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Kellogg Strike Ends With New Five-Year Contract

Union workers and Kellogg Co. have agreed to a new five-year contract, ending a strike that began in early October. 

Workers went on strike for better pay and benefits for new workers. Nearly 1,400 workers refused to work at Kellogg ready-to-eat cereal facilities in Battle Creek, Michigan; Lancaster, Pennsylvania; Omaha, Nebraska; and Memphis. 

Workers are expected to resume their jobs on December 27th.

“Our striking members at Kellogg’s ready-to-eat cereal production facilities courageously stood their ground and sacrificed so much in order to achieve a fair contract,” said Anthony Shelton, president of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union. “This agreement makes gains and does not include any concessions.”

Here are some highlights of the new, five-year collective bargaining agreement:

• No take aways

• No concessions

• No permanent two-tier system

• A clear path to regular full-time employment

• No plant shut-downs through October 2026

• A significant increase in the pension multiplier

• Maintenance of cost-of-living raises

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Kellogg’s Strike, Greensward Battle, and Amy Weirich

Memphis on the internet.

Urine-Free

“Keep your Kellogg’s factory a union shop, and your Kellogg’s products urine-free,” wrote the Central Labor Council of Memphis and West TN on Facebook last week.

It’s a reference to the ongoing strike there and to Gregory Stanton, 46, who was sentenced to 10 months in prison for urinating on a Kellogg’s Rice Krispies assembly line in 2014. He posted a video of it online.

Posted to Facebook by Central Labor Council of Memphis & West TN

Tweet of the Week

@TweetJustnTacos wrote: “Someday someone at Netflix is gonna find out about Amy Weirich and good lord that six-parter is gonna be rough.”

Greensward Battle

Posted to memphisflyer.com

Memphis artist Martha Kelly published an illustrated essay at memphisflyer.com and her website last week showing the history and struggle to protect the Overton Park Greensward.

Her paintings outline how much of the original park design has been taken over by parking lots, a fire station, a service facility, a golf course, and more. It also shows plans from recent years to increase parking for the Memphis Zoo, taking ever more parkland.