1986–1987 John Deere strike
1980s United States manufacturing strike / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1986–87 John Deere strike and lockout was a conflict between Deere & Company, more commonly known as John Deere, and its employees. The workers, unionized as part of the United Auto Workers, began selective strikes at three Deere facilities on August 23, 1986. The selective strikes prompted Deere to close the rest of the facilities under the same labor contract as the original three striking locales, which the UAW, and later The New York Times, called a lockout. On February 1, 1987, workers ratified a tentative agreement which provided stronger benefits to Deere production employees. The conflict was the longest strike ever against Deere, lasting 163 days, or more than five months.
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Date | August 23, 1986 – February 1, 1987 (163 days) 12:01 a.m. CDT | ||
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Injuries | WQAD-TV A/V engineer allegedly assaulted |
UAW Deere employees would not strike again until the 2021 John Deere strike began on October 14, 2021, 35 years later.[4]