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Today's AFL-CIO Press Clips

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JOINING TOGETHER

The Nabisco Workers Who Make Your Oreos And Ritz Crackers Are On Strike

HuffPost

Dave Jamieson

August 17, 2021

Workers and union representatives say the strike follows years of frustration with Mondelez, which was created in 2012 when Nabisco products were spun off from Kraft Foods. Mondelez is demanding changes to pay and health care coverage that would undermine what have long been solid, middle-class production and trucking jobs, they say. “We’re not on strike to secure huge gains. We’re on strike to keep what we’ve already got,” said Cameron Taylor, the business agent at BCTGM Local 364, which represents workers at the Portland plant. “The job they want to give us wouldn’t even be worth fighting for.”

Oreo Makers in Northeast Portland Launch a National Strike

Willamette Week

By Sophie Peel

August 18, 2021

Union vice president Mike Burlingham says nothing new is being produced at the bakery during the strike, but cookies and crackers already packaged are still being loaded onto trucks. “At this time, there aren’t any lines running,” Burlingham says.

Nabisco Workers Are on Strike in Three States

Jacobin

By Alex N. Press

August 18, 2021

When workers at a Frito-Lay production plant in Topeka, Kansas, went on strike last month, they threw into relief the fact that the increased pandemic-era snacking that has boosted profits for PepsiCo, Frito-Lay’s parent company, has come courtesy of working conditions so bad as to lead to suicides and divorces. Now, workers are on strike at another snack-food company, one responsible for Oreos, Triscuits, Planters nuts, and Ritz crackers — Nabisco. Workers at a Nabisco bakery in Portland, Oregon, went on strike on August 10. They have been working twelve-to-sixteen-hour shifts, with some working seven days a week. 

Nabisco workers go on strike against outsourcing, longer hours

Axios

By Yacob Reyes

August 18, 2021

Hundreds of workers at Nabisco — the maker of popular snacks like Oreo cookies and Chips Ahoy! — have gone on strike, citing concerns about the "outsourcing of jobs to Mexico," and demands of contract concessions from parent company Mondelēz. State of play: The strike began with a work stoppage and 24-hour picket lines at a location in Portland, Oregon, before spreading to Aurora, Colorado, and Richmond, Virginia. The workers are part of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM), which announced the strike.

IN THE STATES

'The responsible thing to do': Pittsburgh's Labor Day parade canceled for second year in a row

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Julian Routh

August 18, 2021

For the second straight year, Pittsburgh’s big Labor Day parade — the largest in the U.S. — has been canceled. “We’ve always stated the safety of men and women, our members, as well as the public, will always be our No. 1 commitment,” said Darrin Kelly, president of the Allegheny/Fayette Central Labor Council, in announcing the cancellation early Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Kelly cited rising COVID-19 cases as the reason for the cancellation.

Rich would want us to not miss a beat

NW Labor Press

By Graham Trainor

August 18, 2021

After the difficult news of his passing, I began watching, rewatching, and reading a number of his speeches that have inspired me at different points in my career. One that I’ve come back to frequently was the speech he gave at the United Steelworkers convention in 2008, a speech about racism in America and the critically important role our movement must play to tackle it and dismantle it everywhere we see it, a speech and message that is as important today as it’s ever been.  “There’s no evil that’s inflicted more pain and more suffering than racism, and it’s something we in the labor movement have a special responsibility to challenge,” he said in that speech. This was just one of countless speeches or actions where his hatred of any form of bigotry and intolerance, strategies used to divide working people, was obvious. Rich was a friend of Oregon’s labor movement. He always had our backs. Whether it was blasting dangerous free trade deals to Oregon press or inspiring us to always prioritize organizing and growth at several summits he joined us for, his support for Oregon labor was unwavering. 

We mourn Richard Trumka, and will fight in his memory

Amsterdam News

By Stuart Appelbaum 

August 19, 2021

The world lost a tireless fighter for working people on Aug. 5, when AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka passed away. At the RWDSU, we often saw first-hand the dedication of a man who was willing to go toe to toe with anybody if it meant defending the rights of working people and creating a fairer and more equitable society where all of us have our voices heard, not just the wealthiest and most powerful. After being elected president of the AFL-CIO in 2011, Rich’s first trip to New York was to stand with RWDSU members at the Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx to demand living wages, especially at projects funded with taxpayer money. In Williamson, New York, he was there on the front lines to stand side-by-side with hundreds of striking RWDSU members at the Mott’s applesauce plant. Richard Trumka’s vocal support helped the workers win their strike against a corporate employer that was trying to slash wages and benefits despite enjoying record profits.

Labor Day parade and CASI run canceled due to COVID-19

Quad City-Times

By Anthony Watt 

August 18, 2021

The upcoming East Moline Labor Day Parade and the Center For Active Seniors’ St. Patrick’s Day 5K race have both been canceled. The parade, scheduled for Sept. 6, was canceled because of reports of increasing COVID-19 cases in the area, particularly among young adults and children, according to a news release from the Quad City Federation of Labor AFL-CIO.