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Pratt & Whitney reaches tentative deal with IAM Union after three-week strike

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Pratt & Whitney reaches tentative deal with IAM Union after three-week strike
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Pratt & Whitney | Simple Flying

US engine manufacturer Pratt & Whitney has reached a tentative agreement with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) following a nearly three-week strike. The strike involved around 3,000 employees at the company's Connecticut facilities, beginning on May 4, 2025. The workers demanded stronger job security, higher wages, better retirement benefits, and improved health care coverage.

IAM union members are set to vote on the revised contract on May 27, 2025, at the Toyota Oakdale Theatre in Wallingford, Connecticut. The outcome will determine if the new terms meet workers' expectations and potentially end the ongoing labor dispute.

The strike was Pratt & Whitney's first in over two decades and significantly impacted the company. P&W is a key manufacturer of commercial jet engines and military aircraft systems for the US Air Force (USAF), including those used in F-22 Raptor and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter programs. Its GTF engine is currently utilized by Airbus A320neo family aircraft.

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Initially, approximately 80% of union members rejected P&W's offer of a wage increase: 4% in 2025, followed by 3.5% in 2026 and 3% in 2027. The offer also included a $5,000 ratification bonus and enhancements to pension and 401k plans. According to WSWS reports during negotiations, Pratt & Whitney rejected workers’ demands to revise this contract and cut off medical benefits two weeks into the strike to pressure them back to work.

As of May 19, workers reportedly lost access to company-provided healthcare benefits. In response, IAM advised members to enroll through state healthcare marketplaces. Although details of the tentative agreement remain undisclosed, IAM described it as an improvement via social media posts: "It’s in our membership’s hands to decide if Pratt & Whitney's offer meets their needs so they can get back to work building the most capable engines in the world!"

The strikes coincided with challenges from trade wars imposed by previous administrations amid high earnings for Pratt & Whitney. In recent years P&W returned to profitability; it earned about $2 billion operating profit from $28 billion sales in 2024 after losses due primarily due faulty GFT engine part recalls costing $1.5 billion during prior year while reporting an increased operating profit ($580 million) Q1 this year marking substantial growth both quarterly annually perspectives respectively according financial data presented above however implications remain broader parent RTX facing potential tariffs impacting profits up-to-$850-million.

Pratt & Whitney machinist strike is one largest recent US labor actions following Boeing’s major walkout late last year where roughly thirty-three thousand employees stopped working until reaching favorable agreements ending prolonged disputes highlighting growing trend within aerospace sector towards advocating better compensation security measures among workforce levels.

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