Comment

John Oliver: The Long, Shameful History of Housing Discrimination

160
William Lewis7/26/2021 1:51:51 pm PDT

re: #155 Backwoods_Sleuth

JFC

Here’s a local story on the strike’s end:
Weeks-Long Strike Ends After Topeka Workers Approve New Agreement With Frito-Lay

The company made concessions, but the workers found themselves in a much stronger position than any in recent history to get the workplace and the wages they were bargaining for.
The people who make your Cheetos, Fritos, and Ruffles can put in some seriously long hours doing it.

“I am a very hard-working woman,” says Hellen Teater, standing on the picket line across from the Frito Lay plant in Topeka this week. “I work like hell.”

She said her job leaves little time to spend with her family.

“Because I’ve been working seven days a week,” Teater said, “like, 84 hours a week.”

Teater is mostly satisfied with the money she makes. She makes double her normal 40 hours, $20-an-hour wage with all the overtime she puts in.

On Friday, the rank-and-file of Local 218 of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union voted to approve the latest offer their leadership brought from management, ending a nearly three-week-long strike that made national headlines.

The contract approved by union members would guarantee one day off a week and includes 4% raises over the next two years. It would also end what workers call “suicide shifts,” two 12-hour shifts, with only eight hours off in between.

The company made concessions, but the workers found themselves in a much stronger position than any in recent history to get the workplace and the wages they’re bargaining for.