Union prolongs negotiations with Marathon, avoiding refinery strike

The United Steelworkers (USW) said late Saturday that it had agreed to extend negotiations with Marathon Petroleum, temporarily avoiding a strike involving roughly 30,000 workers at U.S. refineries and chemical plants.

Under the rolling 24-hour extension, the existing labor contract—originally set to expire at 12:01 a.m. ET on Sunday—will remain in force unless either the union issues a 24-hour strike notice or Marathon provides a 24-hour lockout notice.

Since talks began just over a week ago, the union has turned down at least five proposals from Marathon. The most recent offer, made Saturday, included a 14% wage increase over a four-year contract for refinery and chemical plant employees.

Marathon is serving as the lead negotiator for 26 U.S. refining and chemical companies, including Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and Valero Energy. The USW represents workers at facilities that together account for about two-thirds of U.S. crude oil refining capacity.

Earlier Saturday, Marathon spokesperson Jamal Kheiry said the company continued to meet with USW representatives and remained committed to bargaining in good faith toward a mutually acceptable agreement.

Meanwhile, Mike Smith, chairman of the Steelworkers’ National Oil Bargaining Program, said union members were pushing for fairness and justice, emphasizing that their industry-wide unity demonstrated readiness to fight for a fair contract.

People familiar with the negotiations said key sticking points include cost-of-living adjustments for the roughly 30,000 union-represented oil workers, healthcare expenses, and rules governing the use of artificial intelligence at refinery and chemical plants.

The United Steelworkers is also seeking stronger safety standards, though sources said this demand appears unacceptable to Marathon.

“Marathon believes workers in this industry are already overpaid,” one source said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly. “There’s very little movement on economic issues, and aside from AI, they aren’t seriously engaging with the rest of our proposals. Even on AI, the approach hasn’t been constructive.”

In past contract negotiations, the USW has repeatedly agreed to roll over contracts for several days beyond their expiration through 24-hour extensions.

The current talks are focused on a national pattern agreement that establishes wages for hourly union workers, healthcare costs, and nationwide standards on safety and other matters.

Refinery operators typically earn around $50 an hour after completing their probationary period.

The national framework is paired with site-specific agreements to form individual contracts at each facility.

On Friday, Marathon and workers reached agreement on local issues at the company’s largest facility, the Galveston Bay Refinery, which has a capacity of 631,000 barrels per day.

Sources: Reuters

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