Weetabix workers in Northamptonshire announce autumn walkouts over £5,000 fire and rehire wage cuts
- Wednesday 8 September 2021
Production of some of the nation's favourite breakfast cereals will be hit when engineers employed by Weetabix at its Northamptonshire factories begin walk outs this month in opposition to the company’s plans to fire and rehire them on vastly inferior contracts.
Major pay cuts threatened
The workers, members of the UK’s leading union, Unite, based at the company’s factories in Kettering and Corby, face changes to their shift and working patterns which would result in some workers being up to £5,000 a year worse off.
Unite will begin a series of 48 hour strikes on Tuesday 21 September followed by strikes on the same day every week throughout the autumn with the final strike scheduled to begin on Tuesday 30 November.
The strikes will cause widespread delays to production and lead to shortages of Weetabix and other popular products made at the factories including Alpen, Weetos and Oatibix.
Abhorrent practice
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “The idea of ‘fire and rehire’ is abhorrent to me.
"If Weetabix decide to go down this route and they overstep the line then I will absolutely defend our members.”
Offer rejected
Strike action was originally scheduled for June but was postponed to allow for in-depth talks with the employer. Those talks led to new proposals being put to the workers but were overwhelmingly rejected by 82 per cent in a consultative ballot.
Unite warns that consumers will lose their appetites for a product produced by a highly profitable company like Weetabix which then attacks workers' wages.
Weetabix has performed very strongly since the beginning of the pandemic in 2020. It returned a net turnover of $440 million, a 5.3 per cent increase, with profits of $112.3 million, an 18.5 per cent increase. Owners US cereal giant Post Holdings Inc most recent accounts show it had a turnover of $5.7 billion, an operating profit of $700.8 million and $1.2 billion in cash.
Wealthy company
Unite regional officer Sean Kettle said: “Unite has made it clear from the outset that our members will not accept being fired and rehired with large cuts to their pay and conditions.
“Unite has acted responsibly from the beginning of this dispute and called off industrial action for three months to seek an agreement.
“It is deeply disappointing that despite Weetabix’s staggering wealth that it was not prepared to make an offer than our members could accept.
“Strike action will inevitably lead to a disruption in production and shortages of Weetabix and the company’s other products will quickly follow.
“Weetabix is the UK’s favourite cereal but consumers are bound to quickly lose their appetite for the product when they learn it is made by mistreated workers.
“Industrial action can still be avoided but it will require Weetabix to withdraw its plans to fire and rehire its engineers and to put forward a realistic offer to our members.
“Unite is dedicated to advancing the jobs, pay and conditions of its members and will fight back against any efforts to diminish workers' living standards.”
A recent Survation poll for Unite found seven in 10 people want the practice of fire and rehire banned.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
Weetabix strikes suspended to allow for meaningful negotiations
For media enquiries ONLY please contact Unite senior communications officer Barckley Sumner on 07802 329235 or 0203 371 2067.
Email: [email protected]
Unite is the UK and Ireland’s leading union fighting to protect and advance jobs, pay and conditions for members working across all sectors of the economy. The general secretary is Sharon Graham.