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Boeing, Striking Machinists to Restart Talks After Stalemate
- Negotiations that broke down Sept. 27 to resume on Monday
- Walkout that’s idled jetliner plants set to enter fourth week
Workers picket outside a Boeing Co. facility during a strike in Everett, Washington, on Sept. 16.
Photographer: M. Scott Brauer/BloombergThis article is for subscribers only.
Boeing Co. and its largest labor union are heading back to the bargaining table on Monday in a bid to end a three-week strike that’s shut down airplane manufacturing in Oregon and Washington.
The talks, which are being led by a federal mediator, will resume at 9 a.m. Pacific time, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said in a statement on Friday that was seperately confirmed by Boeing. The two sides have been deeply divided over pensions and pay, the union has said in previous dispatches.