Airbus Group NV (AIR.PA) threw a party for its new U.S.
workers ahead of the formal opening Monday of its first commercial jet factory
in the United States, and representatives of the machinists union joined the
crowd.
The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace
Workers (IAM) set up a booth at the Saturday celebration near the $600 million
facility, a family-focused event complete with free red-white-and-blue t-shirts
and a fireworks display.
The machinists' low-key presence highlighted the new
Airbus factory's significance to a commercial aircraft industry that's in
transition from a unionized, centralized past to a future where rivals Boeing
Co (BA.N) and Airbus build planes around the world, in factories that may no
longer be union shops.
The IAM, which represents about 35,000 Boeing employees,
said it is taking a soft approach at Airbus: offering information but not
promising to create a bargaining unit at the company. About two dozen union
members, in t-shirts that said "union values" and "blue collar
hero," handed out information to workers on Saturday.
"We don't want to shove it down their throats,"
said Alfredo Granado, an IAM grand lodge representative from Texas who was at
the event. "Airbus said whatever employees want to do, it's their
choice," Granado added. "I hope it stays that way."
Airbus prefers a direct relationship with employees,
spokesman Clay McConnell said. "But if our employees ultimately decide
they want to choose a union, that's their right."
Alabama is a right-to-work state, where employees are not
required to join a union. Union members are 10.8 percent of the state's
workforce, federal statistics show, compared with 2.2 percent in South Carolina
and 16.8 percent in Washington, where rival Boeing Co (BA.N) has jetliner
factories. Boeing's South Carolina plant is not unionized.
The Airbus plant will employ about 1,000 when it reaches
full production by 2018. Airbus has hired about 260 production workers so far.
A few workers voiced frustration at discovering they earn
less than European counterparts.
"I make $17.85 an hour," said one worker,
adding he had more experience than German workers who make $21 or $22 an hour.
"If we were in the low to mid-20s, there'd be no complaints," he
said.
Airbus said its pay is competitive with other
manufacturing in the area. Federal data show Alabama employers pay on average
$30 an hour for aircraft mechanics and $23 an hour for aircraft assembly
workers, and about $16 for general assemblers, which includes auto workers.
Source: Reuters
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