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Old 09-18-2011, 07:33 AM  
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Government Tries to Block SC Jobs

From the Charlotte Observer:
Quote:
NLRB tries to block Boeing's plant in S.C.
Feds accuse aeronautics giant of union busting as firm builds new facility in North Charleston.
By James Rosen
McClatchy Newspapers
Posted: Thursday, Apr. 21, 2011

WASHINGTON The top lawyer for the National Labor Relations Board on Wednesday accused Boeing of union busting and retaliating against its Washington state workers for past strikes by moving to produce its new Dreamliner planes in South Carolina.

Executives of The Boeing Co. vowed to fight the NLRB bid to compel the aeronautics giant to make the next-generation aircraft, which has been dogged by delays, cost overruns and testing mishaps, at its plant in Everett, Wash., instead of at a 584,000-square-foot factory under construction next to Charleston International Airport.

Boeing Executive Vice President Michael Luttig blasted the ruling as "frivolous," said the company will fight it in court and expressed confidence that production of the 787s will begin as scheduled this summer at its new North Charleston plant.

"Boeing has every right under both federal law and its collective bargaining agreement to build additional U.S. production capacity outside of the Puget Sound region," Luttig said.

Rep. Tim Scott, a first-term North Charleston Republican on the House GOP leadership team, accused President Barack Obama of playing politics to appease his pro-labor allies.

"Such heavy-handed tactics on behalf of the president's union supporters are an affront to the people of the Palmetto State who voted overwhelmingly in support of a constitutional amendment guaranteeing workers the right to secret ballots in union elections," Scott said.

Obama's chief of staff, Bill Daley, was on Boeing's board of directors in October 2009 when it voted unanimously to build the Dreamliner's new final-assembly line at the North Charleston site, a $750 million investment projected to create 3,800 jobs in South Carolina.

The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, which had filed a complaint with the federal labor agency last year on behalf of its 25,000 Boeing workers in the Puget Sound region of Washington, hailed the ruling by NLRB acting general counsel Lafe Solomon.

"Boeing's decision to build a 787 assembly line in South Carolina sent a message that Boeing workers would suffer financial harm for exercising their collective bargaining rights," said Rich Michalski, the union's vice president. "Federal law is clear: It's illegal to threaten or penalize workers who engage in concerted activity."

The union contends Boeing rejected new labor agreements in accepting almost $900 million in incentives and tax relief from South Carolina to build the Dreamliner line there.

The General Assembly had met at a two-day special session to pass legislation granting Boeing $450 million in grants and tax breaks, which then-Gov. Mark Sanford quickly signed into law.

A total of 2,500 workers already make parts of the Dreamliner's fuselage at adjoining Charleston plants, one owned by Boeing and the second co-owned by the Chicago-based corporation and Alenia.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., delivered a scathing indictment of the NLRB move.

"This is one of the worst examples of unelected bureaucrats doing the bidding of special interest groups that I've ever seen," Graham said. "In this case, the NLRB is doing the bidding of the unions at great cost to South Carolina and our nation's economy."

Boeing must file a response to the NLRB complaint by May 4. An administrative law judge will hear the case in Seattle on June 14, with Boeing and union representatives pitted on opposite sides.

S.C. Gov. Nikki Haley made drawing business to the state a centerpiece of her winning campaign last year, but she doesn't support fellow Republican legislators' bid to give online retailer Amazon.com tax breaks to build a distribution center near her home in Lexington County.

Solomon, NLRB's top lawyer, alleged in his complaint that Boeing's decision to open a nonunion factory in South Carolina was made in retaliation for five strikes at its Seattle-area plants between 1977 and 2008.

Solomon cited a half-dozen company documents in which various Boeing officials told investors and other groups that the strikes and other threatened work stoppages had caused production delays and made it hard to hit delivery deadlines.
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Old 09-18-2011, 12:17 PM  
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The General Assembly had met at a two-day special session to pass legislation granting Boeing $450 million in grants and tax breaks, which then-Gov. Mark Sanford quickly signed into law.
so the company got government welfare..... but then wants to claim it is a private company free of being influenced by the government......
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Old 09-18-2011, 06:45 PM  
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Originally Posted by RedJeepXJ View Post
so the company got government welfare..... but then wants to claim it is a private company free of being influenced by the government......
Right or wrong many states offer incentives to attract business, in this case the Obama administration tried to roadblock the state of SC and Boeing.
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