Journal Pioneer

Bombardier unions expect protracted dispute with Boeing over C Series

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The largest unions in Canada and Britain anticipate Bombardier and Boeing are in for a protracted trade battle as they prepare for the U.S. Commerce Department to confirm massive duties on imports of the C Series aircraft. Following a meeting with Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) management Wednesday, Unifor and Unite the Union said the chances are slim that the U.S. will lower or cancel the 300 per cent import duties applied in a preliminar­y ruling. Washington is expected to vote Monday on the preliminar­y and anti-dumping countervai­ling duties announced in the fall.

“There’s no question this is going to end up in front of the WTO (World Trade Organizati­on),’’ Unifor National President Jerry Dias told reporters. “You can’t depend on the kangaroo courts in the U.S. to rule in favour of (Bombardier).’’

A battle before the internatio­nal trade tribunal would likely take months or years to resolve. Canada can also challenge the ruling under NAFTA. Unifor and Unite also expressed serious doubts that the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission will conclude in February that Boeing wasn’t harmed by the C Series. Boeing alleges the Quebec aircraft manufactur­er sold C Series aircraft to Delta Airlines at an unfairly low price thanks to financial support from the federal, provincial and British government­s.

Dias, Unifor’s Quebec director Renaud Gagne and Steve Turner, assistant secretary general of Unite, representi­ng workers in Northern Ireland, met for about an hour with Bombardier CEO Alain Bellemare. The unions from both sides of the Atlantic are meeting to come up with a common strategy to protect jobs as the U.S. is to decide whether the punitive duties will come into effect.

Dias and Turner are also expected to be in Washington in the next few days to meet with U.S. government and elected officials about Bombardier. Unifor represents nearly 10,000 aerospace workers in Canada, including several thousand from C Series subcontrac­tors.

“We have no confidence that the current U.S. administra­tion will look at this in a rational way,’’ Turner said when asked about his expectatio­ns for the decision Monday.

“We are not dealing with a rational president and we’re not dealing with an administra­tion that is really looking at the long-term interests of the United States.’’

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