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Formerly | A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company(1906–1985) Staley Continental Inc.(1985–1993) A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company(1993–2005) Tate & Lyle Ingredients Americas LLC(2005–2022) |
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Company type | Subsidiary |
Industry | Process manufacturing Food processing |
Founded | 1906 (incorporated as A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company) |
Headquarters | Decatur, Illinois, United States |
Key people | Jim Stutelberg (CEO) |
Products | Starches Sweeteners |
Parent | KPS Capital Partners |
Website | www |
Primary Products Ingredients Americas LLC (founded asA. E. Staley Manufacturing Company), also formerly known asTate & Lyle Primary Products, is an American company thatproduces a range ofstarch products for the food, paper and other industries;high fructose corn syrup; crystallinefructose; and other agro-industrial products. The company was incorporated in 1906 as A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company by Augustus Eugene Staley.
In July 2021, Tate & Lyle announced it was spinning off Tate & Lyle Primary Products (formerly, A. E. Staley) into a new company to be known asPrimary Products Ingredients Americas LLC (Primient). Tate & Lyle will maintain 50% ownership of Primient and the remaining 50% will be owned byKPS Capital Partners (including board and management control). The transaction was completed by the end of the first quarter of 2022.[1][2] On May 23, 2024, Tate & Lyle announced that it has agreed to sell its remaining interest of Primient to KPS Capital Partners for $350 million in cash. The transaction is expected to close by end of July 2024.[3]
Augustus Eugene "Gene" Staley (25 February 1867 – 26 December 1940)[4] founded a business of repacking and sellingcornstarch under his own Cream brand inBaltimore in 1898. On 6 November 1906, he incorporated the business asA. E. Staley Manufacturing Company (A. E. Staley) in order to start his own production of food starch. In 1909, Gene Staley purchased an inoperative cornstarch plant inDecatur, Illinois.[5] He paid $45,000 and spent three years rebuilding and upgrading the plant with capital that he had raised from stockholders.[6] The factory began processing on March 12, 1912.[7]
A. E. Staley became one of the largest processors of corn in the United States, second only toArcher Daniels Midland (ADM), also based in Decatur, Illinois. It also processed soybeans under a partnership agreement with ADM at its Decatur, Illinois plant. ADM, through a subsidiary, owned 7.4% of A. E. Staley and would often assist A. E. Staley in filling corn syrup orders forCPC International when the company was in short supply of product. Both companies also had joint ventures producing corn sweeteners in Central America.[8]
A. E. Staley also produced many famous food and household brands including Cream Corn Starch, Staley Pancake and Waffle Syrup, Sta-Puf fabric softener, Sta-Flo liquid starch and Sno Bol toilet bowl cleaner. The food and household brands were subsequently sold toPurex Industries, Inc. in 1981.[9] Presently, only Cream Corn Starch (Conagra Brands), Sta-Flo liquid starch (Henkel) and Sno Bol toilet bowl cleaner (Armaly Brands) continues to exist.
In 1985, A. E. Staley purchasedCFS Continental, a wholesale grocery company, for $360 million. A. E. Staley stated a need to diversify away from bulk food processing. After the acquisition, A. E. Staley changed its name to Staley Continental, Inc. (until 1993).[10]
In 1988, British companyTate & Lyle acquired 90% of A. E. Staley for $1.42 billion.[11] Prior to the purchase, Tate & Lyle announced that it planned to sell CFS Continental toSYSCO, another wholesale grocer, for $700 million to help fund the acquisition.[12] In 2000, Tate & Lyle acquired the remaining 10% of the company.
In 2005, the company changed its name toTate & Lyle Ingredients Americas LLC (Tate & Lyle Primary Products business).
In July 2021, Tate & Lyle announced it was spinning off Tate & Lyle Primary Products (formerly, Tate & Lyle Ingredients Americas LLC) into a new company to be known asPrimary Products Ingredients Americas LLC (Primient). Tate & Lyle will maintain 50% ownership of Primient and the remaining 50% will be owned byKPS Capital Partners (including board and management control). The transaction was completed by the end of the first quarter of 2022.[1][2] On May 23, 2024, Tate & Lyle announced that it has agreed to sell its remaining interest of Primient to KPS Capital Partners for $350 million in cash. The transaction is expected to close by end of July 2024.[3]
On Sunday, June 27, 1993, A. E. Staley officials decided to lock out A. E. Staley employees who were members of the Allied Industrial Workers of America Union.[13] The lockout incident was the result of nearly a decade of labor disputes between management and Staley's unionized workers. The decline in pay and wages began in 1985 when A. E. Staley merged with Continental Foods, forming Staley Continental. During the next three years, the union was forced to make concessions as management was concerned about the plant remaining viable. Base pay was frozen at $10.80 per hour and workers complained of long overtime hours and declining safety conditions. After London based Tate & Lyle purchased A. E. Staley in 1988, conditions got worse for the factory workers. In 1989, contract negotiations began for a new three-year contract. While the bargaining committee was hoping to end the salary freeze and improving safety standards, the company was ushering in new practices, such as rotating shifts and deskilling of jobs as well as elimination of many safety procedures.
In 1991, the company hired a new labor relations director who was known for promoting union busting practices. Workers with years and decades of experience at the plant were fired and new supervisors forced workers to ignoreOSHA regulations. A new attendance policy was also instituted and workers were shocked to find out that anyone with over seven absences per year would be fired and the number of allowed absences would decrease every year. A few months later, company management announced a new set of offences that were grounds for immediate termination. This list included "smoking outside of designated areas; loafing; dishonesty; sleeping on duty; insubordination; refusal to work overtime as directed; unauthorized possession of a camera; and use of abusive or threatening language." This was a gross violation of the union contract, which states that employers cannot fire employees without having the "just cause" to do so. Due to this new regulation, more workers were fired during the next year than had been fired in the previous twenty years combined.
Considering the climate, it was no surprise that continued contract negotiations were unsuccessful. Under the guidance of Jerry Tucker, the union began to organize an in-plant "work to rule" campaign, where workers pressure management to reach a fair campaign by altering their behavior on the job, as opposed to going on strike. At A. E. Staley, this meant that the workers collectively decided to do only what they were told to do by their supervisor without their past knowledge and experiences. They performed only their outlined job duties and nothing extra. The goal of the work to rule campaign was to show management that the factory could not be run without the knowledge and skills of the workers. In many ways, A. E. Staley was the perfect environment for this type of labor tactic, as most unionized workers had acquired skills over the years that boosted overall production and quality of the product. Management and new supervisors simply did not have this knowledge and skills to effectively instruct workers. This was evidenced in the fact that over the next 11 months during which the work to rule campaign occurred, production fell drastically. A company spokesperson estimated that production had fallen by 32%, but union estimates were upwards of 50%.[14][page needed]
The New York Times reported that the decision resulting in the lockout of A. E. Staley union employees were due to Staley officials claiming that workers had been sabotaging plant operations for the weeks prior to the lockout. Representatives from the Allied Industrial Workers of America, claimed that there were no reports of any employees being reprimanded for sabotage, going back nine months since the lockout.[13]
The lockout would result in a two and half-year labor movement that would end in 1996. During that period, union workers fought to win back a fair contract, which would eliminate mandatory 12-hour shifts and mandatory overtime, and address safety concerns.[15] The lockout turned into a national labor movement when union workers from two other Decatur-based companies,Caterpillar Inc. andFirestone Tire and Rubber Company, walked out on contract disputes in August 1994 and joined lockout workers from A. E. Staley in protests, picketing and public demonstrations.[16]
"Without Gene Staley, there never would have been the Chicago Bears.
The Staley company was indirectly and partially responsible for the founding of the National Football League."
In 1917, A. E. Staley's Fellowship Club formed a baseball team managed by futureBaseball Hall of FamerJoe McGinnity.[18] Gene Staley was a big sports fan, believing it helped build character and instill a sense of competition in his employees. Two years later, the Fellowship Club created a football counterpart.[19] The players on both teams worked as semi-professionals in his factory. The football team, nicknamed the Decatur Staleys and headed by a coach named Brennan, competed on the independent circuit in1919; after losing its first game, the team won six in a row to go 6–1.[20]
In March 1920,George Halas, a minor league baseball andcollege football player, was invited by A. E. Staley superintendent George Chamberlain to head the football team.[21] Halas agreed on the conditions that he may sign and invite his former teammates to play and work for the company, which Chamberlain accepted. "I was elated", Halas wrote in his autobiography. "I saw the offer as an exciting opportunity but did not suspect the tremendous future Mr. Staley was opening for me."[22] Halas played for both the football and baseball teams in addition to working as a scale clerk. In the summer, he assisted in forming the American Professional Football Association (APFA), which would eventually become theNational Football League.[23] The Staleys went 10–1–2 in the1920 season and lost out to theAkron Pros for the championship.[24] Although much of the team's home games were played atStaley Field, the team struggled financially due to the stadium holding only 1,500 fans and not producing enough money from ticket sales. The situation was exacerbated by company employees receiving 50 percent discounts on their tickets. Halas elected to move a game against theChicago Cardinals to Cubs Park in Chicago to alleviate monetary stress.[25] Nevertheless, A. E. Staley's funding continued to drain, and the company ended the 1920 season having lost $14,406.36. In compensation, Gene Staley ordered the team to pay back the 2.5 hours of work that had been used to practice.[26]
Halas became A. E. Staley's athletic director in March 1921.[23] When thedepression of 1920–21 hit, Gene Staley convinced Halas to move the team to Chicago for the1921 APFA season, and gave him $5,000 to fund the team and promote the company in exchange for keeping the name Staleys.[27] Now known as the Chicago Staleys, the team won the championship with a 9–1–1 record.[28]
During the 1922 league meeting, debate flared over the Staleys' ownership status. Halas and partnerDutch Sternaman ran the team, but agentBill Harley also sought to do the same. When the APFA contacted Staley, he responded that the move to Chicago also included Halas inheriting full ownership of the team. In an 8–2 vote, league owners decided in favor of Halas/Sternaman. Halas later renamed the team to theChicago Bears.[29] Although he no longer owned the team, Staley regularly attended Bears games and nicknamed them the "Transplants".[17]
In October 1956, to celebrate A. E. Staley's 50-year anniversary, Halas organized a "Staley Day" for the Bears–Baltimore Colts game atWrigley Field. The Bears reserved 1,000 seats for company employees and allowed only them to purchase game tickets from September 3–10, whileWabash Railroad designated a special train fromDearborn Station to the stadium.[30] Halas invited surviving Staley teammates to the game and an evening dinner,[26] while Staley's son A. E. Staley Jr. and Decatur mayorClarence A. Sablotny also attended the game. The Bears won 58–27, the most points scored by the Bears since 1940.[31]
Staley serves as the namesake of the Bears' mascotStaley Da Bear.[32]
In 1922, Gene Staley proposed a project to the city of Decatur that would createLake Decatur, which is Illinois’ largest artificial body of water, being 2800 acres and having a 30-mile shoreline. Staley needed the lake to supply of 19 million gallons of water a day. Staley threatened to close his plant and move it toPeoria, Illinois if the Decatur City Council refused to allow the construction of the artificial lake. The City Council allowed the company to go forward with the project, and construction began in 1922.[33]