WASHINGTON - Lockheed Martin and striking machinist union members reached a tentative contract agreement Wednesday after meeting with federal mediators this week. <br>
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Rick Sloan, a spokesman for the International Association of Machinists, said the potential agreement would end the 6-week-old strike if agreed to by the entire union membership. <br>
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Sloan would not discuss details of the agreement. The vote could come as early as this weekend. <br>
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More than 2,700 members of the machinists union Local 709 have been picketing the defense contractor's Marietta, Ga., plant since March 11, after rejecting a contract proposal by Maryland-based Lockheed Martin. <br>
Both sides have been meeting this week with federal mediators in an attempt to resolve the dispute. <br>
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The deal reached Wednesday was accepted unanimously by the negotiating committee members, who were returning to Georgia after holding talks all night, said Bob Wood, a spokesman for Local 709 in Marietta. <br>
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``During the past two days, we've negotiated improvements in the company's last, best and final offer,'' he said. ``It's now more in line with agreements recently ratified at the two Lockheed plants in California.'' <br>
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The Marietta plant produces F-22 Raptor fighters and C-130J transports. Workers at Lockheed operations in Meridian, Miss., and Clarksburg, W.Va., that supply materials for the Georgia plant also are on strike.
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