Boston Herald

STRIKE WHILE IRON’S HOT

Picketing shipbuilde­rs’ health care to run out amid virus pandemic

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PORTLAND, Maine — The stakes are growing in a strike against Navy shipbuilde­r Bath Iron Works during a global pandemic as company-provided health insurance is running out for 4,300 shipbuilde­rs who’ve left their jobs.

Striking workers from Machinists Union Local S6 will be responsibl­e for their own insurance effective Monday, just days after three workers who carpooled together tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

At least one of those three workers who tested positive had been on the picket line in Bath, a union spokesman said.

Striking workers said Tuesday they were determined to press on with the strike even as tens of thousands of people remain unemployed in Maine, and several states report surging cases of COVID-19.

The workers are striking over subcontrac­ting, work rules and seniority, while wages and benefits are a secondary concern. The company’s final offer called for a threeyear contract with pay raises of 3% in each year.

“The choice is very simple. I had to strike. There was no other option,” said Brad Farrell, who’s married and has four children, and fears subcontrac­ting and seniority changes could force him out of his job in the tin shop.

Workers overwhelmi­ngly rejected the company’s final contract proposal and went on strike June 22.

The last strike, in 2000, lasted 55 days.

Workers are getting prepared for the long haul, looking at other jobs and health care options. Keeping health insurance through the socalled COBRA program can cost up to a couple of thousand dollars a month. Others said they will simply do without.

Kelley Hammond, a 58-year-old marine electricia­n, opted to forgo purchasing insurance and filled a blood pressure prescripti­on Tuesday, before the expiration of the company’s insurance.

“Hopefully that’ll get me through until the team can get back to the negotiatin­g table and work out a deal,” Hammond said.

Bath Iron Works is one of the Navy’s five largest shipbuilde­rs and one of only two that make destroyers, the workhorse of the fleet, which are capable of simultaneo­usly battling aircraft, missiles, warships and submarines.

The shipyard is already about six months behind scheduled, partly because of the pandemic, and it will need subcontrac­tors to help get back on schedule, Bath Iron Works President Dirk Lesko said.

The union has characteri­zed some of the shipyard’s proposals as an attempt to break the union, while the company contends it needs to streamline operations to lower prices to remain competitiv­e.

The company hired 1,800 workers last year and is hiring another 1,000 this year, so there’s no effort to shrink the workforce, the company said. The shipyard employs about 6,800 workers.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? REJECTED CONTRACT: Picketers Navy shipbuilde­rs acknowledg­e a honking motorist outside an entrance to Bath Iron Works last Monday in Bath, Maine.
AP FILE PHOTOS REJECTED CONTRACT: Picketers Navy shipbuilde­rs acknowledg­e a honking motorist outside an entrance to Bath Iron Works last Monday in Bath, Maine.
 ??  ?? SPARKS FLY: A welder works on the hull of a Zumwalt-class destroyer being built in the shipyard in August 2018. Navy shipbuilde­rs are striking against subcontrac­ting, work rules and seniority, while wages and benefits are a secondary concern.
SPARKS FLY: A welder works on the hull of a Zumwalt-class destroyer being built in the shipyard in August 2018. Navy shipbuilde­rs are striking against subcontrac­ting, work rules and seniority, while wages and benefits are a secondary concern.

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