
Best part of this recession is the fact that companies are taking this opportunity to get out from under the extortive and price colluding practices of the unions. Good for them.

Kai
07:51 AM on 08/02/2011
Doesn't it take management to agree to a union contract as well?
05:01 AM on 08/03/2011
Aopolitician:

Hence the word ‘extortive’. The unions are extorting agreement out of management by threatening to shut down the business through strikes. Sometimes management gets tired of these tactics and they move to bust them. Good for management.

Kai
11:00 AM on 08/02/2011
Hopefully, this will happen in your community.

Then, when your job is lost because of a reduction of revenue, you can blame - who?
05:07 AM on 08/03/2011
StinkyMoBub:

I doubt it will happen in my community. I moved to Asian some time ago and now reside in Hong Kong. We have no unions and no minimum wage laws. Yet we have wages that are 102% of the US on a PPP basis, 1 in 12 people are millionaires (v 1 in 24 in America), we have the same work place safety, holidays, etc that the US has, and 3% unemployment (really high for us since it is a Great Recessions, usually it is 1-2%). All predicated on free markets and free market determination of wages.

Nah, if I want to see what high unionization does, I just go to Detroit…how has that worked out for them?

Kai
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
03:30 AM on 08/02/2011
Tired of propping-ip American

sugar prices with your tax dollars

while they rid themsekves of

Americans making a living wage?
03:54 AM on 08/02/2011
I agree. I do not believe that the sugar industry should be supported in the US. These manufacturers should compete at international prices and teh industry shodul be allowed to go under, like our textile industry.

I have no problem with the workers there also then going onto other places of employment, say McDonald's where there skills are paid a fair market wage.

Two reasons to get the government out of the welfare business.

Kai
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
billhodges
Self Reliant Yet Charitable
10:31 PM on 08/01/2011
One more case of the Union depriving people of an income by demanding more than a company can provide and stay in business.

How many times in the last 2 years have the unions let the workers down as businesses had to close rather than be able to meet the demands of the union. Now there are fewer union workers employed at these sugar producers, but people wanting to work were there to meet the demand.
12:46 AM on 08/02/2011
This is just a union busting tactic as people like you cheer on every job becoming a McJob.

Hey genius, people need money to spend it. The Kochs aren't going to buy 10 million copies of Halo 5.
03:56 AM on 08/02/2011
If you have a McJob skillset...you should be working at a McJob, making a fair market McJob wage. These people debased themselves by not having skills worth more elsewhere...not the fault of the company.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miss Peaches
I wanna be a rockstar!
08:45 AM on 08/02/2011
This company is by no means struggling to turn a profit. They receive government subsidies, they had $1.2 Billion in revnues last year. Their expenses decreased $4.4MM last year. This is another example of labor profiteering. Keeping more at the top and paying the workers less.
11:04 AM on 08/02/2011
The GOP/T way. Exploit as long as you can and then blame those you've exploited for the punishment they are about to receive.

It's abusive and so like many extreme conservatives...
Thegr8stu
Personal Responsibility: Anti-Liberal Ideology
10:23 PM on 08/01/2011
Well, looks like there are 1200 people, many who most likely have been searching for jobs for some time that now have a way to support themselves and their families. Additionally, it looks like there are 1200 union workers who once again cost themselves a job. I have absolutely no compassion for the union workers whose greed has cost them all their jobs. Good luck in the unemployment line.
02:46 AM on 08/02/2011
It's not greed to want a good-paying job. Unless you think that is greed. In which case, we disagree on what greed is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miss Peaches
I wanna be a rockstar!
08:48 AM on 08/02/2011
Wanting more than $7.25 and hour and health insurance is greedy?? Tell you what you trade in your nice corporate salary with health benefits for $7.25 and no health insurance. Come on now stop being greedy!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Under Fed yet Fed Up
Business operator
10:08 PM on 08/01/2011
Another large group of American workers that don't find it necessary to work and freely give their jobs over to the unemployed.

What a truly noble gesture!

We should reward them by denying unemployment insurance when this turns into termination.
02:46 AM on 08/02/2011
Really, what were the union employees asking for that you find so objectionable? Data please.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Under Fed yet Fed Up
Business operator
11:52 AM on 08/02/2011
Raises far exceeding inflation when unemployment is very high. And demanding these raises of an industry that is on the verge of collapse.

Unreasonable and selfish. Plus stupid.
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10:51 AM on 08/02/2011
You are not a small business operator unless your business is being paid to write "Right Wing" propaganda.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Under Fed yet Fed Up
Business operator
11:47 AM on 08/02/2011
Any statement that you disagree with is propaganda?
07:34 PM on 08/01/2011
The moment we bought into the Global Economy we lost our identity as Americans.
banana republican
Provoking Progressives with unwelcome perspectives
07:46 PM on 08/01/2011
You are right. However, though we gave up good paying manufacturing jobs, in the trade, a lot of inexpensive goods were made available to us. People on welfare are watching big screen TV's and talking on cell phones. I don't think it would have possible for those people to have those things if they were made in America at union scale.
02:47 AM on 08/02/2011
Right, because big screen TVs and talking on cell phones are the measure of a happy life, living in a safe neighborhood, and reaching your potential as a human being.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miss Peaches
I wanna be a rockstar!
08:52 AM on 08/02/2011
Your logic is flawed, peopole living in a housing project don't a flat screen TV. Stop believing the hype. If they do, the dopeman bought it not their $325 monthly check. Cell phones come a dime a dozen so you can't even say that's a luxury. They are cheaper than a landline most of the time.
04:45 PM on 08/01/2011
It is the job of politicians to protect us from criminals like those and in the US they work FOR those criminals.

Either we start fighting for our rights or it will become worse.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Langley
Successful Beer Guy
04:18 PM on 08/01/2011
The great American cramdown.
Judges can't cramdown mortgages, but Corp's can cramdown wages and benefits by scabbing to bust unions.
Tyrannical Fascism is coming, and soon.
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PathofTotality
Regret serves no purpose
03:57 PM on 08/01/2011
OK, is it 1,200 or 1,300 workers? I read a few articles and there seems to be a disagreement. Also is it 13% increase over 5 years or 17% over 5 years. The only thing that all articles agreed on was the fact the strike is due to increased health insurance costs and job security.

Anyway, here is where I keep flip-flopping on Unions - "Yet, workers said, sugar sales are up and management earned a 28 percent increase." http://globegazette.com/news/local/employees-locked-out-of-american-crystal-sugar/article_4c8914d8-bc53-11e0-a0cd-001cc4c002e0.html


If I take only that statement I say somwhere between 46% and 60% of that increased profit will be given back over 5 years to the workers. The rest will pay the salaried workers and hopefully go into plant improvements. I'm not there so I really have no clue as to the reality of it all. That statement might also mean that the salaried folks got a 28% raise and the unionn workers get ~17%. I don't know..............now seems a bad time to possibly walk away from a job that is virtually guarantying a pay raise each year over the next 5 years with insurance.
02:48 AM on 08/02/2011
A bad time? Of course - businesses always look at a shaky economy as an opportunity to shake down workers.
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PathofTotality
Regret serves no purpose
11:01 AM on 08/02/2011
What "shake down"? Based on threee seperate articles I read on this subject, the Union is upset about increased cost on insurance and 15%-17% raise over 5 years not being enough. Like I said, I am not there so can only base my opinion on the information offered but I don't see this as a "shae down".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
army193
03:10 PM on 08/01/2011
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Humana Inc. posted a 35 percent surge in second-quarter profit Monday, easily beating Wall Street views, as more people enrolled in the health insurer's Medicare plans while existing members made less use of its health care services.