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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Union makes proposal to Northwest

Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS – A union spokesman for striking Northwest Airlines mechanics said Saturday he doubts a deal will be reached anytime soon to end the three-week walkout.

“I think it would be a miracle for us to reach an agreement during this round of bargaining,” said Steve MacFarlane, assistant national director of the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association.

Northwest is seeking $1.1 billion in annual labor cost savings and has said rising fuel prices mean it will probably raise that target. The company is in talks with all of its workers.

The union has said Northwest wants to keep only 1,080 mechanics’ jobs and eliminate aircraft cleaner and custodian positions represented by the union. That represents about 3,350 layoffs, up from the 2,000 Northwest sought before the strike.

Northwest’s proposal would save it $203 million a year, up from the $176 million it sought before the strike began Aug. 20. That proposal was made Thursday, and the union has not rejected it, even though it’s a far worse deal than the one they struck over.

The union made its own proposal to Northwest on Saturday and was waiting for a response, according to negotiations spokesman Jeff Mathews. He would not give details of the union offer.

Mathews said both sides had met face-to-face and that more talks were possible late Saturday night.

MacFarlane said he expects the two sides to reach a deal eventually, even though striking workers may not like it.

“We all know that at some point an agreement must be reached. We also know that any tentative agreement is going to be extreme by any measure,” he told union members in a hotline message Saturday morning.

Northwest has said time is running out for it to avoid bankruptcy. Oct. 16 is the last day before a new, more restrictive bankruptcy law takes effect.