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LOCAL News :: Labor

Domino Sugar Workers On Strike

Second strike in the last 50 years. UFCW workers walk picket lines outside the Domino's Sugar factory.
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I went down to the picket line outside Domino Sugar last night. It's easy to find your way there, the Domino's sign is visible from all over the harbor. We first came upon three strikers on the corner by the gas station, and then on their advice headed on down to the gate.

Domino works 24 hours/day in three shifts... though with recent cuts in staff, and the new management pushing speed ups... alot of the workers have been putting in 10 to 16 hour days. Anyway, the workers are maintaining pickets 24 hours a day. For now, they are letting the occassional truck move through.

The strike is strong, over 300 workers are out of the plant. The only ones inside are foreman who are busy trying to move the already processed sugar to the trucks that come by. Without the workers, they really don't have the staff to continue processing sugar... so once the built up reserve is shipped out... the pressure will develop on the bosses.

The bosses are a couple of Cuban brothers who fled Cuba after Batista fell from power. They got involved with the sugar business in the U.S. and have facilities in Miami and throughout the south, with sugar coming from the Dominican Republic. They bought Domino's, and managed to turn a profit their first year. However, they want to squeeze more out of the workers at the plant, some who have been there 33 years.

So far, the spirits of the workers are high. They didn't want to be out in the cold, but felt they couldn't give in to the company's demands of cuts to the pensions, increases to the cost of family health care, etc... They'd hung a banner demading safer working conditions--last year a woman worker died when she fell into one of the vats.

So far, they have plenty of food, and some donations to the strike fund are coming in.

If you've got the time, drop by the picket and give your support. 1100 Key Hwy., from 95, take Exit 55 (Key Highway); follow Key Highway half a mile, turn left onto Lawrence Street, left again onto Fort Drive; follow that to the end.

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Re: Domino Sugar Workers On Strike

Great article, Flint. I did a quick check of UFCW's website and it looks like they're asking people to call Dominos. "Send a message to Domino Sugar
Tell them to sweeten the holidays for its workers
Call Domino at: 410-752-6150" They're also asking people to boycott Domino products (which should probably be mentioned when calling them). The list is at www.ufcw.org .
 

UFCW Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 9, 2002 Contact: Jill Cashen, (202) 728-4797 or Alex Hamilton, UFCW Local 392, 410-837-0848

Domino Sugar Turns Sour on Long Term Workers
Baltimore Sugar Workers Launch Front Line Fight For Family Health Care And Retirement Security

Picket Lines Up at Domino Sugar Plant

The holiday season turned bitter and cold for 330 Domino's sugar workers on Sunday, December 8, 2002 when the company forced workers on strike. The workers, members of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW) Local 392, put up picket lines on Sunday to protect their family's health insurance and retirement security.

We won't let Domino destroy our retirement plans like Enron and WorldCom. Workers deserve a secure pension, not an insecure future, said Alex Hamilton, a 32-year sugar worker and President of UFCW Local 392.

Domino refuses to provide basic financial information on the pension plans, essentially expecting workers to turn over their money with no more than a wink and a nod to count on. The company's proposals for retirement and health benefits include no guarantees.

Domino Sugar trashed the bargaining process by offering a final proposal that included huge cuts to benefits and working conditions, then cut off negotiations by taking a week-long trip to Europe. Meanwhile, 330 workers are in the cold and on the streets fighting for their future. The National Labor Relations Board is investigating charges of bad faith bargaining by Domino Sugar.

Workers overwhelmingly rejected the company's proposals to:

Shift their retirement funds to an unknown company-run pension. Domino refused to provide any basic financial information about its proposed plan.

Increase the cost of family health insurance and reduce the quality of insurance.

Cut holidays including Veteran's Day. Many of the workers have served in the U.S. Armed Forces.

Job changes that reduce wages and benefits for all new hires.

Jeopardize job security for the long-time workers.
For the past fifty-three years, workers and management have enjoyed a positive relationship without any major work stoppage. Domino is owned by the Florida-based American Sugar Refining, the single largest marketer of refined sugar in the United States.

The UFCW Local 392 is reaching out to consumers to support these hard-working families and not to buy the listed sugar products this holiday season. Products on the Do Not Buy list are: Domino Sugar, America's Choice, Best Yet, Eagle, Food Service, Foodland, Giant, Great Value, Kroger, Jack Frost, Mars, Murry's, Pathmark, Price-Rite, Richfood, Safeway, Shaw's, Stop & Shop, Sunny Cane, Super G, Sweet Harvest, Sysco, Weis.

The Domino sugar workers are on today's frontline against corporate greed. The 1.4 million members of the UFCW International Union are standing with these workers. We won't let Domino destroy these families' lives," said Mark Lauritsen, UFCW International Vice President and Regional Director.

The UFCW represents workers in supermarkets across the country as well as food processing, meat packing, chemical, distillery, garment and health care facilities.

Source
 

Re: Domino Sugar Workers On Strike

I was down there tonight (Sunday, December 15) and since the plant cannot unload ships at their site, they have been unloading ships at Sparrow's Point and trucking the material into the plant.

The picket line has been holding up the trucks from entering and exiting the plant, but not keeping them out completely.
 

Talk Dec 19

There's a talk at the All People's Congress by Alex Hamilton, President of UFCW Local 392, on the Domino's strike on Thursday, Dec. 19. See www.radicalendar.org/group/all/all/display/1160/index.php .
 

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