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UAW chief says deal near that may end CNH Industrial strike

ap photo United Auto Workers President Ray Curry is interviewed, Thursday in Detroit.

DETROIT — The United Auto Workers president says the union is close to reaching another agreement with CNH Industrial that improves a deal rejected by striking workers earlier this month.

In an interview with The Associated Press Thursday, President Ray Curry said he’s hopeful the deal will be reached “within the next week or two” and presented to members for another vote.

More than 1,000 workers have been on strike at CNH plants in Iowa and Wisconsin for nearly nine months. On Jan. 7 they rejected the “last, best and final offer” from the maker of construction and agricultural equipment, and stayed on the picket lines.

The company, Curry said, has been talking with the UAW since the rejection. “We believe that there is going to be an offer that’s there that the membership will see in a different light, with adjustments, not the same offer,” he said.

Curry said he couldn’t disclose any details because the deal is still being negotiated.

CNH, based in the United Kingdom, did not immediately comment on Thursday.

Discussions are ongoing, Curry said, with a lot of talk about the importance of CNH Industrial’s two UAW-represented locations in Burlington, Iowa, and Racine, Wisconsin.

After the offer was rejected, CNH said it was disappointed. The improved offer included wage increases of 28 percent to 38 percent over four years, the company said in a statement. “While we await the union’s next step, CNH Industrial remains committed to honoring and meeting the needs and demands of our customers and, therefore, we will continue operations at both our Burlington and Racine sites,” the statement said.

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