posted at 10:31 am on November 16, 2012 by Ed Morrissey
Hooked on Ho-Hos?? Find Ding-Dongs delectable?? Were Twinkies an indelible (if particularly edible) part of your childhood?? Be prepared to consign them all and many other junk-food delicacies to nostalgia.? Hostess, which has made these sugary staples for years, announced this morning that they will liquidate their business and end production after failing to negotiate new labor contracts with several unions.? Along with these confections, 18,000 jobs will also disappear:
?We deeply regret the necessity of today?s decision, but we do not have the financial resources to weather an extended nationwide strike,? said Gregory F. Rayburn, chief executive officer. ?Hostess Brands will move promptly to lay off most of its 18,500-member workforce and focus on selling its assets to the highest bidders.?
About one-third of the company?s workers are union members who are unhappy about the company?s cutbacks during its bankruptcy reorganization.
But problems with several unions ? including the Bakery, Confectionery, and Tobacco workers and the Grain Millers International Union ? have prevented the company from moving forward. Hostess said it will seek bankruptcy court permission to sell all of its assets. The company said bakery production has already shut down.
Without much more data than this, it?s impossible to say whether the unions or the company has been unreasonable in this dispute, or whether it might be a blend of both, as is usually the case. Sugary snacks like the kind Hostess produces have fallen out of political favor, certainly, but I doubt that sales have dropped dramatically. They have been a ubiquitous presence in supermarkets, convenience stores, and kid?s lunch bags since before I was a child, and in moderation don?t do any harm to anyone who is otherwise healthy.
Those aren?t the only places where Hostess-brand snacks have impacted the culture, either. Twinkies have especially captured the cultural imagination, and in one notable case, the legal imagination.? When Dan White stood trial for the 1978 murders of Harvey Milk and George Moscone in San Francisco, his attorneys tried to argue that White had a diminished capacity to form an intent to murder, thanks to depression that became intensified by consumption of large amounts of sugary snacks.? The media dubbed this the ?Twinkie Defense,? and it proved successful, as White only got a seven-year sentence.? California eliminated its diminished-capacity defense shortly afterward.
On a more fun note, we?ll always have this scene from Ghostbusters:
That used to be a big Twinkie.? Perhaps all sides can take one last deep breath and try working together to save 18,000 jobs rather than see an American institution disappear, along with a lot of livelihoods.
Update: I updated the headline to highlight the jobs as well as the Twinkies.? Also, the jobs lost were nationwide, not in Texas, so I deleted that reference.
Update II: Like I said, I haven?t paid much attention to this fight, so I don?t have a lot of insight into whether labor or management has been more unreasonable.? However, the Teamsters? web site seems to lay the blame on the Bakery, Confectionary, Tobacco and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM) for refusing to go along with the Teamsters to accept the last offer from Hostess:
In fact, when Hostess attempted to throw out its collective bargaining agreement with the Teamsters in court, the Teamsters fought back and won, ensuring that Hostess could not unilaterally make changes to working conditions during the several months? long legal process that recently ended. Teamster Hostess members were allowed to decide their fate by voting on the final offer conducted by a secret mail ballot.? More than two-thirds of Hostess Teamsters members voted with 53 percent voting to approve the final offer.
The BCTGM chose a different path, as is their prerogative, to not substantively look for a solution or engage in the process. BCTGM members were told there were better solutions than the final offer, although Judge Drain stated in his decision in bankruptcy court that no such solutions exist. Without complete information, BCTGM members voted by voice votes in union halls. The BCTGM reported that over 90 percent rejected the final offer and three of its units ratified the final offer.
On Friday, Nov. 9, the BCTGM began to strike at some Hostess production facilities without notice to the Teamsters despite assurances they would not proceed with job actions without contacting the Teamsters Union. This unannounced action put Teamster members in the difficult position of facing picket lines without knowing their right to honor such a line without being disciplined.
As is our longstanding tradition, Teamster members by and large are honoring Bakery Worker picket lines when encountered and complying with their contractual obligations when not encountering picket lines. The BCTGM leaders are putting Teamster members in a horrible position ? asking them to support a strike that will put them out of a job when they haven?t even asked all their members to go on strike.
That strike is now on the verge of forcing the company to liquidate ? it is difficult for Teamster members to believe that is what the BCTGM Hostess members ultimately wanted to accomplish when they went out on strike. We may never know unless the BCTGM members, based on the facts they know today, get to determine their fate in a secret ballot vote. Teamster members would understand that the will of the BCTGM Hostess membership was truly heard if that was the case.
That?s a pretty remarkable statement from the Teamsters.
Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2012/11/16/twinkies-fall-victim-to-union-management-dispute/
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