SEATTLE (Reuters) - Unionized workers at Boeing Co who
resoundingly rejected a proposed contract last month will get a chance to vote
on the company's latest offer, the union's national office said on Saturday,
despite opposition to the revised deal from local labor leaders.
"I can confirm that a vote will take place," Frank
Larkin, a spokesman for International Association of Machinists, told Reuters.
"But the date and details are still being finalized."
Boeing on Saturday said its offer was still valid,
countering suggestions at a union rally last Thursday that said there was no offer
because the local leaders had rejected it.
"The terms of Boeing's enhanced contract offer to the
IAM on December 12 stand," Boeing spokesman Doug Alder said in an email.
"If ratified by the membership, Boeing would honor that contract."
In November, machinists at the Everett, Washington, plant
where Boeing's 777 jet is built voted 2-to-1 against the company's initial
offer.
The eight-year contract would have kept production of
Boeing's next jet - the 777X - in Washington state. But in exchange, management
wanted to replace the workers' pension plan with a 401(k)-style retirement
savings account and raise their healthcare costs.
In the aftermath of that vote, Boeing said it would look for
other locations to build the 777X, the only jet the company is likely to
develop in the next 15 years.
Boeing later made a revised offer that included a larger
signing bonus and other concessions, and asked union leaders to endorse it. But
the leaders of IAM District Lodge 751, which represents the 31,000 workers, refused
endorse it or put it up for a vote, saying the changes were not significant
enough.
In an email to Reuters on Saturday, Bryan Corliss, a
spokesman for District Lodge 751, said "our leadership is trying to
contact our International President for details. As soon as we have them we
will pass them on to our members."
Source: WTAQ
No comments:
Post a Comment