Drinking on the Job Comes to a Head at Carlsberg
Brewery Workers Defend Right to Swill Suds While They
Work
By JOHN W. MILLER And DAVID KESMODEL By JOHN W. MILLER
And DAVID KESMODEL
April 10,2010
The Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/
SB10001424052702304703104575174242543577012.html?
KEYWORDS=beer+unio

HOJE-TAASTRUP, Denmark--Michael Christiansen, a truck
driver turned union representative, is fighting hard to
preserve one of the last, best perks of the beer
industry: the right to drink on the job.

Mr. Christiansen's union brethren are wort boilers,
bottlers, packers and drivers at Carlsberg A/S,
Denmark's largest brewer. For a century, they've had
the right to cool off during a hard day's work with a
crisp lager.

But on April 1, the refrigerators were idled and daily
beer spoils were capped at three pint-sized plastic
cups from a dining hall during lunch hour.

This week, Mr. Christiansen led a strike of 260
Carlsberg employees at a distribution center in this
Copenhagen suburb. On Wednesday, 500 workers at
Carlsberg's Fredericia brewery in southern Denmark
joined in. On Friday afternoon, Mr. Christiansen sent
his men back to work temporarily after management
agreed to renegotiate workers' right to free beer in
coming weeks."This is a right workers have had for 100
years," Mr. Christiansen says. "Carlsberg has taken it
away without any negotiating at all."

Mr. Christiansen, a tall man with a salt-and-pepper
goatee, argues the right to tip a cold one at work is
as sacred as other rights enjoyed by Copenhagen-based
Carlsberg workers, such as a year's sick leave at full
pay, an average annual salary of $59,000 and two free
crates of beer monthly.

At 2 p.m. here Friday, about 100 workers congregated in
a parking lot full of empty beer crates and forklifts
and agreed to temporarily end their strike.

"We need to keep our beer," said employee Juseif
Izaivi, 32 years old. "I need a beer when I take a
cigarette break."

Drunkenness isn't a problem, workers argued. "There is
sometimes some whistling and maybe some singing, but
that's not connected to the drinking," said Martin
Juralowicz, a 31-year-old forklift operator.

Workday drinking used to be commonplace at breweries
around the world. But the practice has faded amid
concerns about workplace accidents, productivity losses
and drunken driving. Carlsberg is one of the few big
breweries where it's still condoned.

But the brewer's management frets that tippling on the
job is a risky anachronism, especially for those
operating heavy equipment. Although the alcohol-related
accident rate is "close to zero," according to
Carlsberg spokesman Jens Bekke, there are other issues
at stake. Research shows drinking can make productivity
go flat. "You can't have all these discussions about
corporate social responsibility and allow this," Mr.
Bekke says.

Even under the new rules, drivers of Carlsberg's 600
beer trucks, vans and cars can still drink up to three
bottles of brew daily. But now company vehicles come
equipped with an Alcolock, a device drivers must blow
into before turning on the ignition. If the device
detects excessive alcohol, the vehicle won't start.

Mr. Christiansen says the Alcolocks are fine, so long
as the company doesn't take away the suds. "A driver
usually has one beer on his lunch break, another after
his shift and maybe he gives the third one away," says
the 40-year-old, who quit driving a truck two years ago
to be a union rep.

Carlsberg's new policy was sparked by a survey
revealing that 93% of Danish companies have a
zero-tolerance policy on alcohol. "We don't want to be
left behind," says Anne-Marie Skov, a Carlsberg vice
president.

Given its 60% market share here, Carlsberg is likely to
influence rivals. Workers enjoy beer rights at all the
country's 120 breweries, says Per Sten Nielsen of the
Danish Brewers Association. "If Carlsberg is able to
follow through with this, others are bound to follow."

In Belgium, monks at the six monasteries that still
brew beers are allowed to drink their product at lunch.
"It is usually a light version of the beer they sell,"
says Joris Pattyn, co-author of the book, "100 Belgian
Beers to Try Before You Die."

At Belgium-based Anheuser Busch-InBev, the world's
largest brewer by sales, brewery workers in Belgium
once were allowed to serve themselves from on-site
refrigerators. The influx of foreign investors and
worried insurance companies halted that. Since 2005,
the global headquarters in Leuven has offered only
non-alcoholic beverages in the canteen and
refrigerators, a spokeswoman says. However, workers at
distribution centers can still drink beer during the
workday.

Beer manufacturers in Germany and the U.K. generally
are dry. Fuller, Smith & Turner PLC, which makes the
cask ale London Pride, once had a free tap at its West
London brewery that served pints to employees. When the
tap was turned off a few decades ago, disappointed
workers marked the spot with a wreath, a spokeswoman
says.

In the U.S., drinking on the job was common before
Prohibition, but gradually has disappeared since the
law was repealed in 1933, says Maureen Ogle, a beer
historian and author in Ames, Iowa.

Jim Koch, founder of Boston Beer Co., the maker of
Samuel Adams Boston Lager, says his father and his
co-workers used to guzzle beer during the workday at
Ohio breweries in the 1940s. "You would just fill your
bucket and you'd drink," says Mr. Koch. Brewing "used
to be much more physical, and it tended to be hot"
inside breweries.

Breweries are now filled with fast-moving bottling
lines and other equipment. "You just can't drink and
operate machinery," Mr. Koch says. Boston Beer doesn't
permit brewery workers to drink, though at the
corporate office, workers can pour brew from a tap or
grab a bottle from a cooler.

Miller Brewing ended the practice of allowing brewery
workers to drink on breaks in 1986, says a spokesman
for MillerCoors LLC, the joint venture formed when
Miller Brewing and Coors Brewing combined in 2008.

In 1994, Coors Brewing banned beer-drinking during
breaks and the lunch hour after an employee who had
been drinking at its Golden, Colo., brewery drove drunk
and was killed in a crash.

On Friday at Carlsberg's breweries, offices and plants,
the rectangular green refrigerators in most hallways
were devoid of alcohol, offering only water, milk and
Coca-Cola products. The only beer to be found was in
the lunch room, inside a square white box topped by a
tap, near a stack of plastic cups.

"If you drink three of those at lunch, that will affect
your job performance," Mr. Juralowicz said. "It's
better to space out your beers, one for each of the
three breaks."

--Gabriele Steinhauser, Paul Sonne and Charles Forelle
contributed to this article.

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