Pratt & Whitney machinists end 3-week strike after approving a new contract
About 3,000 machinists at jet engine-maker Pratt & Whitney in Connecticut approved a new four-year contract Tuesday, ending a three-week strike over wages, job security and other issues.
Union members were expected to return to work Wednesday after 74% of them voted in favor of the new deal, according to locals 1746 and 700 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
Pratt & Whitney, a subsidiary of Arlington, Virginia-based RTX Corp., makes engines for commercial and military jets, including the GTF line for Airbus commercial jets and the F135 for the military's F-35 Lightning II fighter aircraft fleet.
The union said the new contract, which runs to May 2029, guarantees continued operations at the company's East Hartford and Middletown plants through 2029. It also includes a 6% wage increase the first year, followed by raises of 3.5% in 2026 and 3% in both 2027 and 2028. Retirement benefits also were improved, the union said.
'This agreement includes real gains for our members and proves what we can accomplish when we stick together,' Wayne McCarthy, president of Local 700, said in a statement.
The company said in a statement that the contract 'recognizes the skill and dedication of our workforce by keeping them among the highest compensated in their field, while ensuring the company is well-positioned for the future.'
Union members began picketing in East Hartford and Middletown on May 5, after about 77% of union members voted to approve their first strike since 2001.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
32 minutes ago
- The Independent
US consortium completes Rangers takeover with promise to take club back to the ‘top'
A US consortium, led by Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises, has completed its Takeover of rangers, pledging to restore the club to its peak. The new leadership now owns 51% of rangers after purchasing shares and has committed to investing £20m, primarily in players. Healthcare executive Andrew Cavenagh will become chairman, and Paraag Marathe, chairman of Leeds and president of 49ers Enterprises, will be vice-chairman. The Scottish Football Association approved the deal after rangers addressed dual ownership concerns, as 49ers Enterprises holds a majority stake in Leeds. rangers are set to intensify their search for a new manager, with Davide Ancelotti, the outgoing Real Madrid assistant manager, being a leading candidate.


The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Oreo maker Mondelez sues Aldi, alleging grocery chain copies its packaging to confuse customers
Snack food maker Mondelez International is suing the Aldi supermarket chain, alleging the packaging for Aldi's store-brand cookies and crackers 'blatantly copies' Mondelez products like Chips Ahoy, Wheat Thins and Oreos. In a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday in Illinois, Chicago-based Mondelez said Aldi's packaging was 'likely to deceive and confuse customers' and threatened to irreparably harm Mondelez and its brands. The company is seeking monetary damages and a court order that would stop Aldi from selling products that infringe on its trademarks. A message seeking comment was left Thursday with Aldi. In the lawsuit, Mondelez displayed side-by-side photos of multiple products. Aldi's Thin Wheat crackers, for example, come in a gold box very similar to Mondelez's Wheat Thins. Aldi's chocolate sandwich cookies and Oreos both have blue packaging. The supermarket's Golden Round crackers and Mondelez's Ritz crackers are packaged in red boxes. Aldi, a German discount chain with U.S. headquarters in Batavia, Illinois, keeps prices low by primarily selling products under its own labels. The chain has faced lawsuits over its packaging before. Last year, an Australian court found that Aldi infringed on the copyright of Baby Bellies snack puffs for young children. In that case, Aldi's packaging featured a cartoon owl and similar colors to the name-brand packaging. Earlier this year, a U.K. appeals court ruled in favor of Thatchers, a cider company, which sued Aldi over design similarities in the packaging of its lemon cider. Mondelez said in its lawsuit that the company had contacted Aldi on numerous occasions about 'confusingly similar packaging.' Mondelez said Aldi discontinued or changed the packaging on some items but continued to sell others. The lawsuit also alleges that Aldi infringed on Mondalez's trade dress rights for the packaging of Nutter Butter and Nilla Wafers cookies, and its Premium cracker brand.


The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Make America ChatGPT again: Experts say AI was used to create RFK Jr health report that cited false studies
Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. 's 'Make America Healthy Again' report appears to have used garbled artificial intelligence to generate scientific citations, in addition to referencing studies that do not exist. Kennedy's MAHA report, released last week, decried America's food supply, pesticides and prescription drugs. It cited hundreds of studies, but the outlet NOTUS found that some of those studies did not actually exist. Now experts have found evidence that scientific citations in the report were generated by AI, which experts slammed as 'sloppy' and 'shoddy,' The Washington Post reports. Experts told the newspaper that there are definitive signs that the references in the report were generated by the U.S. artificial intelligence company OpenAI. Some citations included 'oaicite' attached to URLs, a marker that the company's chatbot was used to generate the references. The use of AI in citations undermines the credibility of the report, George C. Benjamin of the American Public Health Association told the outlet. 'This is not an evidence-based report, and for all practical purposes, it should be junked at this point,' the executive director said. 'It cannot be used for any policymaking. It cannot even be used for any serious discussion, because you can't believe what's in it.' Analysis conducted by The Post found that at least 21 links in the original version of the report to scientific studies or articles were dead. On Thursday afternoon, the report was updated to remove mentions of 'oaicite' markers and it continued to be worked on overnight, according to the newspaper. The Department of Health and Human Services characterized it as 'minor citation and formatting errors' in a statement to outlet and said that they have since been corrected. 'The substance of the MAHA report remains the same — a historic and transformative assessment by the federal government to understand the chronic disease epidemic afflicting our nation's children,' department spokesperson Andrew Nixon said. 'Under President Trump and Secretary Kennedy, our federal government is no longer ignoring this crisis, and it's time for the media to also focus on what matters.' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt was also questioned about the bungled report at Thursday's briefing and maintained it was 'backed on good science.' 'I understand there was some formatting issues with the MAHA report that are being addressed and the report will be updated.' Leavitt told reporters. 'But it does not negate the substance of the report, which, as you know, is one of the most transformative health reports that has ever been released by the federal government.' But experts told The Post that the report should be discarded. 'The idea that they would envelop themselves in the shroud of scientific excellence while producing a report that relies heavily on AI is just shockingly hypocritical,' said Peter Lurie, president of the Center for Science in the Public Interest and a former Food and Drug Administration official in the Obama administration.