Philadelphia's trademark inflatable union rat, which showed
up Thursday outside the Northeast Philadelphia corporate headquarters of Crown
Holdings Inc., might be local, but the union protest at the $8.6 billion
company's annual meeting was strictly global.
Organizing the protest were members of a Canadian local of
the United Steelworkers union, based in Pittsburgh. The local has been on
strike since September at Crown's plant near Toronto.
In Turkey, meanwhile, a similar rally, no doubt minus the
rat, was canceled, the union said, after an Istanbul paper printed what it said
was Crown's threat to shut the factory if a rally occurred.
"We're not going to comment, so thanks for the
call," Thomas T. Fischer, Crown's vice president of investor relations,
said Thursday.
In less than a week, there will be union rallies and
protests at Crown facilities in Switzerland, Italy, and France, organized
through global alliances formed by labor organizations worldwide.
In 2008, the Steelworkers set up Workers Uniting with the
United Kingdom's largest union, Unite, which also represents workers at 11
Crown plants.
"It's obvious why unions are doing this," said Lee
Adler, who teaches at Cornell University's School of Industrial and Labor
Relations. "This is the way one introduces leverage into the conversation
with powerful multinational organizations. It not only introduces leverage, but
demonstrates leverage."
It used to be that Crown Holdings made cans and containers
at factories in Northeast Philadelphia. Now, there are just corporate offices.
These days, the company, once known as Crown Cork &
Seal, manufactures its containers and cans at 147 plants in 40 countries.
On Wednesday, it completed its $1.6 billion acquisition of
Mivisa Envases SAU, a Spanish can manufacturer, announced last year.
Attending the rally in Philadelphia were Kemal Ozkan,
assistant general secretary of IndustriALL, a 50 million-member global labor
federation based in Europe, and Mark Lyon of Unite. Both held shareholder
proxies and attended the shareholder meeting, presided over by Crown chief
executive John Conway.
Canadian steelworkers official Joseph Drexler, who also
attended the meeting, said Ozkan asked Conway why Crown had not recognized a
Turkish court decision ordering Crown to recognize the Turkish workers' union.
Ozkan also questioned whether the Mivisa deal was in
compliance with European labor laws. Conway said it was.
Unanswered were four written questions on the Toronto
situation submitted by union members who were also shareholders, Drexler said.
The chief issue there, he said, is Crown's desire to
implement a two-tiered wage system, with younger workers getting much less.
CROWN HOLDINGS
Headquarters: Philadelphia
Business: Design, manufacture, and sale of packaging for
consumer goods, particularly steel and aluminum cans.
2013 Revenues: $8.66 billion, up from $8.47 billion.
2013 Profits: $324 million, down from $559 million
Employees: 21,300
Manufacturing plants: 147 worldwide
Closing price: $47.65
Source: Philly.com
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