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Boeing says it's considering temporary layoffs to save cash during the strike by machinists

Associated Press
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Boeing workers wave picket signs as they strike after union members voted to reject a contract offer, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.
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Boeing wing mechanic lead Lee Lara, who has worked for the company for 16 years, yells in response to honks from passing drivers as workers wave picket signs while striking after union members voted to reject a contract offer, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.
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Denise Strike, a 13-year employee of Boeing, right, waves picket signs with 10-year employee Jacob Larson, left, as they strike after union members voted to reject a contract offer, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.
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Jacob Bustad, a machinist who has worked for Boeing for 14 years, holds up a fist to passing drivers as union members work the picket line after voting to reject a contract offer and go on strike, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.
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Boeing workers boo a car turning into the Everett factory parking lot as they wave picket signs while striking after union members voted to reject a contract offer, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.
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Extra picket signs sit on the sidewalk as Boeing workers strike after union members voted to reject a contract offer, Sunday, near the company’s factory in Everett, Wash.

SEATTLE — Boeing plans to freeze hiring and reduce travel and is considering temporary layoffs to save cash during a factory workers’ strike that began last week, the company told employees Monday.

The company said the moves, which include reduced spending on suppliers, were necessary because “our business is in a difficult period.”

Chief Financial Officer Brian West detailed 10 immediate cutbacks in a memo to employees. They include a freeze on hiring across all levels, pausing pay increases for promotions, and stopping all travel that isn’t critical.

“We are also considering the difficult step of temporary furloughs for many employees, managers and executives in the coming weeks,” West said.

Boeing’s business is in a difficult spot, he said, adding: “This strike jeopardizes our recovery in a significant way.”

About 33,000 workers represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers began a strike early Friday. The walkout came after workers rejected an offer with pay raises of 25% over four years.

Representatives of the company and the union are scheduled to meet Tuesday with federal mediators. The union has started to survey its members to learn what they want most in a new contract.

Striking workers are picketing at several locations around Washington state, Oregon and California.

Outside Boeing’s huge factory in Everett, Washington, Nancie Browning, a materials-management specialist at Boeing for more than 17 years, said last week’s offer was worse than the one that prompted a two-month strike in 2008. She said that without annual bonuses that workers have come to depend on, the proposed pay increase was more like 9%, not 25%.

“We just want a piece of the pie like everybody else,” she said. “Why should we work all this overtime and bust our backs while these guys (Boeing executives) are sitting sitting up in their suites just raking in the cash?”

The bonuses have emerged as a flash point for union members. Workers say they ranged from $3,000 to $5,000 a year.

Boeing says it is hard to calculate bonuses in a way that is fair to 33,000 people who perform different jobs. So instead, the company proposes to ditch the payouts and replace them with automatic contributions of $4,160 per year to each employee’s 401(k) retirement account.

Workers are bitter that in contract extensions over the past 16 years, Boeing ended its traditional pension plan and lowered health care benefits.

“We want our pension back,” said Jacob Bustad, a machinist with Boeing for 14 years who was also on the picket line in Everett. “We just keep losing and we never gain, while the people at the top just get more and more money. Boeing has done really good for me and my family, but these last years have been hard.”

Boeing has lost more than $25 billion since the start of 2019, and burned through $4.3 billion in the second quarter of 2024 alone as it stood poised to post another money-losing year. The strike will delay deliveries of new planes, which are an important source of cash for the company.

Stephanie Pope, the head of Boeing’s commercial-airplanes division, cited the company’s $60 billion in total debt in urging blue-collar workers to accept the contract offer last week. She called it the best offer Boeing had ever made — and it was endorsed by the union’s local president and negotiators.

But workers who have spoken out before and since the Thursday strike vote said they want raises totaling at least 40% and the restoration of bonuses that Boeing proposes to eliminate.

Additional cost-cutting moves spelled out in the chief financial officer’s memo included eliminating first- and business-class service for anyone who does travel, and stopping spending on outside consultants.

West also said Boeing plans to make “significant reductions in supplier expenditures” and will stop most supplier purchase orders related to the 737, 767 and 777 airplane models.

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