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Pressure mounts to save Boeing plant

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Posted 8:01AM on Friday 22nd February 2002 ( 22 years ago )
SPOKANE, WASHINGTON - Political pressure is mounting on Boeing to save its only Eastern Washington facility after the company said it might close the plant to cut costs. <br> <br> The 500 well-paid jobs have gained new importance in recent months as the national economic slump pushed Spokane County&#39;s unemployment rate above 8 percent. <br> <br> Perhaps more important, the Boeing plant here is loaded with political and symbolic significance, providing one of the few direct links between the state&#39;s largest private employer and the east side of the state. <br> <br> That&#39;s why U.S. Rep. George Nethercutt, R-Wash., recently made an extraordinary threat - that he might avenge a closure by voting against Boeing interests as a member of the powerful House Appropriations Committee. <br> <br> ``They come to me on funding,&#39;&#39; Nethercutt said last month. ``I would have no reason to support Boeing, even on appropriations, if they were to abandon this plant.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> U.S. Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, both Seattle-area Democrats, both have visited the Spokane plant in the past week and said they are working to keep it open. <br> <br> In a state where politicians often pledge allegiance to Boeing, it was definitely not politics as usual. <br> <br> Boeing was expected to issue its decision in February, but The Spokesman-Review newspaper of Spokane reported Thursday that the decision likely won&#39;t be announced until March or April. <br> <br> Boeing Commercial Airplanes spokesman John Kvasnosky said he was not aware of a delay. <br> <br> ``Originally we told employees we thought we&#39;d conclude by early February,&#39;&#39; he said. ``We remain on that general schedule.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> Kvasnosky acknowledged that Boeing has come under political pressure regarding the Spokane plant. <br> <br> Murray met with workers at the plant Wednesday and told them that ``the good news is a decision has not been made.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> A delay in making the announcement means ``they are seriously looking at ways to keep the plant open,&#39;&#39; she said. <br> <br> Nethercutt said Thursday he hoped the lack of an announcement was ``a positive sign.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> He reiterated that his seats on the House Appropriations panel and several subcommittees put him in a good position to help Boeing. <br> <br> It was politics that brought Boeing to Spokane in the first place. <br> <br> After ignoring Eastern Washington for most of the 20th century, Boeing suddenly took a deep interest in the Spokane area when U.S. Rep. Tom Foley, D-Wash., of Spokane, was elected House speaker in 1989. <br> <br> The plant subsequently built on the plains near Spokane International Airport makes air conditioning ducts, floor panels and cockpit shields for commercial airliners. <br> <br> In a county economy of 200,000 jobs, the Boeing work force was relatively insignificant. But Boeing gave Spokane business leaders an easily identifiable success story as they worked to lure high-tech industry to the state&#39;s second-largest city. <br> <br> Boeing moved its corporate headquarters to Chicago last year, raising questions about the company&#39;s commitment to Washington. Then the terrorist acts of Sept. 11 took a heavy toll on the aviation industry, and Boeing announced plans to lay off as many as 30,000 workers worldwide - most of them in its Washington state-based Commercial Airplanes division.

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