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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Airlines
Technical workers denounce union officials for rejecting strike
action against Boeing
By Cory Johnson
8 February 2000
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Boeing union officials representing over 22,000 technical workers
and engineers retreated from a threat to launch a February 3 strike
against the aerospace giant as union members voted down the company's
latest offer.
While the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in
Aerospace (SPEEA) counted mail-in ballots that recorded a 51 percent
rejection by technicians and a 62 percent rejection by engineers,
top union officials met in Washington DC with members of their
AFL-CIO counterpartthe International Federation of Professional
and Technical Engineersand staff officers for Vice President
Al Gore, Labor Secretary Alexis Herman and Federal Aviation Administration
head Jane Garvey.
To head off a strike or other job actions by the rank and file,
SPEEA sought out Richard Barnes, head of the federal Mediation
and Conciliation Services agency, to intervene and ask for emergency
talks between the union and company. The negotiations will take
place February 7 and 8.
The decision to call off the strike caused an explosion of
anger from union members: We should have been out on strike
in December, said one. Our leaders do not have the
strength to back up what they say. At the company's plant
in Renton, Washington, workers clapped and chanted, Strike,
strike, strike, every half hour in the lead-up to the strike
deadline. In the parking lot outside union headquarters in Southcenter
enraged workers surrounded union officials and charged them with
selling out.
Much has been made of the fact that out of a bargaining unit
of 22,352 workers SPEEA holds a weak position with only 13,780
dues-paying members. But the past period has shown a rising tide
of support for a struggle against the company. SPEEA called for
a rejection of the company's November 11 contract proposal that
failed to provide guaranteed wage increases and no cuts in benefits.
Engineers rejected the offer by 99 percent and technical workers
followed with a 98 percent rejection.
After a new round of talks that concluded in January SPEEA
announced that Boeing had made significant changes.
But as news of the settlement leaked out to the rank and file
and a mail-in ballot got under way, the bureaucracy was forced
to shift its ground and admit that workers were insisting on higher
raises, more guaranteed pay increases, a lump-sum bonus and no
cuts in medical benefits. Although we were able to get them
most everything they were looking for on the second go-around,
concessions had to be made and members have said it is not worth
those concessions, said SPEEA spokesman Bill Dugovich.
While Boeing has made set amounts of money for wages and bonuses
available, they are applied unevenly in the form of merit pay.
Under present conditions engineers make a minimum of $35,000 per
year and a maximum of more than $105,000. Technical workers make
a yearly minimum of $20,500 and a maximum of $88,200.
Workers are also well aware that Boeing expects to slash 18,600
jobs during the year 2000 in addition to its cuts in wages and
benefits. This situation has led a significant section of workers
to conclude that a struggle was necessary. During the last five
months the union added 4,000 dues-paying members, nearly a 50
percent increase in its membership.
The position of the workers is further strengthened by another
factor that was revealed by the Associated Press. The union represents
designated engineering representatives who are authorized
by the Federal Aviation Administration to approve and certify
changes made to engineering design during production. For
Boeing to replace such workers in the event of a strike would
be extremely difficult.
SPEEA executive director Charles Bofferding admitted that there
was determination in the ranks when he said, We think it
would be a shame to not give the strength and power they have
exerted already a chance to succeed and give them the contract
they deserve.
But as the deadline neared, SPEEA officials looked for a way
out of the confrontation. In the week before the strike vote the
union sent out an e-mail that said it would call a one-week protest
strike in the event of a contract rejection. An uproar among the
ranks, who saw in the proposal a retreat by the union, caused
Bofferding to declare the proposal a mistake and call for the
e-mail's retraction.
SPEEA's turn to the AFL-CIO and Clinton-Gore officials clearly
demonstrated their opposition to unleashing a struggle against
Boeing. The Seattle Times admitted as much, writing that
the decision to bring in Barnes and the Mediation and Conciliation
Services signals that SPEEA is gambling on politiciansnot
disgruntled workersto wield the most potent pressure against
Boeing.
Bofferding announced, The Boeing company is a very political
company, and this is a campaign year, making clear SPEEA,
like the AFL-CIO, is interested in a horse-trade with Goreto
boost the vice president's election campaign in return for helping
them to avoid a confrontation with Boeing, the nation's number
one exporter and number two defense contractor.
Barnes has previous experience in helping the labor bureaucracy
ward off an insurgent rank and file. He personally participated
in the Teamsters sellout of the strike against United Parcel Service.
Despite the union's characterization of its calling off the
strike as a way of giving the company more time to think,
Boeing has made clear that while accepting the mediated talks,
it is not going to budge. Jim Dagnon, a Boeing vice president,
declared, We've said pretty much that all the money we have
is on the table. We made the best offer that we can. Now they're
going to have to decide whether they can live with it.
Dagnon admitted that the company's reorganization, whose main
focus is to reduce workers' living standards to remain globally
competitive, was the source of friction in the negotiations. I
think the negotiations have become a symbol of all the frustrations
they feel about the changes. Expectations got out of line with
reality.
See Also:
Workers
Struggles : Airlines Workers
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