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labor issues you care about  . . . in streaming video
2003 Transportation Conference

GE Reaches Tentative Agreement

Resuscitating Medicare

Senator Robert F. Kennedy Remembered

Fed Calls Economy Weak

Stanley Workers Strike


Unemployment Rises Again

New Contracts at UAL

Workers Memorial Day

Lockheed Ratifies Contract
 



The IAM Executive Council

International President 
R. Thomas Buffenbarger 

 

Secretary Treasurer
Donald E. Wharton 
 

GVP Western  Territory
Lee Pearson 


GVP Canada
Dave Ritchie 
 

GVP Midwest Territory
Alex M. Bay 
 

GVP Headquarters
Robert V. Thayer


GVP Southern Territory
George Hooper 
 

GVP Eastern Territory
Warren L. Mart 
 

GVP Transportation
Robert Roach, Jr.

 

 

 

Tuesday, June 24,  2003

Voting Underway on GE Contract
Some 2,800 IAM members at 18 GE locations are voting on a new contract with the multinational giant. Final ballots will be cast tomorrow. The IAM negotiating committee unanimously recommended acceptance of the tentative agreement, which makes significant improvements in key areas.

The proposed four-year agreement raises wages, improves pension benefits, slows soaring health care costs and adds strong job security provisions, reports GVP Bob Thayer, who headed the negotiating team. “It addresses every area of concern our members asked us to improve,” he said.

The wage hikes, projected COLA increases and a skills adjustment increase add up to a $3.82 an hour hike for the average IAM member, Thayer noted. That translates into a 16.2 percent increase. All of those increases could mean as much as $18,500 over the life of the agreement.

Thayer said the solidarity shown by the members at every GE location was an inspiration to the committee and helped bring the negotiations to a successful conclusion. “With a solid membership behind us, we knew we couldn’t lose,” he said.
 


White House Aims to Privatize Medicare
Current White House efforts to ram an inferior drug plan through a compliant Congress amounts to little more than a backdoor effort to privatize Medicare and, eventually, Social Security, warned IP Tom Buffenbarger. “This is just another giveaway to the drug industry and big insurance firms that have tossed millions of dollars into GOP coffers,” he said.

Legislation moving through both houses of Congress leaves millions of seniors at the mercy of private insurers and does little to bring down the skyrocketing costs of prescription drugs. At the same time, it opens the door for employers to drop existing retiree prescription drug coverage and leave seniors vulnerable to being bounced from plan to plan.

The Alliance for Retired Americans, a labor-endorsed advocacy group, called on Congress to “put this legislation on the right track and give seniors a prescription drug benefit under Medicare that is affordable, universal, comprehensive and voluntary. Older Americans deserve no less,” declared George Kourpias, Alliance president.

You can make your voice heard on this issue by calling your members of Congress at this toll-free number 877-331-2000. Tell them to oppose the Prescription Drug and Medicare Improvement Act (S.1) & the Prescription Drug and Medicare Modernization Act (H.R. 1).
 


Pensions Secured in Air Canada Pact
A majority of IAM members at Air Canada voted to ratify a six-year agreement that provides the troubled carrier with significant cost savings while preserving pensions for active and retired members.

“The process is not over,” said Canadian GVP Dave Ritchie. “Air Canada still has a number of outstanding issues to resolve with its creditors. We said from the beginning we wanted to be part of the solution to Air Canada’s problems. We’ve done our part; we can only hope others will do the same.”

The ratification vote was taken following a cross-Canada tour by leaders and staff of District Lodge 140 to explain the details of the agreement negotiated in the face of the potential bankruptcy of the carrier.

The preservation of pensions was critical. “Our union recognized this as a major issue we couldn’t yield on,” said GVP Ritchie. “On that issue, our members and our retirees can rest easy tonight.”
 


Yellow Freight Mechanics Reach Accord
Nearly 100 highly skilled Yellow Freight truck mechanics in 9 Midwest states are preparing to vote on terms of a tentative agreement reached last week.

In addition to wage increases, the multi-state IAM agreement includes job security language; improved medical benefits; added vacation flexibility and a boost in company paid tool insurance from $6000 to $15,000 per mechanic.

“Key features of this 4-year, 9-month agreement are job security language and improved medical benefits,” said Boysen Anderson, IAM Automotive Coordinator. “In the current economic environment, these terms reflect the determination of the bargaining committee and the solidarity of the membership.”
 


Airlines Drop Support for No-Strike Law
The U.S. airline industry is backing away from an anti-worker lobbying campaign calling for changes in the Railway Labor Act that would require binding arbitration to resolve outstanding contract negotiations.

The proposed changes to current law would severely undercut airline workers’ right to strike by imposing winner-take-all “baseball arbitration” in lieu of traditional collective bargaining.

The effort to eliminate union members’ right to vote on contracts was spearheaded by Communities for Economic Strength Through Aviation (CESTA), a lobbying group funded by the airline industry. American Airlines and Delta Airlines, key backers of the effort, announced they would no longer be involved with the group.

 


Welfare for the Wealthy
The GOP-controlled House endorsed legislation to permanently repeal estate taxes. As a result of previously passed millionaire tax cuts, the first $1 million of an estate is already exempt from taxes. President George Bush’s 2001 tax cut increases the exemption each year until it is eliminated entirely in 2010, when it would need to be renewed.

The House rejected a Democratic alternative that would have exempted the first $3 million of an individual’s estate and $6 million for a married couple. The bill now goes to the Senate, which rejected a similar measure last year.
 


Online Calculator Details Prescription Costs
The Kaiser Family Foundation has developed an online Prescription Drug Benefit Calculator to help illustrate out-of-pocket spending for prescription drugs under leading Medicare proposals being considered in Congress. The calculator allows users to enter their total prescription drug costs and determine what they would pay under the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means/Energy and Commerce Committees' proposals. The Calculator can be found at: http://www.kaisernetwork.org/static/kncalc.cfm

 



The Summer 2003 IAM Journal is now online. Skyrocketing health care costs are causing Premium Shock for members and employers. The IAM Journal looks at what's causing the increases and what can be done to change America's health care system.



See who works for you, how the IAM is structured, and what services the IAM offers. Go to: IAM profiles for 2003.



The 108th Congressional Directory . . .
get your copy. Send $5 to the MNPL Education Fund, c/o IAMAW, 9000 Machinists Place, Upper Marlboro, MD, 20772.



Like to take pictures? Good with a camera? Then you should enter this year's IAM Photography Contest.
Find out more information



The official site for the 36th Grand Lodge Convention to be held in 2004 in Cincinnati, Ohio is now online. Check it our for convention news, sponsorship offers, and convention gear.