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Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Tyson Foods to close two plants, cut 880 jobs

(Reuters) - Tyson Foods Inc (TSN), the biggest U.S. meat processor, said it would stop operations at two of its plants in the United States, affecting about 880 employees.

The company said it expects to cease operations at a pepperoni plant in Jefferson, Wisconsin and a prepared foods facility in Chicago, Illinois during the second half of the year ending Oct. 1.


The closures would affect about 880 employees, including about 480 at Chicago and about 400 at Jefferson, Tyson said on Thursday.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Arkansas: Walmart to cut 450 jobs at its headquarters

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. CEO Doug McMillon said 450 people will be laid off at the company’s headquarters in Bentonville, Ark., according to a memo sent to all Wal-Mart staff today.

“After months of evaluation, we’ve concluded there is an opportunity to better position our Home Office teams to move with speed and purpose,” McMillon wrote in the memo. The company is at “an important time in our history,” he said. “This in part means pulling back in some areas and investing in others.”

Laid-off employees will receive 60 days of pay, plus two weeks of pay for every year of employment with the company, said a Wal-Mart (WMT) spokesman. Job search assistance will be available for those who want it, he said.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Illinois: Kraft Heinz cuts 700 jobs in Northfield, Illinois

Kraft Heinz says it is cutting about 2,500 jobs, including more than a third of its workers at Kraft's headquarters in Northfield, as part of its plan to slash $1.5 billion in costs after the food companies combined.

Employees were notified of the staff reductions in an internal email sent this morning. Spokesman Michael Mullen said the cuts include 700 jobs in the north suburb, where Kraft Foods has been based. Mullen said the company has no plans to shut a research and development center in neighboring Glenview, which will "remain open and continue to be an important R&D facility," he said in an email.

Affected workers are in the U.S. and Canada and were to be notified in person. The company would not specify where other cuts were taking place.

The mass firing is among the biggest in metro Chicago since the recession and comes amid layoffs at the headquarters of CME Group, McDonald's , Walgreens Boots Alliance and Allstate.

Kraft Heinz said it has a total of around 46,600 employees, including about 1,900 in Northfield, prior to the dismissals. That's already down from about 2,100 from before Kraft's early July merger with Pittsburgh-based H.J. Heinz.

Significant layoffs had been expected since the company announced plans last month to move one of its two corporate headquarters to 170,000 square feet at the Aon Center in downtown Chicago from its sprawling 700,000-square-foot complex in Northfield.

In the email sent this morning to employees signed by the heads of people and performance for the U.S., Gil de Las Alas, and Canada, Michael Ferranti, employees were told the "thorough and detailed process of integrating our businesses and designing our new organization is well underway."

"The leadership team has examined every aspect of our business to ensure we are operating as efficiently and effectively as possible," the memo read. The cuts, de Las Alas and Ferranti wrote, "will better position the company to deliver on the needs of our consumers and our customers."

A GRIM DAY IN NORTHFIELD

Most employees will be notified by the end of the day tomorrow. They'll be offered benefits for a minimum of six months and outplacement assistance, according to the letter.

A source with knowledge of the cuts described a harrowing morning in Northfield. All employees with senior manager positions or lower were to be given 10 minutes with human resources and security and told whether they would keep their jobs or get a severance package. None had meetings on their calendars this morning, but all had been told to be in the building, said the source, who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive information.

The company's IT department, the source said, was told to "prepare for 800 computers to be turned in."

Kraft Heinz also will cut a number of temporary office workers and limit their use. They also will be let go by the end of tomorrow.

CUTS AND MORE CUTS

From the moment the merger was completed, the company has been in belt-tightening mode.

In a memo to employees dated July 13, Kraft Heinz CEO Bernardo Hees outlined a variety of "provisional measures" the company was taking to avoid unnecessary spending. That included instructing workers to print on both sides of paper, reuse office supplies like binders and file folders, and turn off computers before leaving the office.

Corporate donations to charities had to be approved, as did memberships in industry associations, the memo said.

At its office in Northfield, the company stopped providing free Kraft snacks like Jell-O.

The company also has instituted a series of new requirements that govern hiring. Kraft Heinz will not rehire former employees of either Kraft or Heinz, spouses of current employees or employees of other consumer packaged-goods competitors unless approved by the executive leadership team, according to a July 8 memo.

A TIGHTFISTED REPUTATION

The combination of Heinz and Kraft earlier this year was engineered by Warren Buffett's Omaha, Neb.-based Berkshire Hathaway and Brazilian investment firm 3G Capital, which has become known for its tight cost controls.

Hees—a 3G partner—had overseen cost-cutting at Heinz since the ketchup maker was taken over in 2013 through a previous partnership between 3G and Berkshire. That means the cuts announced today mostly will hit the Kraft side of the business.

Together, the two U.S. food giants own brands including Jell-O, Heinz baked beans and Velveeta that are facing sales challenges amid changing tastes. Their combination was nevertheless seen as attractive because of the opportunity to save hundreds of millions of dollars a year by combining functions like manufacturing and distribution.

Executives say they expect to save $1.5 billion in annual costs by 2017.

In a statement, Mullen said today that the job cuts were part of the process of integrating the two businesses and "designing our new organization." "This new structure eliminates duplication to enable faster decision-making, increased accountability and accelerated growth," he said.

Monday, August 10, 2015

Chicago: CME Group cuts 3% of staff, with half coming from technology

(Bloomberg) -- CME Group Inc. eliminated about 3 percent of its employees, with about half the cuts coming from technology staff.

The world's largest futures exchange dismissed about 80 workers on Aug. 6, Laurie Bischel, a spokeswoman, said in an e- mailed response to questions. Brian McElligott, a managing director and global head of information products, is among those who have left the Chicago-based company, Bischel said.

“This was part of the restructuring announced last fall designed to eliminate bureaucracy and improve our ability to serve our global client base more efficiently,” Bischel said.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

McDonald's, Coca-Cola announce lay-offs

Coca-Cola on Thursday announced plans to lay off 1,600 to 1,800 of its corporate, U.S. and international employees in the coming months. The move came hours after McDonald's, on Wednesday, confirmed that it was laying off 63 employees at its corporate headquarters and that some other open corporate positions had been eliminated.

While both moves had been widely anticipated, they only begin to reflect the sizable cutbacks and changes expected to hit both iconic brands in 2015.

The job cuts are part of Coke's $3 billion cost-cutting program that was announced in October — about three times the $1 billion in cuts that had previously been announced. The job reductions at McDonald's are part of a wider corporate review to redirect nearly $100 million in savings toward business priorities, says McDonald's spokeswoman Heidi Barker Sa Shekhem.

For Coca-Cola and McDonald's, 2015 will be a year of cutbacks, change and evolution as an increasingly Internet-savvy and health-conscious public continues to move away from sugary drinks and fried and processed foods.

"These two brands cannot continue to decline," says Gary Stibel, CEO and founder of the New England Consulting Group. "They must have growth. Even when they're in neutral, they're actually slipping back."

In October, when both companies posted wretched third-quarter results, CEOs for both brands announced plans for big cutbacks and changes. At the time, Coca-Cola posted a 14% drop in third-quarter profit, and McDonald's fell a worse-than-expected 30%.