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https://i-invdn-com.investing.com/trkd-images/LYNXMPEI1D11P_L.jpgBEAUMONT, Texas (Reuters) -Union officials on Monday agreed to schedule a membership vote on a contract offer that could end a nearly 10-month worker lockout at an Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) refinery in southeast Texas, a union official said.
The leadership of United Steelworkers (USW) Local 13-243 agreed to put a sweetened Exxon contract proposal received last week to its about 600 members. A vote was scheduled for next Monday, Feb. 21.
On Friday, Exxon agreed to add a holiday on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, update contract language regarding a union committee and add a new job description for operators in the 369,024 barrel-per-day refinery and lubricant facility.
“With the company’s latest move, with the MLK holiday added, we felt it was time for the membership to have the say-so on where we go from here,” said Bryan Gross, a USW International representative.
The oil company has said the lockout would end when either a contract acceptable to company is ratified or the union is removed.
Beaumont union workers have been without paychecks since May with managers, supervisors and temporary replacement workers continuing to produce gasoline and Mobil 1 motor oil.
In October, the workers had voted against an earlier Exxon offer.
If workers accept the latest contract offer, the union and Exxon will have to negotiate a return-to-work agreement spelling out rules for returning workers before they can re-enter the refinery.
Exxon has said it began the lockout to avoid disruption from a threatened strike at the refinery and adjoining lubrication oil plant, which makes Mobil 1 motor oil.
The two sides were unable to reach an agreement before the lockout over proposed changes to job seniority provisions, union officials have said. Those provisions provide workers a say in job assignments.
A vote on the union’s removal was conducted by the U.S. National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in November and December. But the ballots were impounded on Dec. 29 by the board so it could review charges filed by the USW alleging Exxon undertook the lockout to force the union’s removal.