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Union and Marathon meet as deadline for US refineries' strike looms

The United Steelworkers union and Marathon Petroleum continue to negotiate on Saturday just hours before a possible strike deadline at several U.S. chemical and refineries plants.

The union rejected an offer made by Marathon, who is the chief negotiator of 26 U.S. chemical and refinery companies, including Exxon Mobil and Valero Energy. According to sources who were familiar with the negotiations, the offer included a 13% wage increase over a 4-year contract.

Marathon spokesperson Jamal Kheiry said that "MPC is continuing to meet with USW representatives." "We are committed in working towards a mutually satisfying agreement and bargaining with good faith."

USW spokesperson stated that the union had no immediate comment regarding negotiations.

Marathon's proposed pay increase would have been 3% for each of first two years and 3.5% for each of final two.

Sources said that the USW and the oil industry workers, who are represented by the USW in these talks, will be discussing the cost of living, healthcare costs, and the standards of use of artificial intelligence at the plants.

USW also wants to see tougher safety regulations, but sources say that this is not likely to happen for Marathon.

"Marathon, as a company, thinks that our industry is overpaid," stated one of the sources who asked to remain anonymous because they weren't authorized to speak in public. "They don't say much about economics. To be honest, our proposal is dominated by AI. They're not doing it well.

The current four-year agreement expires on Sunday at 12:01 am, but this does not automatically mean that a strike would begin.

In previous?negotiations the union granted rolling contract extensions of 24 hours to reach an agreement beyond expiration.

Only in plants where the union has authorized a strike will workers walk off their jobs.

The USW announced that it would be calling out 5,200 USW workers at 11 refineries in the United States, which employed USW members. The refineries continued to operate with temporary replacement employees.

Negotiations between the USW, Marathon and other unions are aimed at a national agreement pattern that will set wages for hourly workers in the union, healthcare costs, safety agreements and more.

After completing their probation period, inside refinery operators earn about $50 per hour.

To create the contract, you combine the national agreement with site-specific agreements.

The company and workers settled local issues at Marathon's biggest refinery on Friday, the 631,000 barrels per day Galveston Bay. (Reporting and editing by Nathan Crooks, Nia Williams, and Erwin Seba)

(source: Reuters)