Houston Chronicle

Biden to Boeing: End impasse with firefighte­rs union

- By Julie Johnsson BLOOMBERG

President Joe Biden weighed in on a labor dispute underway at Boeing Co., urging the planemaker to restart stalled contract talks with a union representi­ng 160 of its firefighte­rs.

“Collective bargaining is a right that helps employers and employees,” Biden said in a post on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter. He said he was “concerned” about reports that Boeing had locked out members of Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Fire Fighters Local I-66.

Biden’s admonishme­nt over a relatively smallscale labor spat signals the scrutiny and stakes ahead for Boeing as it holds separate, high-stake talks with the union representi­ng roughly 32,000 Seattle-area factory workers. The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, whose contract expires in September, is seeking a 40% pay hike and board representa­tion.

The labor talks come as the company contends with a management shakeup, financial strain and regulatory scrutiny stemming from a January accident in which a fuselage panel blew off a 737 Max shortly after takeoff.

“We remain committed to securing an agreement,” Boeing said in an emailed statement. “Our offer provides significan­t pay increases and increased benefits.”

Boeing locked out its firefighte­rs and hired replacemen­ts on May 4 after workers rejected pay offers that their union described as 20% below the average at other Puget Sound-area fire department­s. The union has said it represents about 160 firefighte­rs at several factories and flight-test facilities around the Seattle area and Moses Lake, Wash.

In its statement, Boeing said its firefighte­rs’ compensati­on is competitiv­e with other industrial fire department­s, which provide the initial response to an incident before municipal first responders take command.

Boeing’s firefighte­rs earned $91,000 on average last year, and their pay would increase to $112,000 at the start of Boeing’s proposed four-year contract, according to the company.

“I encourage folks to return to the table to secure a deal that benefits Boeing and gets these firefighte­rs the pay and benefits they deserve,” said Biden, who has dubbed himself the most pro-union president in history.

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