www.newsandletters.org











NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

V&V Supremo contract and solidarity

Chicago - On Nov. 22, the Chicago workers' movement celebrated a first contract for the drivers and warehouse workers at V&V Supremo Cheese. They rallied at St. Pius Church in the largely Mexican neighborhood of Pilsen where the plant is located. This Mexican immigrant workforce had been on strike for six months, fighting to be recognized as members of Teamsters Local 703.

The production workers had agreed to go back to work while their contract is being negotiated. But the "owners," Gilberto and Philipe Villasenor, have since locked them out during negotiations.

Their lawyer, John Rodenbaugh, with his firm Matkov, Salzman, Madoff & Gunn, has convinced them to continue to waste time and resources fighting to keep these workers at poverty wages. In fighting the workers' right to organize, they have already wasted over one million dollars. Now they are attempting to intimidate the workers by locking them out.

Without knowing of the planned lockout, religious, labor, and community leaders gathered in the church to celebrate a settlement which gives pay raises over three years of up to 35% for drivers and up to 25% for warehouse workers. The employer loses the right to arbitrarily reward people at various levels for the same work. The contract institutes a standard, progressive disciplinary system and a grievance procedure, and makes the employer agree to binding arbitration.

These provisions reduce the employer's dictatorial domination over the lives of the workers. On the one hand, holding out for six months may have given the employer the ability for now to keep a greater percentage of the wealth that the workers produce. But as Sarita Gupta of Jobs with Justice pointed out, the creative solidarity of workers with the community gained them real victory.

A first contract gives them better opportunities to improve their conditions in the future united as Teamsters. Local 703 Secretary-Treasurer Tom Steide, while gratified at the victory of the union, pointed out the broader aspect of workers' fights in the United States by saying that the ruling class is using the so-called "war on terrorism" to declare "war against workers at home." Jesse Jackson made a similar point by saying the "terrorists must not (be used to) destroy the American Dream." 

Margaret Blacksheare, President of the Illinois AFL-CIO, emphasized the appropriateness of having the rally at a Shrine of St. Jude, the patron saint of the impossible. She said that the seemingly impossible was made possible by those who tenaciously stood together as human beings in solidarity to defeat injustice.

Dennis Dixon

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons