UPS Teamsters say nationwide strike is ‘imminent’ if Friday deadline not met
The Teamsters working for shipping giant UPS said a strike is “imminent” after walking away from the bargaining table.
The UPS Teamsters said in a statement late Wednesday it gave UPS a one-week notice Tuesday to “act responsibly and exchange a stronger economic proposal” to more than 340,000 employees of the shipping company.
The Teamsters demanded that UPS delivers its “last, best and final offer” to the union by Friday.
“The largest single-employer strike in American history now appears inevitable,” Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien said in a statement.
“Executives at UPS, some of whom get tens of millions of dollars a year, do not care about the hundreds of thousands of American workers who make this company run,” he said.
Earlier this month, UPS agreed to “equip all newly purchased U.S. small package delivery vehicles with air conditioning” in 2024.
The company also promised to install additional cab fans and heat shields in delivery trucks, after UPS came under fire for viral social media posts showing excessive temperatures putting drivers in uncomfortable and even dangerous working conditions.
But that momentum appears to have stalled.
The union has been vocal about how higher inflation and corporate profits have created an untenable situation for working-class employees. O’Brien also took further aim at UPS management.
“They don’t care about our members’ families. UPS doesn’t want to pay up,” O’Brien said. “Their actions and insults at the bargaining table have proven they are just another corporation that wants to keep all the money at the top. Working people who bust their asses every single day do not matter, not to UPS.”
The UPS Teamsters have been engaged in ongoing negotiations for about two months, but a strike could thrust the commerce industry into chaos because it would lead to the largest U.S. strike in decades.
It will include more than 340,000 warehousing, transportation and delivery workers bound by the largest private-sector bargaining agreement in the country.
The UPS Teamsters wrote that UPS risks “causing devastating disruptions to the supply chain in the U.S. and other parts of the world” with its Friday deadline.
More Business coverage from The Hill
- CBO finds federal debt to rise to 115 percent of GDP in next decade
- Free traders wax nostalgic for bygone globalized era
- DoorDash updates to include a minimum hourly wage for drivers
- ‘A regional disaster’: Cyberattacks on health care facilities have ripple effects, study says
The group wrote that it met with UPS negotiators late into Tuesday, but union members walked away from the table after they said UPS attempted to “withhold any additional benefits from the Teamsters, seeking concessionary language instead.”
“Time has run out for UPS to give workers that honorable contract,” said Fred Zuckerman, general secretary-treasurer for Teamsters, in a statement.
“The Teamsters repeatedly told the company from the beginning of this process that there would be no extensions,” Zuckerman said. “But UPS has sat on its hands and chosen to turn its back on these workers. Come August 1, it’s going to be damn hard for UPS to ignore us any longer.”
UPS said in a statement to The Hill that they “remain at the table ready to negotiate.”
“Last week, we provided our initial economic proposal,” the statement reads. “This week we followed with a significantly amended proposal to address key demands from the Teamsters. Reaching consensus requires time and serious, detailed discussion, but it also requires give-and-take from both sides. We’re working around the clock to reach an agreement that strengthens our industry-leading pay and benefits ahead of the current contract’s expiration on August 1.”