MONTREAL -- Bombardier Inc.'s regional jet assembly lines will
restart Monday after machinists voted heavily in favour of accepting
the company's revised offer of a 16% pay boost over four years,
according to the National Post.
The settlement comes on the
same day the company announced major orders for rail
cars.
The vote by 7,500 members of the International
Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Local 712, ends a
19-day-old strike.
The new contract includes a $1,000 signing
bonus, a two-year reduction in the retirement age and other
benefits, said John Paul Macdonald, vice-president, communications,
Bombardier Aerospace.
The union said it won concessions worth
$15-million in the conciliation process, bringing the total value of
the deal to $213-million.
Bombardier would not comment on
those figures or discuss the impact of the strike on deliveries and
on its bottom line.
"The strike has had an impact on our
regional jet operations and on the employees," he said, "but over
the next few weeks and months, we'll make up for it and deliver
aircraft according to our clients' expectations."
He would
not detail any financial fall-out for the company.
One
analyst temporarily reduced his estimate of Bombardier's overall
earnings for the first quarter earlier this week and fiscal 2003 on
the assumption the strike might be extended.
Others, however,
minimized the impact, saying Bombardier could easily catch up on its
orders.
"I don't think they lost too much ground," Elvis
Picardo, an analyst with Global Securities Corp. in Vancouver, said
yesterday.
"They should be able to make up whatever ground
they lost on the deliveries front."
Bombardier stock rose 35¢
to $14.25 on volume of 5.2-million shares late
yesterday.
Bombardier Aerospace expects to deliver 190 of its
50-passenger and 70-passenger regional jets this fiscal year. The
strike also halted output of Challenger business
jets.
Meantime, the company announced yesterday $1.3-billion
of rail equipment orders in the United States and Europe, bringing
the transportation unit's order backlog to about $23-billion, up
from $20.4-billion at the end of fiscal 2002, which ended Jan.
31.
It will supply 352 stainless steel commuter cars to Long
Island Rail Road, the fourth such contract since 1999 and worth
$941-million. Cars under the first LIRR contract are now going into
service. The cars are built in Quebec and at Plattsburgh,
N.Y.
Bombardier will also make 42 electric locomotives worth
$188-million for the Italian State Railways in a contract that came
with last year's $1.1-billion takeover of DaimlerChrysler AG's
Adtranz rail equipment unit. Bombardier acquired electric traction
technology, as well as manufacturing plants in several European
countries.
The Italian locomotives, which are to be used to
pull both freight and passenger cars, will be designed and produced
in Italy, Poland and Germany.
These orders bring the
transportation unit's total since Jan. 31 to $3.4-billion, excluding
first-quarter deliveries. The earlier orders were for passenger cars
for a British leasing company and for network operator Go-Ahead
Group Plc.
Bombardier will deliver the last Acela high-speed
train to Amtrak for the Washington-New York-Boston corridor in July.
The trains were built under a US$700-million contract signed in 1996
and expanded in 1998.