National Grid Reaches Tentative Deal With Locked Out Gas Workers

(Photograph courtesy of Clean Energy Fuels.)

The tentative agreement covers approximately 1,250 gas workers, the State House News Service reports. (Photograph courtesy of Clean Energy Fuels.)

The prolonged contract dispute and lockout that has riled the natural gas industry and labor and political circles since June could be coming to an end, the State House News Service reports.

National Grid and United Steelworkers Locals 12003 and 12012-04 announced late Wednesday night that they have reached a tentative agreement to replace the collective bargaining agreements that expired June 24, 2018.

“The tentative agreement covers approximately 1,250 employees who work in gas operations and other support lines of business across eastern Massachusetts,” according to the unsigned joint statement released by National Grid.

The unions will present the agreement terms of the agreement to members for ratification “on or before” Monday, Jan. 7, according to the statement, which said details “will not be shared before both unions have had an opportunity to vote.”

Health care and pension benefits were sticking points between the company and the union before and during the lockout.

The tentative agreement comes two days after Gov. Charlie Baker signed legislation extending unemployment benefits for locked out workers. The locked out National Grid workers are due to exhaust their initial benefits in mid-January.