By presenting its “best” offer, Boeing hopes for a quick end to the strike

The Boeing group on Monday sent its “best” offer to the International Union of Machinists (IAM), including a 30% wage increase over four years, and setting a September 27 deadline for ratification by union members on strike in the United States.

More than 33,000 workers at the American aircraft manufacturer in the Seattle region (northwest) have been on strike since September 13, as part of the negotiation of their new collective agreement.

“Ending the strike is the top priority,” Kelly Ortberg, Boeing’s boss since early August, said in a message to employees on Friday, saying he was “looking forward to getting on the road to recovery.”

The group’s two main factories in Renton (737, its best-selling aircraft) and Everett (777 and several military programs) are among the sites that have been completely shut down for ten days.

A hard blow for the manufacturer, which is going through a difficult period and which has taken measures, including partial technical unemployment affecting tens of thousands of employees, to preserve its cash flow during the walkout.

A draft agreement had been rejected on September 12 by nearly 95% of members of IAM-District 751, the local branch of the union, who were not satisfied with the proposals, particularly in terms of salary increases (+25% instead of the +40% requested) and retirement. They voted to strike by 96%.

“After listening to our employees and their concerns, Boeing today presented our best and final offer to union leaders,” the group said.

“This offer is conditional on ratification no later than September 27 at 11:59 p.m. local time (3:59 a.m. GMT),” he continued.

Contacted by AFP, IAM-District 751 did not respond immediately.

“Sacrifices”

“The workers knew that Boeing could do better, and [cette offre] “This shows that the workers were right,” Brian Bryant, the union’s national president, said in a statement.

“This proposal will be analyzed to see if it is able to help workers regain ground after the sacrifices of the past,” he continued.

“It’s better, but I’m not sure it’s going to be enough,” Mike Corsetti, a Boeing employee for 15 years at the Everett plant, told AFP.

The planemaker said that under its new proposal, the average annual salary for a unionized machinist would increase from $75,608 currently to $111,155 when the collective agreement expires in four years.

It also proposes a ratification bonus doubled to $6,000, as well as the reinstatement of a performance bonus — eliminated in the preliminary agreement — and an increased contribution to the 401(k) retirement savings plan.

The rest of the deal presented on September 8 remains unchanged, particularly the commitment to produce the next plane — expected in 2035 — in the Seattle area. That represents a promise of jobs for decades.

The collective agreement currently under discussion is intended to replace the one concluded in 2008, after a 57-day strike, and which was extended in 2011 and 2014.

Negotiations between Boeing and IAM-District 751 began in March, and a session with federal mediators on September 17-18 failed to find common ground and no date was set for a new round of talks.

The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service “FMCS remains committed to facilitating dialogue and will continue to monitor the situation closely,” its spokesperson told AFP on Monday morning, inviting both parties to “keep the lines of communication open.”

Strikers have set up picket lines around several Boeing sites in the state of Washington, the automaker’s birthplace, and in neighboring Oregon. Boeing said there is also a “small group” in California.

Boeing shares closed Monday’s session on the New York Stock Exchange up 1.96%.

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