Deere Union Workers Accept Latest Deal, Ending Monthlong Strike

(Bloomberg) — Deere & Co. union workers approved a tentative deal with the company Wednesday, putting an end to the first strike since 1986.

United Auto Workers members voted 61% to 39% in favor of the agreement, which will increase pay and boost retirement benefits over a six-year agreement.

The strike had thrown several of Deere’s businesses into turmoil. Software engineers and computer programmers left their desks to assemble sprayers and combines in manufacturing plants instead. Serious delays in replacement parts threatened farmers, who rely on functional machines and speedy repairs at the peak of harvest. Used farm equipment prices were hitting record highs amid shortages.

The agreement brings an end to the work stoppage that took some 10,000 workers off the job for just over a month. The last time Deere workers picketed in 1986, it lasted 163 days. 

“If we get an amicable outcome now, this will be viewed most likely as a short-term blip in an otherwise positive long term story,” Larry De Maria, an analyst at William Blair & Co., said in a phone interview before the results. Given the inflation and labor shortages in the economy, it’s a “unique time for Deere’s hourly workforce to make a stand.”

Still, the strike is part of a broader worker movement in the U.S. with employees successfully pushing for higher compensation as the economy emerges from a pandemic-induced slump. 

The agreement, which follows two other failed ones, is a six-year contract that will increase worker wages by 10% in the first year and then 5% in the third and fifth years. A 3% bonus would be paid in the even years of the contract based on prior-year earnings, and each worker will receive an $8,500 signing bonus.

There are still no adjustments to a contentious two-tier compensation system, in which workers hired after 1997 receive less generous benefits than those who started working there earlier.

The strike was squeezing the company. Last week it sent an email to gauge the interest of even more salaried information technology workers to volunteer in factories if the situation continued.

“It says a lot about the new determination and solidarity of John Deere workers that they have forced the company – and top UAW leaders and negotiators – to return to the bargaining table time and again to resolve the strike with a better contract,” said historian Nelson Lichtenstein, who directs U.C. Santa Barbara’s Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy. 

Nearly 30 years ago, Deere’s historic Midwest rival, Caterpillar, almost destroyed a union that picketed during a bitter battle. 

“Those days seem past,” Lichtenstein said.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

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