Steelworkers lose arbitration case against US Steel in their bid to
derail sale to Nippon
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[September 26, 2024] By
MICHELLE CHAPMAN
An arbitration board has ruled that U.S. Steel may proceed with its
proposed acquisition by Nippon Steel, a deal that faces strong
opposition from its workforce.
The board, which was jointly chosen by U.S. Steel and the United
Steelworkers to decide disputes between them, said Wednesday that U. S.
Steel has satisfied each of the conditions of the successorship clause
of its basic labor agreement with the union. It determined that no
further action under the agreement was necessary in order to proceed
with the closing of the proposed transaction with Nippon Steel.
USW had filed a series of grievances in January alleging that the
successorship clause had not been satisfied. The union has previously
stated that it doesn't believe Nippon fully understands its commitment
to steelworkers, retirees and its communities. USW has expressed concern
about the enforcement of its labor agreements, having transparency into
Nippon's finances, as well as national defense, infrastructure and
supply-chain issues.
The arbitration board heard evidence and arguments from U.S. Steel and
USW last month.
The board said Wednesday that it recognized the repeated written
commitments Nippon made to fulfill the requirements of the successorship
clause and that no further actions were required by the company. The
written commitments include Nippon's pledge to invest at least $1.4
billion in USW-represented facilities, not to conduct layoffs or plant
closings during the term of the basic labor agreement, and to protect
the best interests of U.S. Steel in trade matters.
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“With the arbitration process now
behind us, we look forward to moving ahead with our pending
transaction with Nippon Steel," U.S. Steel President and CEO David
Burritt said in a statement.
USW said in a statement on Wednesday that it disagreed with the
arbitration board's result.
“Nippon’s commitment to our facilities and jobs remains as uncertain
as ever, and executives in Tokyo can still change U.S. Steel’s
business plans and wipe them away at any moment,” the union said.
“We’re clearly disappointed with the decision, but it does nothing
to change our opposition to the deal or our resolve to fight for our
jobs and communities that hang in the balance in this transaction.”
President Joe Biden has previously voiced his opposition to Nippon
Steel buying U.S. Steel, but the federal government appears to be in
no hurry to block the deal.
Earlier this month White House officials did not deny that the
president would formally block the acquisition. But the necessary
report from the government’s Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States has yet to be submitted to the White House.
The proposed takeover carries some heavy political weight in
Pennsylvania, a state that both Vice President Kamala Harris and
Donald Trump view as a must-win in November’s presidential election.
U.S. Steel is headquartered in Pittsburgh.
Biden, Harris and Trump have all come out against the deal. Harris
spoke at the Economic Club of Pittsburgh on Wednesday where she
pledged to build an economy that is both pro-business and helps the
middle class.
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