By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Reading: Boeing to Cut 17,000 Jobs After Strikes End
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2024 | All Rights Reserved
Travel Radar - Aviation News > News > Aviation > Careers > Boeing to Cut 17,000 Jobs After Strikes End
AviationCareersIncidents & AccidentsManufacturing

Boeing to Cut 17,000 Jobs After Strikes End

Leticia Sandoval-Solyom
Last updated: 15 November 2024 23:48
By Leticia Sandoval-Solyom 3 Min Read
Share
Letter of termination © Leticia Sandoval-Solyom via Canva Pro
SHARE

Only one day after the machinist strike has ended, Boeing has begun issuing layoff notices. They plan to cut their workforce by 10%, averaging 17,000 jobs. Boeing has reported that these will mostly be affecting white-collar workers and not the machinists who participated in a labour strike for 8 weeks.

Photo of the inside of a Boeing factory
Inside a Boeing Factory © Jetstar Airways

Current Forecast and Previous Layoffs

Boeing has forecasted that by mid-January, 10% of the workforce will be cut, with notices beginning to reach workers this week. These notices will contain a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) – with 60 days paid notice period. Boeing has also reported that these layoffs will be mostly affecting white collar workers and not the employees who participated in the strike. In actuality, the two subject matters seem unrelated – their only potential relation being the temporal proximity to the two events taking place. Boeing’s CEO Kelly Orthberg said the company’s $25 billion in losses is the primary reason for these job terminations, the Seattle Times reported.

In 2020, Boeing enacted a very similar large-scale layoff procedure. Due to their losses from the pandemic, Boeing ended up making 30,000 workers redundant. This was just under 20% of their active workforce at the time. Therefore, these large scale procedural job terminations are nothing new to Boeing, leading to anger, here being displayed by Brian Bryant, International President of the IAM Union:

“Boeing just turned its back on 17,000 of its own workers – the same people who carried Boeing through crisis after crisis, year after year. Their reward? A pink slip. This is corporate greed at its worst. Shame on you, Boeing executives.”

Photo of striking Boeing Workers
© World Socialist Website

Boeing Machinist’s Strike

Boeing machinists had only been back to work for one day when the layoff notices began being distributed. However, due to an agreement being reached between the International Association of Machinists and Boeing, their jobs are safe for now. After engaging in an 8-week long labour strike and countless negotiation meetings, Boeing finally agreed to a 38% wage increase over the next four years combined with a ratification bonus. Machinists who participated in the strike will not have their jobs at risk of termination for the next quarter Boeing reports.

What do you think of these large-scale layoffs? Comment down below.

You Might Also Like

Air Malta vs. Malta Air: What’s the Difference?

ITA Airways Announces Winter Season Highlights

Ryanair Issues Urgent Plea for Passengers to Demand Action from ATC

New deal will greatly benefit Aer Lingus loyalty members

Flexjet Reveals Exclusive Collaboration with Luxury Luggage Brand, Globe-Trotter

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link
What’s your thoughts?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Leticia Sandoval-Solyom
By Leticia Sandoval-Solyom
Aviation Reporter - As a final year undergraduate student at University College London, Leticia is currently exploring career options which led to her entering the world of journalism with Travel Radar! A London native and a hard working individual, Leticia loves the world of travelling and sharing the latest news with readers across the globe.
Previous Article An aircraft in the sky Contrail avoidance offers solution to climate-harming flights, experts say
Next Article The one of one liver for indian superstar at the hanger Air India unveils special livery for Indian singing sensation
Leave a comment
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe

Trending News

A photoshoot of the inflight meal that includes a cheeseburger, Caesar salad, fires and brownie. Also included in the photo is a glass of beer and a hand holding the brownie.
Delta announces new partnership with Shake Shack
Airlines Airports Travel
Avelo Airlines plane on the runway
Avelo Airlines Celebrates its Second International Destination
Airlines Aviation Route Development Travel
3 men and a SARDA IN search and rescue dog in front of an easyJet plane
Search and rescue dogs given free cabin travel on selected easyJet flights
Aircraft Airlines Aviation Travel
Estonian Nordica aircraft flies over sea and mountains
Estonia’s state-owned airline Nordica files for bankruptcy
Airline Economics Airlines Aviation
A TSA officer checks a passenger's carry-on baggage
TSA intercepts loaded gun from airline crew member’s carry-on
Airlines Airports Aviation Incidents & Accidents
//

Travel Radar is the leading digital hub for all things aviation and air-travel. Discover our latest aviation news, aviation data, insight and analysis.

Discover

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press & PR
  • Privacy & Legal

Our Content

  • News
  • Data
  • Images
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Click here to Signup!

© Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2015-2024| ISSN #2635-0696 | Trademark #UK00003579704
wpDiscuz
adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Ads help us bring you high-quality, independent journalism for free. Support us by whitelisting us from your ad blocker.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome to the TR Community!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?