• @JoshuaFalken
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    483 months ago

    This article doesn’t specify, but based on the previous 25% offer, I’m guessing this new and improved proposal is also structured over four years.

    New information to me is that the union initially sought a 40% increase. Kind of silly to think that when 90% of your workers decline an offer - any offer - that adding an extra few percent will get you an agreement.

    I wrote this before when the union declined the 25% bump, but it bears repeating:

    If Boeing were to pay the 40% the union is looking for upon returning to work, and committed to annual salary increases that were double whatever inflation is moving forward, they would have 32,000 employees that would never strike the rest of their careers.

    • @Sanctus
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      English
      413 months ago

      But then the shareholders get less ROI and the bench needs their till.

      • @ArbiterXero
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        53 months ago

        How would they afford next year’s stock buyback?

        • @pdxfed
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          23 months ago

          Think of all the “extra” bolts that competent mechanics and engineers would put in airplane doors, you’d hurt margins…slightly. Hard no from Board.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      103 months ago

      What do you mean the article doesn’t specify? It’s literally the first sentence of the article.

      Boeing increased its wage proposal to tens of thousands of striking workers on Monday, offering a 30% general wage increase over four years in what it called its “best and final” offer as a work stoppage that began on September 13 drags on.

      • @JoshuaFalken
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        43 months ago

        Funny, I went through the article twice looking for the term length. Maybe I missed it because it’s written and I was looking for a digit. Thanks for pointing that out.