KEY POINTS
  • For the past month, nearly 4,300 production workers at a key U.S. Navy shipbuilding facility are on strike as federal mediators and union leaders struggle to settle a contracting dispute.
  • Bath Iron Works, a subsidiary of defense giant General Dynamics, builds the U.S. Navy's Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers.
  • The company is currently operating on a year-long delay, with the worker strike as well as the coronavirus further complicating logistics and production timetables.

In this article

Shipbuilders picket outside an entrance to Bath Iron Works, Monday, June 22, 2020, in Bath, Maine.

WASHINGTON — For the past month, thousands of production workers at a key U.S. Navy shipbuilding facility have been on strike as federal mediators and union leaders struggle to settle a contracting dispute.

Nearly 4,300 workers at Bath Iron Works in Maine went on strike on June 22 following a decision by the company to expand its use of low-wage and out-of-state contractors. Bath Iron Works, a subsidiary of defense giant General Dynamics, contends its aim is to streamline the hiring of subcontractors.

In this article