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Does the Machinists Union Want Boeing’s SC Plant Closed?

Last year, we reported on the Machinists vs. Boeing jobs saga that ended with Boeing deciding to produce part of the new 787 in Charleston, South Carolina.  At the heart of Boeing’s decision to manufacture in the South was the International Association of Machinists (IAM).

In sum, Boeing wanted a no-strike pledge from the union, which the union would only agree to if Boeing would let the union unionize more of the company.  Ultimately, the Company said, ‘no thanks’ and opened the plant in Charleston.  Of course, it helps that the South Carolina plant is union-free.

Clearly, Boeing’s move to the South enraged the union.  Now, the IAM is hoping to give Boeing some union payback by  filing charges with the National Labor Relations Board.  The union is claiming that Boeing’s new plant is a retaliatory move by the company for the union’s 2008 strike.

The Machinists union has filed a complaint against Boeing with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), charging that the company was retaliating for a 2008 union strike when it decided last fall to put a second Dreamliner assembly line in Charleston, S.C., rather than Everett.

It is illegal under the National Labor Relations Act for employers to retaliate against workers for engaging in lawful activities, including strikes.

[snip]

In a statement, District 751 president Tom Wroblewski cited public declarations by senior Boeing executives tying the selection of North Charleston to a desire to avoid Machinists’ strikes in the Puget Sound region.

Such declarations, Wroblewski said, “send a message to workers that they should not stand up for their rights at the bargaining table. We will not allow this unlawful intimidation to stand as we prepare for the 2012 contract negotiations.”

Boeing spokesman Tim Healy said the company believes the charges are “meritless.”

The IAM struck Boeing for two months in fall 2008, the fourth strike in a decade. Early the following year, Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney told Washington’s congressional delegation the repeated strikes were a major problem and the company would seek another location for its second 787 assembly line unless the union agreed to a long-term no-strike clause.

“We were entirely transparent with the IAM,” Healy said. “We needed an agreement that would allow us to meet our customer commitments. [Emphasis added.]

While the IAM’s case seems flimsy at best, with the new union-controlled NLRB in Washington, one cannot predict how the NLRB will ultimately rule, especially given the union desire to decimate long-standing legal precedent and capitalism.

If the NLRB happens to rule in the union’s favor, it is possible one of the remedies it could order would be for Boeing to close the Charleston plant and bring the work back to the union in Puget Sound.

__________________
“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776

For more news and views on today’s unions, go to LaborUnionReport.com.

Cross-posted.

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COMMENTS

  • bk

    Isn’t what that amounts to? Toyota built a plant in San Antonio instead of of let’s say Detroit, so isn’t that unfair to the UAW?

  • JadedByPolitics

    SHUT DOWN! I relish a Right-to-work President and Congress who will make the unions wished they had been satisfied with what the AVERAGE person earns!

  • lineholder

    that conduct international trade operate within the principles of JIT and ISO standards. If Boeing contracts are based on JIT principles, then the likelihood is that they have contractual agreements with their customers on the delivery time of products. If they don’t meet the terms of the contract, they are at risk of facing financial penalties along with loss of business.

    Unions like the UAW, IAM, etc. know this. They know it puts the business between the proverbial rock-and-the-hard-place situation and they play it for everything they are worth in an effort to get what they want and to have things their own way.

    It’s as childish, irrational and illogical as watching a 4-year-old pitch a temper tantrum!!

  • izoneguy

    And build a huge wall to the unions.

    • lineholder

      I worked 18 years in manufacturing. I could recite the ins-and-outs of the business in my sleep. Restoring growth and development in the manufacturing sector is one means we do have to protect and preserve our economy.

      We have a lot of options open to us, including the application of non-traditional manufacturing methods in an effort to recover a sector of products that we basically gave away to foreign countries.

      What we don’t have is someone to take the lead. The government isn’t going to take the lead on this. Neither will the manufacturing sector. The retail sector is neck deep in its dependency on foreign goods. So, where does that leave us?

      It’s going to come back down to we the people. It’s come back to we the people in the realm of politics and it is going to be exactly the same way economically. If and when we the people begin to take the initiative in defining the products produced and bought in this nation, then other sectors of our economy will begin to take notice.

      It could mean going in the direction of protectionism economically speaking. I’ve heard a lot of people who object to the idea of protectionism, but if it comes down to a choice between seeing our economy fail and becoming protective over the growth and development of areas of our economy…..

  • melissatx

    I don’t have a problem with starting over.