Boeing Has the Upper Hand in the Latest Labor Strike

Boeing Co. resumed talks on Monday with union leaders to end a strike that most investors aren’t paying much attention to. This is a problem for the 3,200 employees who rejected a company offer that provided an all-in 40% average compensation increase over four years and walked off the job on Aug. 4.

The striking workers help build aircraft, including the F-15 and, among other things, produce kits that turn dumb bombs into smart ones in facilities near St. Louis, Missouri. This labor struggle has drawn little publicity compared with the high-profile strike at the end of last year that shut down commercial aircraft production for 53 days.

Boeing is likely to dig in its heels after members of District 837 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers “overwhelmingly” rejected the offer. In reaction to the vote, Boeing withdrew a $5,000 signing bonus and then did nothing.

In a nod to which side holds the upper hand on talks, the president of the union, which represents about 600,000 workers in North America, sent a letter on Aug. 11 to Missouri lawmakers asking them to urge Boeing to return to the bargaining table. Now, two weeks later, Boeing and union leaders are holding talks again, but don’t expect a sense of urgency on the company’s part.

Boeing was under intense pressure from investors and customers to resolve the strike of about 33,000 machinists last year that shut down commercial aircraft factories in the Seattle area. Still, it took almost two months to resolve the dispute in which workers clearly had an edge.