Topic: Anheuser Busch Slashing Over 1,400 | |
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Edited by
Milesoftheusa
on
Tue 12/09/08 03:37 PM
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about.
I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? |
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August Bush Jr. is a friend of mine. They sold because they seen thing were out of control and took the chance to sell when they could. They do have a verbal agreement that this German company would not lay off workers or they would not of sold. The Bush family has a long history of taking good care of thier workers since thier grampa founded the Business. Makes me wonder in the article says almost to the day if the agreement was not for a year. Nothing new when foriegners come in. It is all about money Well, they are laying off people!! It's not a German company, btw. Bush's family history is a moot point at this time. They don't it anymore. In-Bev is known for lay offs and cut backs and for busting the union.`That's how they get their money back after an acquisition. Btw, in high school I lived across the street from Grant's Farm. The son shot one of my classmate's brothers. I heard the shot. I heard about that.. That was August.. He is not the same person anymore. A little bit of a brat then. It was Peter Busch in 1976. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_A._Busch_III August Anheuser Busch III was born in St. Louis, Missouri on June 16, 1937. He has been married twice. His first wife, Susan, is the mother of his two older children August Anheuser Busch IV and Susan Busch-Transou. His second wife, Virginia, who is a practicing attorney is the mother of his younger two children Steven Busch and Virginia "Ginny" Busch That says the 4th i always thought it was Jr.. |
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August Bush Jr. is a friend of mine. They sold because they seen thing were out of control and took the chance to sell when they could. They do have a verbal agreement that this German company would not lay off workers or they would not of sold. The Bush family has a long history of taking good care of thier workers since thier grampa founded the Business. Makes me wonder in the article says almost to the day if the agreement was not for a year. Nothing new when foriegners come in. It is all about money Well, they are laying off people!! It's not a German company, btw. Bush's family history is a moot point at this time. They don't it anymore. In-Bev is known for lay offs and cut backs and for busting the union.`That's how they get their money back after an acquisition. Btw, in high school I lived across the street from Grant's Farm. The son shot one of my classmate's brothers. I heard the shot. I heard about that.. That was August.. He is not the same person anymore. A little bit of a brat then. It was Peter Busch in 1976. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_A._Busch_III August Anheuser Busch III was born in St. Louis, Missouri on June 16, 1937. He has been married twice. His first wife, Susan, is the mother of his two older children August Anheuser Busch IV and Susan Busch-Transou. His second wife, Virginia, who is a practicing attorney is the mother of his younger two children Steven Busch and Virginia "Ginny" Busch That says the 4th i always thought it was Jr.. Here's more about the dynasty. http://bulletin.aarp.org/yourmoney/work/articles/anheuserbuschs_dynasty_nears_a_close.html |
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. |
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. Right now I don't think anyone is feeling comfortable about the possible loss of jobs. Someone once said "the difference between a recession and a depression is - in a recession some one else losses their job. While in a depression you lose your job." It maybe a matter of symantec’s but think it is how a number of people are feeling. JMO |
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. Right now I don't think anyone is feeling comfortable about the possible loss of jobs. Someone once said "the difference between a recession and a depression is - in a recession some one else losses their job. While in a depression you lose your job." It maybe a matter of symantec’s but think it is how a number of people are feeling. JMO Redshirt, We're also concerned about the donations that they made to better our community. They are big on donating to Forest Park. If you check out their web site, you'll see what they've been doing. |
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Edited by
Milesoftheusa
on
Tue 12/09/08 08:08 PM
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. No.. This is Steve's do'in. The others were happy where they were. See Steve is the only one that really worked thier. They kinda ran August off. He was not quite Excutive Material. He is a people person he would of been more comfortable as a worker. Like I said he did what he could when he bought the distributers. I doubt most even remember him doing that. We go gambling together and when ever he goes he gives the dealers around 5k every time. They love him.. They tell me he is about the only one with money who does that and most people in thier think he is some bum. he gave a friend after watching a football game at his house and he did not have a flat screen team about a 10k hometheater system delivered and set up the next day. That is the way he is. Noway would he of wanted this to happen. He is probally kicking himself now but I doubt he could stop it with the influence Steve has. I would not doubt it a bit if you do not here before long he has bought or built a new company that will pay good and i would kill for those jobs . You have a problem you just walk n his office and he more than likely would write you a check. he has a bad rap for partying and being known as a playboy. St. Louis has kinda dismissed him for Steve. Big Mistake. He is very kind hearted and compassionate.. He will help you watch |
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. Right now I don't think anyone is feeling comfortable about the possible loss of jobs. Someone once said "the difference between a recession and a depression is - in a recession some one else losses their job. While in a depression you lose your job." It maybe a matter of symantec’s but think it is how a number of people are feeling. JMO Redshirt, We're also concerned about the donations that they made to better our community. They are big on donating to Forest Park. If you check out their web site, you'll see what they've been doing. Winx, am aware of what they have done for the community. In many ways they have kept Forest Park and all that is there going when others just wanted to enjoy it. Not to mention supporting other charitable causes. |
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August was peter.. huh? maybe August is his middle name. That is all I have ever known him by. But i have not known him but 5 or 6 years. His siblings I just here about. I know St Louis better be thankful that when this aqusition was 1st brought up. August went and quitely bought up the Distrubution.. Everyone wondered. Why did he do that? Actually St. Louisians are not happy at all about the buy-out. Right now I don't think anyone is feeling comfortable about the possible loss of jobs. Someone once said "the difference between a recession and a depression is - in a recession some one else losses their job. While in a depression you lose your job." It maybe a matter of symantec’s but think it is how a number of people are feeling. JMO Redshirt, We're also concerned about the donations that they made to better our community. They are big on donating to Forest Park. If you check out their web site, you'll see what they've been doing. Winx, am aware of what they have done for the community. In many ways they have kept Forest Park and all that is there going when others just wanted to enjoy it. Not to mention supporting other charitable causes. Do you think In-Bev is going to put a stop to all of that? I think there's a good chance that they will. When I go to "Live on the Levee", bands by the Arch, it's funded by AB. |
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community.
It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. |
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community. It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. It's not their company anymore. |
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These cuts hurt St. Louis deeply. People outside of our city are not aware of how much Anheuser-Busch is intertwined with our city and it's history. Over 1,000 people will be laid off in St. Louis. By Jeremiah McWilliams, Tim Bryant and Tim Logan Anheuser Busch is now called A-B InBev. ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 12/09/2008 It didn't take long. Three weeks to the day after InBev, of Belgium, took over Anheuser-Busch, of St. Louis, the combined company announced sweeping cuts in its work force. A-B InBev is slashing 1,400 salaried jobs in the U.S., with an additional 415 contractor positions eliminated as well, the company said Monday. More than 250 open positions in the U.S. will remain unfilled. The cuts to eliminate overlapping staff were expected but were dramatic nevertheless. They were aimed squarely at Anheuser-Busch's St. Louis headquarters at One Busch Place. More than 1,000 of the lost jobs are in St. Louis. The local cuts amount to more than 3 percent of A-B's full-time, global work force before the merger, or about 1 percent of the staff of the combined company. The primary groups affected are engineering, information technology and other corporate positions. The cuts will come at the Pestalozzi Street facility and at A-B's Sunset Hills campus, which houses IT and other functions. The cuts by Anheuser-Busch InBev are part of an effort to eventually achieve $1.5 billion in annual "synergies." The company is under pressure to pay down $45 billion in debt that it needed to ink the takeover. "These actions are pretty consistent with what InBev has done in other acquisitions," said bond analyst Craig Hutson. "It shouldn't be a surprise to too many people." Big questions remain, including which areas could be cut next. Monday's announcement might be the largest single blow, analysts said. Further cost savings could come from tightening benefits or perks. A-B InBev did not make executives available on Monday to discuss the actions. "Anheuser has not been run as the most efficient of companies," said Hutson. It "has an opportunity to change that." Cutting costs is entwined in InBev's corporate DNA, hearkening back to its roots in Brazilian investment banking. With billions of dollars in debt payments coming due, the company needs to cut rapidly to make good on its massive $52 billion investment in Anheuser-Busch. "They're going to look at everything," including A-B's sweeping advertising budget, said Morningstar analyst Ann Gilpin. "I don't think anything is particularly safe." CUTS AMID BEER BOOM Outside A-B's corporate office complex on Lynch Street, it seemed like a typical Monday. Barley scented the air. Tour buses rumbled through. Employees came and went. Most didn't want to talk about the cuts. They didn't know anything yet, they said, or they were worried for their jobs. A few shot dirty looks at the TV news crews that have become an all too common sight in recent months, as the merger with InBev progressed. The mood inside was "somber," one woman said as she walked to the bank. No one knows just who will lose their jobs yet, she said, or whether there are more cuts to come. "There's just a lot of uncertainty." One fear is that InBev will be so aggressive with its cost cutting that it will end up hurting itself, Gilpin said. In the U.S. market, you have to spend money to make money, and losing top marketers or people with good relationships with crucial beer distributors could backfire, she said. Morale is already bad after InBev swooped in with what was, for all intents and purposes, a hostile bid. One thing is clear. The cuts did not come because of business struggles at Anheuser-Busch. Shortly before the takeover, A-B posted the best quarterly results in recent memory. The company said it is "pleased" with its U.S. beer sales and will "continue to invest in growing our brands." But in the meantime, there will be lots of empty chairs. Monday's announced cuts are in addition to the retirement of roughly 1,000 A-B employees this year under a $1 billion cost-cutting plan announced this summer. Busch Entertainment and the company's packaging division were left untouched in this round of layoffs. Members of the Teamsters union were also protected from the cuts. "These decisions are a result of a careful review of each department," according to an e-mail to employees sent by A-B President Dave Peacock and Luiz Fernando Edmond, president of A-B InBev's North American zone. "These were not easy decisions, but were necessary for the organization." The executives said the process would be "very difficult" because "many good workers who are trusted and valued in the organization will not remain." A-B InBev said it will provide severance pay and pension benefits to affected employees based on age and years of service. Depending on those factors, laid-off employees will be eligible for as little as two weeks and as much as one year of severance pay at the rate of their full-time salary. They also will be offered outplacement services and other benefits during the transition. The Missouri Division of Workforce Development said the state has offered to activate its "Rapid Response" team to meet with company officials and workers to help workers train for new careers. St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay and Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo., decried the timing and severity of the cuts. "It's a real tough time to be let go," said Blair Forlaw, executive director of Greater St. Louis Works, a civic group that tries to keep technology talent in the area. That said, St. Louis information technology jobs are open now in manufacturing, financial services and health care, which is undergoing the conversion to digital medical records, Forlaw said. "It may be just a matter of getting your résumé updated and practicing your interviewing skills," she said. Russ Signorino, a labor market analyst with the United Way of Greater St. Louis, said the cutbacks' effect on the region's economy will depend on the scope of the former employees' severance packages and how long they need to find new jobs. Even if the short-term consequence is slight, layoffs are painful when they involve "one of our great corporate citizens," Signorino said. With roughly 6,000 local employees, Anheuser-Busch is the 11th-largest employer in the St. Louis area, according to Post-Dispatch calculations. The company has a Missouri payroll of $560 million and pays about $32 million annually in state and local taxes and fees. InBev has promised to keep all 12 of A-B's U.S. breweries open, including the flagship in St. Louis. But analysts have predicted for months that deep cost cuts would be needed to justify the high price InBev paid to buy A-B. In addition, InBev chief executive Carlos Brito and his lieutenants have nurtured a reputation for relentlessly focusing on costs. "To keep the business strong and competitive, this is a necessary but difficult move for the company," Peacock said in a statement Monday. "We will assist in the transition for these employees as much as possible." Things are tough all over. If you have a job, better hold onto it. |
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Edited by
Milesoftheusa
on
Tue 12/09/08 11:25 PM
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community. It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. It's not their company anymore. I do not think you are understanding where I am coming from. You are from St Louis so you should know. 1.. Was it known AB was a good place to work? 2.. Did they pay good? Why if they did? This family is not your normal Dynasty. The children from the 1st marraige seems to of had instilled in the Family values of taking care of thier own. The community. The 2nd marraige from what I know about Steve he is a true A.H. August and his sister are very down to earth and think like thier father and grand parents. Don't be suprised if you see them rise to the occasion if this new company dumps on St Louis. They see you as part of thier family ..Believe it or not.. |
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community. It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. It's not their company anymore. I do not think you are understanding where I am coming from. You are from St Louis so you should know. 1.. Was it know AB was a good place to work? 2.. Did they pay good? Why if they did? This family is not your normal Dynasty. The children from the 1st marraige seems to of had instilled in the Family values of taking care of thier own. The community. The 2nd marraige from what I know about Steve he is a true A.H. August and his sister are very down to earth and think like thier father and grand parents. Don't be suprised if you see them rise to the occasion if this new company dumps on St Louis. They see you as part of thier family ..Believe it or not.. My grandfather and Great-Uncle retired from there. My Dad's good friend retired from there. My best friend's brother retired from there. But...my best friend's other brother was fired for a piddly reason right before his retirement. This happened last year. They suspected that he was going to be replaced with someone cheaper and they appealed with the union. I would like to see them rise to the occasion. It's already started though. Grant's Farm used to be open all week long. All of the schools had field trips there. It is packed everyday. Many tourists are there. Now it's open only on weekends. |
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Like I said the only one since thier fathers death that really has had anything to do out thier is thier younger brother. Stephen.
Ask your relatives what they think of Stephen.. It would be interesting to me what they say |
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Like I said the only one since thier fathers death that really has had anything to do out thier is thier younger brother. Stephen. Ask your relatives what they think of Stephen.. It would be interesting to me what they say I'll ask, Miles. I am curious about something though. How did you meet them when you live in Moberly? |
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community. It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. It's not their company anymore. I do not think you are understanding where I am coming from. You are from St Louis so you should know. 1.. Was it know AB was a good place to work? 2.. Did they pay good? Why if they did? This family is not your normal Dynasty. The children from the 1st marraige seems to of had instilled in the Family values of taking care of thier own. The community. The 2nd marraige from what I know about Steve he is a true A.H. August and his sister are very down to earth and think like thier father and grand parents. Don't be suprised if you see them rise to the occasion if this new company dumps on St Louis. They see you as part of thier family ..Believe it or not.. My grandfather and Great-Uncle retired from there. My Dad's good friend retired from there. My best friend's brother retired from there. But...my best friend's other brother was fired for a piddly reason right before his retirement. This happened last year. They suspected that he was going to be replaced with someone cheaper and they appealed with the union. I would like to see them rise to the occasion. It's already started though. Grant's Farm used to be open all week long. All of the schools had field trips there. It is packed everyday. Many tourists are there. Now it's open only on weekends. well...did you know...that my mother and your mother were both mothers ?... ![]() |
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This was tradition the Old Man had passed down from generations. They are German and believed in community. It is hard to say about that but I hope the Busches make sure what thier father and grandfathers wanted does not die. It's not their company anymore. I do not think you are understanding where I am coming from. You are from St Louis so you should know. 1.. Was it know AB was a good place to work? 2.. Did they pay good? Why if they did? This family is not your normal Dynasty. The children from the 1st marraige seems to of had instilled in the Family values of taking care of thier own. The community. The 2nd marraige from what I know about Steve he is a true A.H. August and his sister are very down to earth and think like thier father and grand parents. Don't be suprised if you see them rise to the occasion if this new company dumps on St Louis. They see you as part of thier family ..Believe it or not.. My grandfather and Great-Uncle retired from there. My Dad's good friend retired from there. My best friend's brother retired from there. But...my best friend's other brother was fired for a piddly reason right before his retirement. This happened last year. They suspected that he was going to be replaced with someone cheaper and they appealed with the union. I would like to see them rise to the occasion. It's already started though. Grant's Farm used to be open all week long. All of the schools had field trips there. It is packed everyday. Many tourists are there. Now it's open only on weekends. well...did you know...that my mother and your mother were both mothers ?... ![]() No, I didn't. ![]() |
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Edited by
Milesoftheusa
on
Wed 12/10/08 06:24 PM
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Like I said the only one since thier fathers death that really has had anything to do out thier is thier younger brother. Stephen. Ask your relatives what they think of Stephen.. It would be interesting to me what they say I'll ask, Miles. I am curious about something though. How did you meet them when you live in Moberly? We both like Gambling.. Met him at the Tables one night.. Like I said he is like you and me. he does not want people to know really who he is when he is out. He will go to the same places as you and me and you would not ever believe who he is.. That is why I have such respect for him and what he says about his sister. Stephen.. Well i think you know what he thinks of him |
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A British company called Woolworths has just gone bust. It is a retail chain that has a branch in pretty much EVERY town throughout the country. They have been saying on the news tonight that 30,000 people are going to lose their jobs.
I am surprised nobody has managed to buy it out. |
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