Union,
Shell discuss meeting on U.S. refinery strike: sources
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[February 27, 2015]
HOUSTON (Reuters) - The United
Steelworkers union (USW) and representatives for several U.S. refineries
discussed on Thursday a possible resumption of face-to-face negotiations
to settle a 26-day strike, two people familiar with the discussions told
Reuters.
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No date had been set as of Thursday for resuming direct meetings
with Shell Oil Co, which is representing the refiners, the sources
said.
About 6,550 USW members were on strike at 15 plants, including 12
refineries that account for one-fifth of national capacity.
"The USW continues to be ready and willing to resume negotiations
with Shell at any time," said union spokeswoman Lynne Hancock.
"Other than that, I don't have any information on when talks will
resume."
Shell Oil Co, the U.S. arm of Royal Dutch Shell Plc <RDSa.L>,
confirmed making contact with the union.
Direct meetings between negotiators for the USW and Shell broke off
on Friday, after refinery owners balked at a possible settlement and
the union ordered walkouts at three Motiva Enterprises LLC
[MOTIV.UL] refineries co-owned by Shell.
The USW has said it is seeking to retain safety provisions from
previous contracts and tighten fatigue standards for workers, as
well as win back daily maintenance jobs now done by non-union
contractors.
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Shell and other companies have said the strike came about because of
the union's insistence on replacing the non-union contractors with
USW members, which would impair management's flexibility in refinery
staffing.
Companies have called on temporary replacement workers to keep
plants running at nearly normal levels.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Lisa Shumaker, Ken Wills and
Gopakumar Warrier)
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