Boeing slashes DEI department in latest staff shake-up.

Machinists also set to vote on contract proposal delivering 38% wage increase over 4 years

Boeing dismantled its global diversity, equity and inclusion department on Thursday, according to a report by Bloomberg citing sources familiar with the matter.

The report stated that staff from Boeing’s DEI office will be combined with another human resources team focused on talent and employee experience. Sara Bowen, Boeing’s vice president leading the DEI department, also announced her resignation from the company on LinkedIn Thursday.

“Today I turn in my blue badge,” Bowen said in her LinkedIn post. “It has been the privilege of my lifetime to lead Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion at the Boeing company these past 5+ years. Our team strived every day to support the evolving brilliance and creativity of our workforce. The team achieved so much – sometimes imperfectly, never easily – and dreamed of doing much more still. All of it has been worth it.”

 

The DEI department is the latest staffing cuts within the company as 17,000 jobs are reportedly on the chopping block for layoffs by early next year.

AirlineGeeks has reached out to Boeing for comment.

New contract vote
The move comes as striking members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) are scheduled to vote on a new contract offer Monday. Over 33,000 IAM members have been on strike at Boeing locations in Washington, Oregon and California since Sept. 13.

According to a news release from IAM, the new contract proposal would deliver a 38% wage increase over four years and a $12,000 ratification bonus. It would also reinstate Boeing’s Aerospace Machinists Performance Program (AMPP) incentive plan with a guaranteed minimum annual payout of 4% for both 2024 and February 2025.

Additionally, the contract includes a 401(k) employer match of 100% up to 8%, a special company retirement contribution of 4% into 401(k) and a $105 pension multiplier per year for those vested in the pension plan.

The union rejected a previous contract from Boeing after putting it to a vote last week, though sentiment may now be growing toward accepting the newest offer. IAM District 751 posted an endorsement of the newest offer on X/Twitter, calling for members to approve the new contract.

“Your Union is endorsing and recommending the latest IAM/Boeing Contract Proposal,” IAM District 751 posted. “It is time for our Members to lock in these gains and confidently declare victory. We believe asking members to stay on strike longer wouldn’t be right as we have achieved so much success.”

IAM District 751 President Jon Holden and IAM District W24 President Brandon Bryant issued the following joint statement in a news release from the union:

“The resolve and solidarity of IAM members at Boeing has spurred a new offer from the company that if ratified will enable workers to quickly make up significant ground financially while setting a new standard for the industry on wages and other key protections – including key wins on job security, safety, health care costs, retirement, bonus pay, and more,” they said.

IAM International President Brian Bryant said a contract like this would send an inspiring message to all workers in the U.S. who are seeking to join unions.

“Nearly every worker in America knows what it’s like for a company to take too much and give too little,” Bryant said in the release. In securing this agreement, IAM Union members have won an opportunity to ratify a contract that would set a new standard for their industry.”

Voting is slated to close at 10 p.m. EDT on Monday, with vote totals expected to be announced afterward.

 

This story originally appeared on AirlineGeeks.com

By Caleb Revill.

Source: Freightwaves. https://www.freightwaves.com/news/boeing-slashes-dei-department-in-latest-staff-shake-up. 3 November 2024..

You may also like

Race to top 10 pays off for Port Klang

Race to top 10 pays off for Port Klang KUALA LUMPUR (Oct 25): When the government made the bold decision to position Port Klang as the country’s premier maritime gateway in the 1990s, it raised a lot of eyebrows. After all, competing with regional rivals like Singapore and Hong Kong was no small task, and both were already way ahead [...]

Explorer more

How geopolitics is redrawing the world’s shipping routes

How geopolitics is redrawing the world’s shipping routes Globalisation isn’t dead, but it’s changing course, writes Neil Shearing, group chief economist at Capital Economics, and author of this year’s bestseller The Fractured Age. Commentators have been quick to declare globalisation dead. But, as is so often the case in economics, the reality is more complicated than the headlines suggest. This [...]

Explorer more

Asia-U.S. container rates rally

Asia-U.S. container rates rally GRIs, less capacity boosts trans-Pacific prices The uncertainty that has marked global ocean shipping so far this year struck again this past week –but that may signal a turn for the better for ocean carriers. Container rates on the eastbound trans-Pacific posted increases, halting steady declines that have challenged lows from 2023. Rates from Asia to [...]

Explorer more

Scroll To Top