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UAW, automakers resume talks as US strike stretches into second day

Besides higher wages, the UAW is demanding shorter work weeks, restoration of defined benefit pensions and stronger job security as automakers make the EV shift

Published: Sat 16 Sep 2023, 10:19 PM

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  • Reuters

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United Auto Workers members strike at the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan. — AFP

United Auto Workers members strike at the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan. — AFP

Talks between the United Auto Workers and the Detroit Three automakers resumed on Saturday, a day after the union initiated the most ambitious US industrial labour action in decades with simultaneous strikes targeting a trio of auto plants.

The four-year labour deal between the union and General Motors, Ford Motor and Chrysler-parent Stellantis expired at 11.59pm EDT on Thursday. Stellantis said on Saturday it has hiked its offer, proposing raises of 20 per cent over a four-and-a-half-year contract term, including an immediate 10 per cent hike. That matches proposals from GM and Ford.

The automakers say the proposals work out to a cumulative 21 per cent hike over the period, but they are still significantly below the 40 per cent wage hike the UAW is demanding through 2027. The union's wage demand includes a 20 per cent immediate increase.

"We do care. We absolutely do care," Mark Stewart, the North American chief operating officer for Stellantis, told reporters on Saturday, describing the company's latest offer as "very compelling."

"This is not about greed. This is about sharing success," he said.

Stellantis also said it is offering more than $1 billion in retirement security improvements and other increases in benefits. Stewart said the UAW rejected a Stellantis proposal to keep an Illinois assembly plant open that was contingent on reaching agreement before the contract expiration. He declined to offer specific details, but added that the company was still willing to talk about the facility's future.

The strikes have halted production at three plants in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri that produce the Ford Bronco, Jeep Wrangler and Chevrolet Colorado, along with other popular models.

Automakers say they need cost-competitive contracts because of the need to spend billions of dollars to make the transition to electric vehicles (EV), while workers note US automakers have enjoyed robust profits over the last decade and had hiked CEO salaries by 40 per cent on average since 2019.

On Friday, Ford said it was indefinitely laying off 600 workers at a Michigan plant because of the impact of the strike at the facility, which makes the Bronco SUV, and GM told some 2,000 workers at a Kansas car plant that their factory likely would be shut down next week for lack of parts, stemming from a strike at a Missouri plant.

Stellantis said on Saturday it does not anticipate any other plants being disrupted by the strike at its Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio.

UAW President Shawn Fain called the reports of planned layoffs of non-striking workers an attempt by the automakers to "squeeze" union members into accepting a weaker settlement.

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"Their plan won't work," Fain said in a statement. "We'll organise one day longer than they can, and go the distance to win economic and social justice at the Big Three."

Besides higher wages, the UAW is demanding shorter work weeks, restoration of defined benefit pensions and stronger job security as automakers make the EV shift. The union also wants an end to so-called "two-tier" wages, while automakers have proposed cutting the number of years needed to reach top pay levels from eight to four years. The UAW said the automakers has rejected many key demands.

US automakers have said the UAW demands could hike the current mid-$60-per-hour labor cost to more than $150 an hour. GM said on Thursday the UAW wage and benefits proposals would cost it $100 billion, while Ford CEO Jim Farley said the 40 per cent UAW wage hike would "put us out of business."

US President Joe Biden, who faces re-election next year, called on Friday for the auto companies to reward workers just as executives' salaries have risen. "The companies have made some significant offers, but I believe they should go further to ensure record corporate profits mean record contracts," he said.



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