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Mack Truck workers begin strike at plants in 3 states

In all, the company said the strike involves about 3,500 employees.
Credit: AP
File- In this Sept. 30, 2019, file photo a UAW flag flies near strikers outside the General Motors Orion Assembly plant in Orion Township, Mich. A General Motors contract offer to striking union members has wage increases or lump-sum payments in all four years. But a person briefed on the offer says it was rejected because it took money from other places to fund profit sharing and didn’t give temporary workers a clear path to a full-time job. Still, the offer made late Monday is likely to be the framework for whatever agreement is reached to end the strike by 49,000 workers that has halted production in the U.S. and severely cut output in Mexico and Canada. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

MACUNGIE, Pa. — Thousands of Mack Truck workers were on strike Sunday at plants in three states, the first such walkout in decades.

United Automobile Workers union members, many wearing red T-shirts and carrying signs, began picketing in the morning at the Mack Truck cab and vehicle assembly plant in Macungie, Pennsylvania, where the company says "every Mack truck built for the North American market gets its start."

Workers also walked out of plants in Middletown, Pennsylvania; Baltimore; Hagerstown, Maryland, and Jacksonville, Florida, the union said. In all, the company said the strike involves about 3,500 employees.

"One of the biggest issues for us is the job security," Walter Smith, president of the local representing Pennsylvania workers, told WCAU-TV. "I've been here for 42 years at Mack Trucks, love working at Mack Trucks. But we need to have our job security."

The union said many issues are unresolved, including wages, job security and pension and health benefits. Union officials say they will be available to reconvene negotiations Oct. 21, nine days after the beginning of picketing.

RELATED: UAW boosts strike pay to $275 a week for GM workers as talks continue

Mack Trucks President Martin Weissburg said he's "surprised and disappointed" that the union decided to walk out "rather than to allow our employees to keep building trucks and engines while the parties continued to negotiate."

Weissburg said in a statement that the two sides had been making progress and have a "positive working relationship." He said the company had no plans to close any U.S. manufacturing facilities and had on the contrary invested hundreds of millions of dollars in them over the last decade.

Officials remain confident they can reach an agreement that "provides a competitive wage and benefit package for our employees and families, and helps to ensure the company's competitiveness," he said.

RELATED: UAW letter to GM indicates that strike won't end quickly

In 1984, some 9,200 Mack Truck workers went on strike for nine days, closing the manufacturer's U.S. plants before a tentative agreement was reached, The (Allentown) Morning Call reported.

The action comes amid a weekslong United Automobile Workers strike against General Motors that shut down GM's factories in the U.S. Factories in Canada and Mexico were later forced to close due to a lack of parts. Both sides are sparring over wages, job security, investments in U.S. plants and technology training for workers.

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