Five-Year Contract
Protects Workers' Benefits, Will Help Union Companies Compete
February 10, 2008
(Washington, D.C.) - Teamster freight members
overwhelmingly ratified the 2008-2013 National Master Freight Agreement NMFA)
that protects existing Teamster jobs, maintains a strong wage and benefit
package and provides new language to allow the largest unionized carriers a
chance to better compete, which will give Teamsters more job security.
“This is a landmark
contract because we won many economic gains despite this poor economy, and we
have taken steps to allow the largest unionized companies a better chance to
compete against the non-union competition," said Tyson Johnson, Director of the
Teamsters National Freight Division.
"This contract provides a
more secure future for the 70,000 Teamsters covered by the NMFA and their
families," Teamsters General President Jim Hoffa said.
The NMFA was ratified by a
67-percent margin. In addition, all but two of the 22 regional agreements were
also ratified. The two, covering Joint Council 7 in Northern California and the
Carolina Automotive Supplement, will be resolved within a week.
The strong gains include
record employer health, welfare and pension contribution increases of $5 per
hour over the life of the agreement, and wage increases of $2.20 per hour and
5.5 cents per mile over the life of the agreement, including 50 cents per hour
in the first year. That's an average increase of 3.9 percent in wage and
benefit-contribution increases.
The union also maintained
the COLA, or cost of living adjustment, which kept wages up with inflation by
providing an additional 10 cents per hour increase under the current contract.
The new language to help unionized companies compete allows the transfer of some
long-haul, dedicated rail traffic back to the road and creation of a new
classification, a "utility employee," who can service freight on a more
expedited basis.
Founded in 1903, the
Teamsters Union represents more than 1.4 million hardworking men and women in
the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.
View updated vote counts as they
happen.