Craft Brew News # 18 - Not Your Father's Union




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Summary: Craft Brew News 2/15/19<br><br>(Courtesy of Brewbound.com)<br><br>Union Efforts Start at Anchor Brewing<br><br>Anchor Employees Attempt to Unionize<br><br>Workers of the iconic Anchor Brewing Company in San Francisco have begun the process of unionizing, Splinter News reported.<br>In a letter dated February 7, Anchor’s employees requested that Japan’s Sapporo Holdings Limited, which acquired the brewery in 2017, recognize their union with the International Longshoremen &amp; Warehouse Union.<br><br>“Anchor workers should be paid enough to live in San Francisco,” the letter said. “We’re struggling to survive and raise our families. The work we do is exhausting — and we have to keep moving farther away and driving longer to survive.”<br><br>The employees added that if Sapporo does not recognize their union, they would file for an election with the National Labor Relations Board.<br><br>Anchor would not be the only beer company to organize. Brewers Association chief economist Bart Watson tweeted that Boston Beer Company’s Cincinnati production facility as well as Lagunitas’ Chicago operation are both unionized. Additionally, August Schell brewer Dave Berg noted that the Minnesota brewery is also a union house.<br><br>Pabst Rebrands Not Your Father’s Line, Targets Female Consumers<br><br>Pabst Brewing Company officially launched the rebrand of its Not Your Father’s FMB line earlier this week. The nationwide rollout of rebranded labels and packaging for its root beer offering and new lemonade flavor started Monday.<br>According to a press release, Pabst is now using the line to target female consumers ages 21 to 35, and the company has lowered the price of 6-packs to $9.99.<br><br>“We learned that these women are buying 60 percent of the flavored malt beverage business,” Daniel Crawford, Not Your Father’s associate brand manager, said via the release. “We took the time to get to know her – what makes her tick, what motivates her and how she likes to spend her free time – it all guided the new look and the campaign we’re launching to introduce the new brand.”<br><br>Weyerbacher Cuts 2 Sales Reps, Seeks Investment<br><br>In a cost-cutting move as it seeks new investment, Easton, Pennsylvania-based Weyerbacher Brewing has laid off two salespeople, according to PhillyBeerWorld.com.<br><br>Weyerbacher chief operating officer Josh Lampe described the job cuts as “reorganizing.”<br>“We’re getting some funding from investors,” he said. “As part of that, we had to get the company healthy before the investment came in.”<br><br>According to PhillyBeerWorld.com, Weyerbacher produced about 15,000 barrels of beer in 2018, down from a peak of 19,543 barrels in 2014, according to an estimate from the BA.<br>Meanwhile, Weyerbacher was involved in a two-month dispute with its insurance carrier.<br><br>Breweries Close in Portland, Oregon and Denver<br><br>Portland, Oregon-based Burnside Brewing is now closed after its landlord changed the locks to the building due to the 9-year-old beer company failing to keep make its rent payments, Willamette Week reported. Additionally, a lien has been placed on the brewery’s equipment.<br><br>Employees were reportedly notified via a message — a screenshot of which was shared on Reddit — that the brewery was “no longer operational” as of February 5, and they were encouraged to file for unemployment. The message added that it was unclear if the company would make payroll, but “wages will be paid as soon as possible.”<br><br>Burnside, which the BA estimated produced 3,400 barrels of beer in 2017, is one of several established Portland beer companies to either shut down completely or close a taproom over the last five months.<br><br>Meanwhile, Denver-based Fermaentra Brewery announced it would close on February 23, according to the Westword alt-weekly newspaper.<br><br>“Long story short, a lot of overhead has forced some difficult...