SEATTLE – Machinists
Union members have voted to accept the Boeing Co.’s proposed eight-year
contract with a 51 percent yes vote.
“Our members have spoken and this is the course we’ll take,”
said Tom Wroblewski, the president of Machinists Union District Lodge 751,
which represents more than 30,000 hourly workers at Boeing plants in Puget
Sound.
The decision means Boeing will stop seeking alternate sites
for its 777X aircraft program, the latest version of its best-selling widebody
jet, and start preparations to start final assembly and wing fabrication in
Puget Sound.
The union’s goal in coming years will be to fight to ensure
Boeing lives up to its commitment to its workforce and keeps jobs in Washington
state, Wroblewski said.
The vote to accept the contract came even though Wroblewski
and the District 751 leadership team had unanimously recommended that union
members reject Boeing’s offer, which included steep concessions on retirement
and health care benefits and limits on future wage growth.
“All along we knew that our members wanted to build the
777X, and that it was in Boeing’s best interest to have them do it,” he said.
“We recommended that our members reject the offer because we felt that the cost
was too high, in terms of our lost pensions and the thousands of dollars in
additional health care costs we’ll have to pay each year.
“Now, it’s up to all of us now to pull together to make this
airplane program successful. I’m confident we will do that, because as we’ve
said all along, this is the most-skilled aerospace workforce in the world.”
Source: IAM751.org
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