A spokeswoman for the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Workers Union, Local 220, said striking workers won't give the growers a hard time, explaining that Mott's policies are issue.
"We wouldn't plan any disruptions. We respect all working people and the jobs they have to do," said union spokeswoman Carolyn Daly. "This is about the company and the way they are treating the workers and the way they are highly profitable."
Because of the hot, sunny summer, New York's 27-million-bushel apple crop is starting to ripen. About one-third of the crop is typically processed by Mott's. For apples grown in western New York, the Mott's share grows to about one-half.
"When apples are ripe," Allen said, "they have to be harvested, and growers will be delivering this year's apple crop to the Mott's plant as usual."
Peter Gregg, a spokesman for the association, said growers must retrieve their wooden crates, which are stored at the plant, and fill them with the ripening apples. Then they'll drive them back to the plant, where Mott's weighs and inspects the apples before paying the farmers and putting the apples in cold storage.
http://www.democratandchronicle.com/article/20100804/BUSINESS/8040344/Apple-growers-to-cross-Mott-s-picket