General Mills, workers at Cedar Rapids plant agree on a new contract

The deal came just two days after workers rejected an earlier offer from the company.

November 9, 2019 at 3:23AM
FILE - In this Dec. 15, 2007 file photo, a box of General Mills' Cheerios is seen on a shelf at a Shaw's Supermarket in Gloucester, Mass. General Mills says it will start labeling products across the country that contain genetically modified ingredients to comply with a law that is set to go into effect in Vermont. The maker of Cheerios cereal, Progresso soups and Yoplait yogurt notes it is impractical to label its products for just one state, so the disclosures required by Vermont starting in J
Workers at General Mills' plant in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, announced they had tentatively agreed to a new contract, forged just two days after they overwhelmingly rejected the company's previous offer. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

General Mills and the union representing 520 workers at its plant in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, said Friday they reached a tentative deal on a new contract.

The agreement came after workers on Wednesday voted to reject the company's previous offer. Union leaders cited inadequate protections on scheduling the use of third-party contractors for the rejection.

The workers will vote on the new deal Thursday, the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union Local 110 and the company said.

"Not a single one of our union members at General Mills ever wanted to walk out of the facility and go on strike," Roger Grobstich, a union vice president, said in a statement. "They were pushed to the edge by a company that has for far too long been slowly stripping away their long-held needed benefits."

The union said it would release further details about the agreement in coming days. Its negotiations committee said it expected the deal would be approved.

The negotiation was the first one that the union local conducted with General Mills. Employees at the plant voted in January to join the union. In recent weeks, the same union negotiated a new contract for its members at a Quaker Oats cereal plant in Cedar Rapids.

Workers at the General Mills facility produce several varieties of Cheerios, Lucky Charms fruit snacks and Betty Crocker frosting.

Evan Ramstad • 612-673-4241

General Mills corporate headquarters and sign in Golden Valley, Minnesota. General Mills committed on March 4, 2019 to expanding regenerative agriculture practices by 2030 on one million acres of land used to source its food ingredients. (Dreamstime/TNS) ORG XMIT: 1277129
The General Mills office in Golden Valley. The firm and a workers union in Iowa negotiated a new contract. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Evan Ramstad

Columnist

Evan Ramstad is a Star Tribune business columnist.

See More

More from Business

card image

Health care spending rose by 15%, driven by higher prices. Officials say solutions are needed to prevent Minnesotans from being priced out or delaying care they need.

A businessman's hand fishes hundred-dollar banknotes out of a glass container like a cookie jar. Is this embezzlement or is he simply raiding his savings?