- Joined
- Sep 9, 2008
- Messages
- 26,096
- Likes
- 9,073
- Points
- 113
I don't quite understand...isn't Boeing able to open a plant wherever they want to? And now the NLRB has the authority to tell them to operate three lines, rather than two?Boeing was retaliating illegally against its largest union when it decided two years ago to put a second Dreamliner assembly line in a nonunion plant in South Carolina, the National Labor Relations Board charged in a complaint filed Wednesday.
To remedy the alleged violation, the complaint says, Boeing should be ordered to operate the second line at a union plant in Washington. However, an NLRB statement said the case "does not seek closure of the South Carolina facility" or the ending of 787 production there.
NLRB Acting General Counsel Lafe Solomon brought the action after a yearlong investigation of an unfair-labor practices complaint filed in March 2010 by Seattle-based International Association of Machinists (IAM) District 751, Boeing's largest union.
The IAM charged Boeing was retaliating for a 2008 strike when it chose to locate the second line in North Charleston, S.C. Solomon agreed, citing numerous statements by Boeing executives that South Carolina was chosen in large part to avoid production disruptions from future strikes.
Boeing's decision was "inherently destructive of the rights guaranteed employees" by federal labor law, the NLRB complaint says.
A hearing on the complaint is scheduled before an administrative law judge in Seattle June 14.
Boeing said in a prepared statement that it would "vigorous contest" the complaint.
"This claim is legally frivolous and represents a radical departure from both NLRB and Supreme Court precedent," said Michael Luttig, the company's executive vice president and general counsel.
The IAM, in contrast, hailed the NLRB's move as "a victory for all American workers."
The Charleston plant was an initiative by Boeing "to intimidate our members with the idea that the company would take away their work unless they made concessions at the bargaining table," said Tom Wroblewski, local president.
Someone familiar with labor law please help me understand. Is NLRB binding?
