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Boeing suppliers fear long-term jobs hit from strike

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Boeing’s two-week-old strike has forced aerospace supplier Pathfinder Manufacturing to furlough 14 out of the company’s 54 employees, and CEO Dave Trader fears he may need to send more home if the stoppage grinds on.

Pathfinder runs a project to attract new recruits to the aerospace industry, and trains them alongside skilled workers at its facility yards away from Boeing’s Everett jet factory outside Seattle, the largest manufacturing building in the world.

Besides the 14 workers, the strike has sent high school students training for aerospace careers at Pathfinder back to their regular classrooms, in a double blow to a sector struggling for skilled labor.

“We want to keep them on, so we’re trying to help them the best that we can, but at the same time I’m trying to keep this company afloat,” said Trader, 60, who has led Pathfinder through most of its 33-year existence.

Some 30,000 machinists downed tools in Boeing’s West Coast factories on Sept. 13, halting production of the best-selling 737 MAX and older 767 and 777 wide-body programs. The company’s supply chain is now fretting about how to retain thousands of workers set to be furloughed in the coming weeks during the planemaker’s first strike in 16 years.

Pathfinder is covering the costs of the 14 workers’ health care benefits to help retain them when orders rebound.

“We want them back and we’re trying to give them that carrot to get them back,” Trader said.

Unlike other CEOs, Trader is also a fundraiser, since Pathfinder combines paid contractual work with a nonprofit “Work Force Development Center” where high school students and adults with disabilities in the Puget Sound area learn high-tech aerospace skills.

Boeing recently visited Pathfinder as part of a routine inspection.

“Their biggest concern was when we start doing these stand-bys (furloughs), how easily are we going to be able to get people back,” Trader said.

CASH SQUEEZE

Boeing put most white-collar staff on rolling furloughs and said it would freeze most parts orders except on the 787, made in South Carolina. The company and its suppliers are also reeling from a series of crises including a MAX safety grounding after two fatal crashes; a global slump in air travel during the pandemic; and a quality crisis compounded by output curbs placed on Boeing since the blowout of a door plug in January.

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