Thursday, January 17, 2013

BWI: Extending Boeing Contracts Allows SPEEA and Company to Focus on Rebuilding Confidence in 787

Press release from Business Wire India
Source: Business Wire
Thursday, January 17, 2013 10:49 AM IST (05:19 AM GMT)
Editors: General: Consumer interest; Business: Transport engineering
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(BW)(WA-SPEEA)Extending Boeing Contracts Allows SPEEA and Company to Focus on Rebuilding Confidence in 787


Seattle, United States, Thursday, January 17, 2013 -- (Business Wire India) --

The following is a statement from SPEEA, IFPTE Local 2001, regarding Boeing contract negotiations:

With the desire to focus all attention on solving the emergent issues with The Boeing Company's 787, the union representing engineers and technical workers today (Jan. 16) proposed incorporating areas of agreement from ongoing negotiations into existing contracts and extending the agreements for another four years.

This "best and final" offer by the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA), IFPTE Local 2001, was presented as negotiations resumed at 1 p.m. with the assistance of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) at the SeaTac Hilton.

SPEEA's unprecedented offer would free Boeing and 23,000 engineers and technical workers from protracted and increasingly contentious negotiations that appear headed for a strike. It also allows the company and its technical workforce to focus on reaffirming confidence and proving the 787 is the reliable and safe product employees know it to be. Completing negotiations also helps Boeing stay focused on supporting customers, engineering the 767 tanker, 737 MAX, increasing 737 and 777 production rates and the other products needed for our national defense.

"These negotiations have been going on for more than a year," said Tom McCarty, SPEEA president and Professional Team member. "At this point, we should move forward with the items upon which we can agree, and leave the status quo in place for the remaining items."

In addition to the proposed contract extension, SPEEA requested that Boeing continue to meet under the auspices of FMCS mediation to tackle the difficult issues that have proven so divisive in these negotiations.

"Our hope is that we can work collaboratively to find solutions in a data-rich environment outside of the constraints of the collective bargaining process," said Ryan Rule, Professional Team member.

In making the proposal, SPEEA agreed to accept Boeing's funding mechanism for the Ed Wells Partnership training program. The status quo proposal continues to offset company medical costs through annual deductible increases based on salary growth. To put to rest the pension issue, a major point of contention, SPEEA proposes to accept the same pension proposal that Boeing negotiated with the International Association of Machinists (IAM District 751). Finally, the contract extension offer is made with the understanding Boeing recognizes same-sex survivor pension benefits pursuant to Washington state law.

"With our contracts put to rest, we can all roll up our sleeves and work the issues facing the 787 and Boeing," said Sandy Hastings, Technical Team member. "SPEEA members know this is a great airplane, and we are eager to prove this to our customers, the flying public and the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration)."

SPEEA and Boeing started meeting in April 2012 to negotiate new contracts for 15,550 engineers and 7,400 technical workers. In October 2012, engineers rejected Boeing's initial offer by 95.5 percent. Technical workers rejected the company's offer by 97 percent. Existing contracts expired Nov. 25. Since resuming talks Jan. 9 after a month-long FMCS-imposed recess, union members increased preparations for a possible strike. A 40-day strike in 2000 by SPEEA stopped deliveries and caused major factory and service bottlenecks at Boeing plants around the country.

A local of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers (IFPTE), SPEEA represents 26,300 aerospace professionals at Boeing, Spirit AeroSystems in Wichita, Kansas, and Triumph Composite Systems, Inc. in Spokane, Wash.



CONTACT DETAILS
CONTACTS :

SPEEA
Bill Dugovich, communications director, 206-674-7368 or 206-683-9857
or
Ray Goforth, executive director, 206-433-0991


KEYWORDS
CONSUMER, TRANSPORT

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