UPS to sweeten offer as Teamsters-represented workers prepare to strike
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[July 20, 2023] By
Lisa Baertlein and Priyamvada C
(Reuters) - United Parcel Service on Wednesday said it would return to
the bargaining table with a better offer for roughly 340,000
Teamsters-represented U.S. workers, in a bid to avert a potentially
economically damaging strike on Aug. 1.
"We are prepared to increase our industry-leading pay and benefits, but
need to work quickly to finalize a fair deal that provides certainty for
our customers, our employees and businesses across the country," UPS
said in a statement.
The union said the world's largest delivery company contacted it on
Wednesday with an offer to resume talks next week, the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters said in a statement on Twitter.
Talks broke down on July 5, with each side blaming the other.
A key sticking point in the talks is pay increases for experienced
part-time workers who are making roughly the same or even less than new
hires because starting wages jumped due to the labor shortage in the
last few years.
Any disruption to the business of UPS would be broadly felt because the
company handles about 20 million packages a day - about quarter of the
parcel shipments in the United States. Those include deliveries for
online retailers like Amazon.com, high-value prescription drugs for
doctors and hospitals, and inventory for millions of other large and
small businesses.
A strike could be one of the costliest in at least a century, with the
impact of a 10-day strike topping $7 billion, according to one think
tank.
UPS pilots, who belong to a different union, would also stop flying in
solidarity with the striking workers.
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People hold placards during a rally held
by teamsters employed by UPS in downtown L.A., as an August 1st
strike deadline against the company nears in Los Angeles,
California, U.S. July 19, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The Teamsters have been holding "practice pickets" in major cities
around the country to keep pressure on UPS.
Despite all of the noise and hand-wringing, many transportation
executives and analysts believe the two sides will reach a deal
before the deadline.
That's because each side depends on the other.
UPS called its skilled and loyal Teamster employees a competitive
advantage early in the pandemic, when orders of everything from home
work stations and exercise stations to sofas and large TVs
overwhelmed delivery companies.
On the other hand, UPS is the largest employer of Teamsters at a
time when unions are fighting to grow.
Meanwhile, Teamsters leader Sean O'Brien told Reuters last week he
has asked President Joe Biden not to intervene in the talks, even as
retail groups and other interested parties push for the
administration to weigh in.
"We believe an August 1 strike at UPS remains possible but not yet
probable," Susquehanna analyst Bascome Majors said in a client note.
"Official news that Teamsters-UPS negotiations restart next week
after a 2.5-week break clears a path to 'get to yes' before the
deadline."
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles, Priyamvada C in
Bengaluru and David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Chris Reese
and Josie Kao)
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