Holden Hopkins is a student at Harvard Law School.
In today’s News & Commentary, unions report “panic mode” in Boeing plant tied to anti-union policies and American Airlines flight attendants prepare to strike.
In the wake of the company’s highly-publicized safety crisis, workers and union officials in Boeing’s largest plant have reported a campaign by managers pressuring workers to cover up quality concerns. The Everett, Washington plant is responsible for manufacturing several planes and for making repairs to the 787 dreamliner—the plane at the center of many of the safety concerns.
Since 2021, those planes have been manufactured in South Carolina—a move which some have characterized as anti-union. Boeing Mechanics in Washington are unionized, while South Carolina mechanics (despite a contentious union organizing drive in 2018) are not. Many of the 787s from South Carolina are flown to Washington for repairs, where mechanics have raised serious manufacturing safety concerns and faced backlash from management. Ultimately, mechanics and their union have placed the blame for the safety crisis on changes to seniority-based management promotion systems and what one union official called a “very robust union-containment strategy” at Boeing.
Amid mediation to reach a new contract for American Airlines flight attendants, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants has instructed members to prepare for a strike. The National Mediation Board, which is overseeing the negotiations, had originally set the end of May as a deadline to reach a deal before issuing an extension on Friday. The union expects that extension to lead to a two-week “last-ditch effort” to reach an agreement. The main issues of contention between the union and the airline have been compensation and scheduling. Should the NMB find that the parties remain at an impasse following the extension, a 30-day “cooling off” period will follow, after which the union has told members a strike may be anticipated.
Daily News & Commentary
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April 13
Starbucks' union files new complaint with NLRB; FAA targets video gamers in new recruiting pitch; and Apple announces closure of unionized store.
April 12
The Office of Personnel Management seeks the medical records of millions of federal workers, and ProPublica journalists engage in a one-day strike.
April 10
Maryland passes a state ban on captive audience meetings and Elon Musk’s AI company sues to block Colorado's algorithmic bias law.
April 9
California labor backs state antitrust reform; USMCA Panel finds labor rights violations in Mexican Mine, and UPS agrees to cap driver buyout offers in settlement with Teamsters.
April 8
The Writers Guild of America reaches a tentative deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers; the EEOC recovers almost $660 million in compensation for employment discrimination in 2025; and highly-skilled foreign workers consider leaving the United States in light of changes to the H-1B visa program.
April 7
WGA reaches deal with studios; meatpacking strike brings employer back to table; union leaders take on AI.