Strike at Boeing was part of a new era of labor activism long in decline
at US work places
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[November 06, 2024] Aircraft
assembly workers at Boeing factories near Seattle and elsewhere voted to
end a seven-week strike overnight.
Leaders of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace
Workers district in Seattle said 59% of members who cast ballots agreed
to approve the company’s fourth formal offer and the third put to a
vote.
Organized labor has made itself heard over the past couple of years, and
the number of actions taken by unions has soared. There were 470 work
stoppages (466 strikes and four lockouts) involving approximately
539,000 workers last year, according to Cornell University's School of
Industrial and Labor Relations. The nearly 500 work stoppages resulted
in approximately 24,874,522 strike days.
While the number of work stoppages increased by only 9% between 2022 and
2023, the number of workers involved in those work stoppages skyrocketed
141% to well over a half million workers, according to Cornell.
Unions including the UAW, the Teamsters and, most recently, the
International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, say they
made the sacrifices asked of them by their companies during the pandemic
and previous periods of distress for different economic sectors. Workers
have stood firm on demands of late, however, saying that now is the time
for companies, which have been consistently posting billions of dollars
in profits every year, to catch up and pay workers what they are owed.
Here's a look at some recent standoffs between corporate America and
workers.
Automakers and UAW
Late last year the United Auto Workers union overwhelmingly ratified new
contracts with Ford and Stellantis, along with a similar deal with
General Motors, that would raise pay across the industry and force
automakers to absorb higher costs.
The agreements, which run through April 2028, ended contentious talks
that began in the summer of 2022 and led to six-week-long strikes at all
three automakers.
The new contract agreements were widely seen as a victory for the UAW.
The companies agreed to dramatically raise pay for top-scale assembly
plant workers, with increases and cost-of-living adjustments that would
translate into 33% wage gains.
Top assembly plant workers were to receive immediate 11% raises and
would earn roughly $42 an hour when the contracts expire in April of
2028.
Under the agreements, the automakers also ended many of the multiple
tiers of wages they had used to pay different workers. They also agreed
in principle to bring new electric-vehicle battery plants into the
national union contract.
UPS and Teamsters
UPS workers that are members of the Teamsters union approved a tentative
contract with the package delivery company last year. The run-up to the
approval was acrimonious, with labor negotiations that threatened to
disrupt package deliveries for millions of businesses and households
nationwide.
After negotiations broke down in early July 2023, Atlanta-based UPS
reached a contract agreement with the Teamsters just days before an Aug.
1 deadline.
At the time the agreement was struck, full- and part-time union workers
were set to get $2.75 more per hour in 2023, and $7.50 more in total by
the end of the five-year contract. Starting hourly pay for part-time
employees also got bumped up to $21, but some workers said that fell
short of their expectations.
UPS said at the time that by the end of the new contract, the average
UPS full-time driver would make about $170,000 annually in pay and
benefits. It was not clear how much of that figure benefits accounted
for.
As part of the deal, the delivery company also agreed to make Martin
Luther King Jr. Day a full holiday, end forced overtime on drivers’ days
off and stop using driver-facing cameras in cabs, among a host of other
issues. It eliminated a two-tier wage system for drivers and agreements
on safety issues were also reached, including equipping more trucks with
air conditioning.
Video Games and SAG-AFTRA
In September video game performers reached agreements with 80 individual
games that have signed interim or tiered budget agreements with the
performers’ union and accepted the artificial intelligence provisions
they have been seeking.
The performers had been striking for over a month.
Members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and
Radio Artists began striking in July after negotiations with game
industry giants that began more than a year and a half ago came to a
halt over AI protections.
The interim agreement secures wage improvements, protections around
“exploitative uses” of artificial intelligence and safety precautions
that account for the strain of physical performances, as well as vocal
stress. The tiered budget agreement aims to make working with union
talent more feasible for independent game developers or smaller-budget
projects while also providing performers the protections under the
interim agreement.
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Ed Lutgen shows off his tattoo while waiting to hear the results of
the union vote on a new contract offer from Boeing, Monday, Nov. 4,
2024, at IAM District 751 Union Hall in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey
Wasson)
Las Vegas Resorts and Culinary
Workers Union
Thousands of hospitality union workers on the Las Vegas Strip
reached a tentative deal with the Venetian and Palazzo resorts in
August, a first for employees at the sprawling Italian-inspired
complex that opened 25 years ago.
The Culinary Workers Union announced on the social platform X that
the deal came together after a year of negotiations. It covers over
4,000 hotel and casino workers, from housekeepers and cocktail
servers to bartenders and porters.
Bethany Khan, a union spokesperson, said the deal mirrors the major
wins secured in recent contracts awarded to 40,000 hospitality
workers at 18 Strip properties owned or operated by casino giants
MGM Resorts International, Caesars Entertainment and Wynn Resorts.
Those wins included a 32% pay increase over five years, housekeeping
workload reductions and improved job security amid advancements in
technology and artificial intelligence.
The bump in pay under those contracts will amount to an average $35
hourly wage by the end of the contracts, according to the union.
Workers at these properties were making about $26 hourly with
benefits before winning their latest contracts in November.
Kaiser Permanente and Health Care Worker Unions
Unions representing 85,000 health care workers reached a tentative
agreement with industry giant Kaiser Permanente in October 2023
following a strike over wages and staffing levels.
The deal included setting minimum hourly wages at $25 in California,
where most of Kaiser’s facilities are located, and $23 in other
states. Workers would also see a 21% wage increase over four years.
The lead up to the tentative agreement included a three-day strike
involving 75,000 workers in multiple states.
The tentative agreement also included protective terms around
subcontracting and outsourcing, as well as initiatives to invest in
the current workforce and address a staffing crisis.
Hollywood Studios and SAG-AFTRA
Hollywood’s actors voted to ratify a deal with studios in December
2023 that ended their strike after nearly four months, bringing an
official finish to a labor strife that shook the entertainment
industry for most of last year.
Members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television
and Radio Artists approved a three-year contract.
Control over the use of artificial intelligence was the most
hard-fought issue in the long, methodical negotiations. The contract
called for a 7% general pay increase with further hikes coming in
the second and third years of the deal.
The agreement also included a hard-won provision that temporarily
derailed talks: the creation of a fund to pay performers for future
viewings of their work on streaming services, in addition to
traditional residuals paid for the showing of movies or series.
U.S. ports and the International Longshoremen’s Association
Some 45,000 dockworkers at East and Gulf coast ports returned to
work in October after their union reached a deal to suspend a strike
that could have eventually caused shortages and higher prices if it
had dragged on.
A walkout would have shut down as many as 36 ports that handle
almost half of the nation’s cargo from ships entering and exiting
the nation. Any such strike would eventually have led to shortages
that would have hurt the U.S. economy if the walkout by the
International Longshoremen’s Association went on for more than a
month.
The dispute is not over, however. Longshoremen suspended its strike
after three days, but that lasts only until Jan. 15, providing more
time to negotiate a new contract. The union and the U.S. Maritime
Alliance, which represents ports and shipping companies, said in a
joint statement that they have reached a tentative agreement on
wages.
Talks now turn to the automation of ports, which the unions says
will lead to fewer jobs, and other sticking points.
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