Go Home

Hostess Bankruptcy Filing Hits 5,000 BCTGM Members

by Tula Connell, Jan 12, 2012

Hostess Brands, the company that has brought us such iconically American snacks as Twinkies, yesterday filed for bankruptcy protection for the second time since 2004. But the move does more than affect our universal sweet tooth—it has vast repercussions for some 5,000 workers, members of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers (BCTGM).

BCTGM, which represents workers in 34 production facilities throughout the United States, has been working with Hostess for months to identify a mutually beneficial solution that would address the company’s financial difficulties. But according to BCTGM, the company has never offered a legitimate proposal that could be taken to the membership for consideration.

Says BCTGM President Frank Hurt:

Read the rest of this entry »

Permalink >>

Print This Article | E-Mail This Article | Comments (5)

Private Equity Firms, Our New Corporate Masters?

by Tula Connell, Jul 10, 2009

Photo credit: Micah Landau

Workers returned Tuesday to the job at Stella D’oro Biscuit Co. in the Bronx after a judge ordered the company reinstate the 136 employees who had remained strong throughout a brutal 11-month strike. But before they could even walk through the doors, they were greeted with the anti-union response by the company’s private equity firm owners, the 21st century’s mutation of the robber barons: Brynwood Partners announced it would shut down operations in October. (“Private equity firms” is the euphemism those leveraged buyout corporations adopted after leveraged buyout got a bad name in the 1980s.)

Established more than 75 years ago, Stella D’oro is a nationally known maker of specialty baked goods and until recently was a family-owned business. But a series of corporate buyouts ultimately resulted in Brynwood’s 2006 purchase of the company. And a private equity firm’s only reason for existing is to make money-lots of it. Even robber barons ultimately had to ensure they had enough workers on the job because those companies made money by making things. Not so for today’s private equity firms. Closing shop and making off with the profits is what they do.

Read the rest of this entry »

Permalink >>

Print This Article | E-Mail This Article | Comments (3)


All Archived Posts »

Contact Us | Disclaimer