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John Deere on Thursday confirmed additional layoffs of 345 production workers from its operations in Waterloo, effective Sept. 20. That brings to 894 the total since the beginning of the year at ...
John Deere has announced the layoffs of nearly 300 more workers in the Quad Cities area as farm income continues to sag reducing demand
Hit by inflation and plummeting demand as agricultural prices turn down, John Deere is continuing layoffs, announcing Monday it will cut 813 employees from plants in Iowa and Illinois.
John Deere layoffs continue, with cuts in salaried workforce. The tractor, combine manufacturer declines to say how many will be impacted in Iowa.
As the deadline passed with no new contract proposal, the workers went on strike on October 14, 2021. [10] At the plant in Milan, Illinois, strikers almost immediately began picketing, [10] and UAW President Ray Curry voiced his support for the strike, saying, "The almost one million UAW retirees and active members stand in solidarity with the striking UAW members at John Deere."
John Deere announced additional layoffs at Ankeny, Waterloo and added Urbandale, following an announcement last week of cutbacks in Ottumwa. John Deere layoffs continue to climb as jobs are cut in ...
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.
John Deere Harvester Works at 1100 13th Ave., East Moline, where 3,000 employees made agricultural implements; John Deere Industrial Equipment Works at 301 Third Ave., Moline, where 500 employees made earth-moving equipment; John Deere Malleable Works at 1335-13th Street, East Moline, where 600 employees made malleable and nodular iron castings