Mott's

Mott's Inc.
Industry Juices and sauces
Founded 1842
Products Apple juice
Owner Keurig Dr Pepper
Website www.motts.com
Mott's apple juice.
Mott's apple sauce.

Mott's is an American company involved primarily in producing apple-based products, particularly juices and sauces. The company was founded in 1842 by Samuel R. Mott in Bouckville, New York, who made apple cider and vinegar. Mott products were exhibited at Philadelphia's Centennial Exposition in 1876 and Chicago's World's Columbian Exposition in 1893. In 1900, the company merged with the W. B. Duffy Cider Company to become Duffy-Mott. In 1933, the company introduced prune juice.

Eventually, the company was acquired by American Brands (formerly American Tobacco) and became a division of that conglomerate. In 1982, Cadbury Schweppes purchased the Duffy-Mott Company. In early 2006, all of Mott's beverage brands (Hawaiian Punch, IBC Root Beer, Mr and Mrs T Bloody Mary mix, Orangina, and Yoo-hoo) were folded into Cadbury Schweppes Americas Beverages. Mott's continues to operate as a separate unit of Keurig Dr Pepper (recently demerged from Cadbury Schweppes plc). In 2008, Marcia Cross was a spokeswoman of Mott's.[1]

History

Acquisitions

  • 1953 - Clapp's Baby Foods
  • 1960 - Chris Pratt-Low Preserving Corporation
  • 1960s - Cherry Growers Co., Inc., of Michigan
  • 1966 - Lord Mott Canning Company
  • 1966 - Tilghman Packaging Company
  • 1966 - Clamato

Key Dates

  • 1842: Samuel R. Mott starts making and selling cider and vinegar in Bouckville, New York.
  • 1900: The Mott Company merges with the W.B. Duffy Cider Company, creating Duffy-Mott.
  • 1914: Duffy-Mott is incorporated in New York.
  • 1929: Duffy-Mott acquires the Standard Apple Products Company.
  • 1933: Duffy-Mott begins producing prune juice.
  • 1938: Duffy-Mott introduces Mott's Apple Juice.
  • 1958: Duffy-Mott completes its initial public offering of stock.
  • 1982: Cadbury Schweppes acquires Duffy-Mott.
  • 1987: The Mr. & Mrs. T brand is acquired.
  • 1999: Cadbury-Schweppes acquires the Hawaiian Punch brand and partially integrates it with Mott's.[2]
  • 2001: ReaLime and ReaLemon are acquired.
  • 2002: During the previous four years, annual sales for Mott's double.
  • 2008: Cadbury Schweppes divests Mott's as part of the Keurig Dr Pepper.

Labor Issues

Mott’s, Williamson, New York

On May 23, 2010, 305 workers at the Mott's plant in Williamson, New York, represented by the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union Local 220 (RWDSU), voted to strike after Mott's parent company, Keurig Dr Pepper (DPS)-- despite healthy profits, an increase in market share and stock price—proposed serious cuts to employee benefits.

The proposal from the company included a $1.50 per hour wage cut for all employees, a pension elimination for future employees and a pension freeze for current employees, a 20 percent decrease in employer contributions to the 401(k) and increased employee contributions toward health care premiums and co-pays. DPS came under criticism for proposing cuts to worker pay at a time when not only was the local economy in turmoil, but the top three executives at DPS had doubled their pay between 2007 and 2009.[3]

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo wrote to Mott's on June 25, 2010, urging the company to return to the bargaining table and come to a "fair and equitable solution".[4]

The labor dispute has been a source of anxiety among many in the region, particularly apple growers. In a letter to Fang Li, President and CEO of Keurig Dr Pepper, US Senator Chuck Schumer expressed concern that "with unemployment in the Rochester area nearly 10 percent, the ongoing labor shortage is not only harming the 305 workers of the RWDSU Local 200 who work in the facility, but can harm the entire Wayne County economy due to the facility's centrality to the regional and state apple market."[3]

This sentiment was echoed by the New York Apple Association, Inc., in a statement urging Mott's to continue negotiations:

"The current impasse between the valued work force at the Williamson plant and management not only threatens the growers' and workers' future, but places more than 150 years of building brand recognition and consumer loyalty for Mott's products at risk." [5]

On Monday, September 13, 2010, the strike ended after Mott's workers voted to approve the company's most recent proposal. The new agreement included a wage freeze, but not the pay cuts the company had demanded. The contract also preserved pensions for existing workers.[6]

References

  1. http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/76100/Cross-twins-land-mum-a-saucy-role
  2. "Cadbury-Schweppes buys the Hawaiian Punch brand". Lexdon. 1999-04-15. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  3. 1 2 Marketwatch, June 24, 2010.
  4. https://www.scribd.com/doc/33658380/RWDSULetter-Cuomo
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2010-09-23.
  6. Greenhouse, Steven (September 13, 2010). "Mott's Plant Union Agrees to New Contract to End Its Strike". The New York Times.
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