Independent essays and ideasAboutContactDeutsch
Tech

Raytheon, union reach labor deal at key jet engine plants

Union workers at two Pratt & Whitney jet-engine plants in Connecticut approved a new labor pact on Sunday, avoiding a potentially costly work stoppage at the key unit of Raytheon Technologies Corp.

Raytheon Technologies CEO Greg Haynes joins a meeting hosted by U.S. President Joe Biden with corporate chief executives and members of his cabinet to discuss the looming federal debt limit in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on Oct. 06, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Each of the meeting participants, including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, spoke in dire terms about the negative national and global economic reaction to Congress failing to raise the limit and the U.S. defaulting on its debt.

Union workers at two Pratt & Whitney jet-engine plants in Connecticut approved a new labor pact on Sunday, avoiding a potentially costly work stoppage at the key unit of Raytheon Technologies Corp.

The three-year deal includes annual wage increases, improved benefits and job-security language, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said in a statement. The contract covers roughly 3,000 workers.

The accord ensures continued production at facilities manufacturing and supporting jet engines powering Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35 stealth fighter, Boeing Co.’s KC-46 midair refueling tanker and the geared turbofan engine powering Airbus SE’s A320neo family of single-aisle jetliners.

“This negotiating committee studied, prepared, and executed the very best for our membership,” IAM District 26 Chief Negotiator Jeff Santini said in a statement. “As a result, we have made solid gains in nearly every aspect of our agreement and maintained previous important language.”

A Raytheon spokesperson didn’t immediately comment on Sunday.

Raytheon and other commercial aerospace companies are contending with supply-chain disruptions and component shortages that have hindered production. Pratt & Whitney was unable to ship 70 engines to Airbus in the first quarter because of a shortage of castings, though the company expects to make those up over the course of the year, Raytheon Chief Executive Officer Greg Hayes said last week.