A strike began Monday by union workers at Marathon Petroleum’s Martinez Renewables facility amid negotiations for a new labor agreement, according to the company.
The strike by hourly employees represented by United Steelworkers Local 5 comes after four months of collective bargaining that has not resulted in a new agreement after the previous labor agreement between the refinery and union expired on Jan. 31, Marathon spokesperson Jamal Kheiry said.
Kheiry said refinery operations normally handled by the union workers have been turned over to “trained and qualified Marathon employees.”
United Steelworkers Director Gaylan Prescott, who represents the union’s District 12 that includes members in California and other Western states, alleged in a statement that “members are striking in protest of the employer’s unlawful conduct” during the last four months of negotiations.
“We urge Marathon to return to the table and to abandon its ill-advised illegal bargaining strategy so that the company’s highly trained, union-represented workforce can return to their jobs with justice and dignity,” Prescott said.
Marathon announced in late 2020 plans to convert the Martinez refinery to one that processes renewable feedstocks like soybean and corn oil rather than crude oil from fossil fuels.
Management operating . . . . . . . . Hmm,
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Could get real interesting, depending on pre-strike ratio of managers to hourly
workers. If process becomes unstable or there’s a mechanical or instrumentation
failure is management competent to restore process parameters ?
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If strike persists are managers competent to perform necessary preventive
maintenance to ensure process stability ?
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Will those delivering raw materials for refining process cross a picket line ?