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Boeing workers vote on a new contract, but the company's problems are far from over

Terry Muriekes, a tool-storage worker at Boeing's factory in Everett, Wash. for 38 years, holds a sign during a strike rally last week.
Jason Redmond
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AFP via Getty Images
Terry Muriekes, a tool-storage worker at Boeing's factory in Everett, Wash. for 38 years, holds a sign during a strike rally last week.

Updated October 23, 2024 at 05:01 AM ET

SEATTLE — The Boeing machinists union overwhelmingly rejected the company's first contract offer more than five weeks ago.

Now there's a better offer on the table. And this time, the vote could be much closer.

"Our members have been able to get Boeing to move a lot," said Jon Holden, the president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 751.

But even Holden isn't sure how his 33,000 members will vote Wednesday.

"I don't know," Holden said in an interview. "I know there's a lot of emotion out there. There's still a lot of anger."

What seems certain is that Boeing's problems will outlast the strike, whenever it ends. The company has been losing more than a billion dollars a month as the strike halted production at its factories in the Pacific Northwest.

Even before the strike, Boeing was grappling with production and quality control problems that limited production of its best-selling 737 line. The new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, has announced plans to lay off roughly 10% of its workforce.

"Restoring our company requires tough decisions and we will have to make structural changes to ensure we can stay competitive," Ortberg said in a memo to employees earlier this month.

People hold sings during a strike rally for the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) at the Seattle Union Hall in Seattle, Wash., on October 15, 2024.
Jason Redmond / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
People hold sings during a strike rally for the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) at the Seattle Union Hall in Seattle, Wash., on October 15, 2024.

Boeing declined to make Ortberg available for an interview. Since taking over as Boeing's CEO in August, he's kept a low profile. Ortberg is expected to speak publicly for the first time during an earnings call Wednesday morning. The company has already said it will report losses of at least $5 billion in the third quarter alone.

Ortberg is taking over at a crucial moment for Boeing. The head of Emirates, a major Boeing customer, said this month that the plane maker could be headed for a credit downgrade, with bankruptcy "looming on the horizon."

Boeing quickly announced that it intends to raise billions of dollars to replenish its cash flow — including up to $25 billion by selling stock and other securities, and another $10 billion through a new line of credit.

Other observers say Boeing's problems aren't that bad. At least, not yet.

"I don't think that bankruptcy's inevitable," said Kevin Michaels, managing director at AeroDynamic Advisory, an industry consulting firm. "It is a possibility. It's a higher possibility today than it was six months ago or a year ago. But I don't think it's inevitable."

Michaels worked closely with Boeing's CEO in the 1990s, when they were both at the firm Rockwell Collins. And Michaels believes Ortberg's strategy of shrinking the company is fundamentally sound.

"Boeing is a bloated mess," Michaels said. "They're very top heavy. And that slows down their decision-making."

In the long run, Michaels thinks Boeing can still turn things around, especially if it's able to sell off assets that are underperforming.

For now, the focus is on Boeing's latest proposal to its striking machinists. The machinists union credits Acting U.S. Secretary of Labor Julie Su with helping to restart stalled negotiations.

The company is offering a 35% wage hike — a significant increase from the initial offer of 25%, though still short of the 40% raise the union wanted. The company would also increase its contributions to employees 401k retirement funds.

Jon Holden, the president of IAM District 751, shakes hands with Kat Kinckiner, a Boeing tool-room clerk for 15 years, during a strike rally in Seattle, Wash.
Jason Redmond / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
Jon Holden, the president of IAM District 751, shakes hands with Kat Kinckiner, a Boeing tool-room clerk for 15 years, during a strike rally in Seattle, Wash.

But there's one key union demand where Boeing has not budged: the pension plan.

"When we lost our pensions, I cried," said Kat Kinckiner, a union steward at the plant in Renton, Wash. where Boeing assembles the 737. "This was my future. And to see something just taken like that was just devastating."

At the rally in Seattle last week, Kinckiner and other union members made it very clear they want to reinstate the pension plan they lost a decade ago.

"I remember then, all of us said, this next contract, we're not taking this," she said. "It's not gonna happen anymore. Not to us. Not like that."

IAM 751 president Jon Holden says he understands why some of his members are still angry, and why some are still fighting to get the pension plan back.

"Those wounds don't heal easy," he said. "But now it's ten years later, and it's not easy to get something like that back."

The union's leadership is not making a recommendation as to how members should vote on this offer. That's a notable difference from the previous vote in September, when the union did recommend acceptance — only to be sharply criticized by some members.

"We do believe it's our responsibility to get this in front of the members so that they can make that decision," Holden said. "I hope they'll consider this, but it's up to them."

Copyright 2024 NPR

Joel Rose is a correspondent on NPR's National Desk. He covers immigration and breaking news.