Hoffa Hails Major Teamster Victory
March 31, 2008
(Washington, D.C.) –
United Airlines mechanics overwhelmingly
chose the Teamsters Union as their collective bargaining representative by a
vote of 4,113-2,631, the National Mediation Board announced Monday.
The 9,300 active and
furloughed mechanics who comprise the bargaining unit will become Teamsters as
soon as the NMB vote is certified. The board is expected to certify the vote by
close of business Tuesday.
The Teamsters victory
culminates a two-year effort by United (Nasdaq: UAUA) mechanics and related
personnel to gain strong representation. A key issue was the failure of their
former bargaining representative, the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association,
to hold United to its contractual obligation to limit outsourcing.
“We’re thrilled that United
mechanics voted to join our union by such a large margin,” said Teamsters
General President Jim Hoffa. “United mechanics will now have the Teamsters
strength behind them in their fight against outsourcing to foreign repair
stations.”
“United has cut more
maintenance positions than any other U.S. airline,” Hoffa said, noting that
United outsourced 45 percent of its aircraft maintenance expenses in 2006, three
times the amount it outsourced in 1998.
Hoffa also said the
Teamsters would support the mechanics in their efforts to curb excessive
executive compensation and restore their own retirement security.
“We’ll stand shoulder to
shoulder with United mechanics as they try to rein in management greed and hold
them accountable for foisting their pension obligations on U.S. taxpayers,”
Hoffa said.
“After two years of hard
work, we now have the opportunity to work with the strength of a true union
behind us to secure our futures,” said Rich Petrovsky, chairman of the Committee
for Change, which spearheaded the organizing campaign.
The United victory is the
latest in a series of organizing triumphs for the Teamsters. In the past three
months, the Teamsters organized nearly 10,000 workers at UPS Freight since Jan.
16.
The election began on Feb.
26 and ended at 2 pm EDT. Mechanics could vote by telephone or Internet,
enabling the National Mediation Board to tally the total quickly.
Founded in 1903, the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents 1.4 million hardworking men
and women in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. There are 40,000
Teamsters airline employees, including more than 9,000 mechanics and related at
11 airlines.