Federal Judge Orders Kellogg to End Memphis Lockout; Immediately Return Workers to Jobs
Representing manufacturing, production, maintenance and sanitation workers in the baking, confectionery, tobacco and grain milling industries.
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Federal Judge Orders Kellogg to End Memphis Lockout; Immediately Return Workers to Jobs

A federal judge yesterday granted an injunction ordering the Kellogg Company to end its lockout of 226  BCTGM Local 252G members—at its Memphis cereal plant and reinstate them to their jobs within five days.

Judge Samuel H. Mays, of the Western District of Tennessee, also ordered Kellogg to bargain with the union in good faith; offer reinstatement to every worker to their former or equivalent positions; re-establish the same terms and conditions of employment prior to the company’s last/best offer; and, submit to the court details of its compliance with the order within 20 days.

BCTGM International President David B. Durkee, said, “A federal judge agreed entirely and unequivocally with the union and the National Labor Relations Board. Judge Mays rejected each and every argument Kellogg has made since this dispute began.”

Durkee noted that the decision validates what the BCTGM has contended since the beginning of the lockout. “Our members and their families have been subjected to more than 280 days of unnecessary pain and suffering at the hands of Kellogg. We applaud Judge Mays for beginning the process of righting this senseless tactic that was brutally imposed on these workers and their families. We look forward to our members returning to do what they do best — producing a quality product,” said Durkee.

In the decision, Mays said that imposing a lockout over non-mandatory terms is unlawfully coercive and “discriminate[s] against the employees for their participation in protected collective bargaining activity.”

The BCTGM has argued that Kellogg’s proposals in local bargaining would have changed already agreed upon wage rates and benefits for regular employees, thus modifying the terms and conditions contained in the Master Contract that governs such terms and is in effect until October 2015.  Mays validates the union’s position in his ruling, stating:

“Kellogg’s proposals were not to change the Casual employee program, as it insists it had the right to demand. Rather, Kellogg effectively demanded changes to the wage rates of new or rehired Regular employees. Those rates are set in the Master Agreement. The good-faith bargaining required by the Act does not allow Kellogg to use creative semantics to force midterm changes in the wages of new or rehired Regular employees in violation of the Master Agreement.”

Mays concluded that it was “just and proper” to end the lockout.

“The lockout, which has deprived the employees of their pay and health insurance, has been ongoing for nine months. The administrative process may continue for many months and even years to come. To allow the lockout to continue through that period would place significant hardship on employees in furtherance of Kellogg’s bargaining position, which [the NLRB] has reasonable cause to believe is unlawful. That would undermine the remedial powers of the Board.”