National Post

GM promises to retrain employees

Unifor unimpresse­d, vows to fight

- DaviD PaDDon

TORONTO •GeneralMot­ors of Canada Co. is working to set up jobs and training programs for employees who will be put out of work when it closes the Oshawa Assembly plant next year even as Unifor promises an extended fight to keep the operation open.

The auto giant said Friday that several employers have identified about 2,000 jobs that will come open in Durham region in 2019 and 2020, many of them related to the refurbishm­ent of the Darlington nuclear power plant southeast of Oshawa.

GM has also identified 300 openings for auto technician­s at GM dealership­s in Ontario and 100 jobs that will be open at other GM facilities in Ontario.

In addition, GM estimates about half of the 3,000 unionized and salaried employees are eligible to retire under the company’s defined benefit pension plan, leaving about 1,500 who will want to transition to new occupation­s.

The city of Oshawa and surroundin­g areas east of Toronto were shocked last month when the highly rated Oshawa Assembly plant was included as one of five North American GM plants identified to close next year.

GM Canada vice-president David Paterson said the company is committed to spending millions of dollars to ensure its employees get the retraining they require, with an initial estimate of between $5 million and $10 million, but the exact amount will depend on what other employers provide.

GM Canada says Durham College will also establish a confidenti­al internet portal in the new year to help autoworker­s identify job openings and begin plans to take retraining courses offered by a consortium of colleges. Unifor president Jerry Dias said in an interview that the training commitment is just a distractio­n from the company’s lack of commitment to Canada.

“All of these announceme­nts that General Motors is making about retraining, they’re trying to hide the fact that they’re a terrible corporate citizen.”

GM says it will be discussing further benefits packages for employees with the union, but Dias said the focus is entirely on saving Oshawa. If the plant closes, GM’s only Canadian assembly plant will be CAMI in Ingersoll, Ont., which produces the same Chevrolet Equinox the company produces in Mexico.

“If there’s going to be a reduction in volume, guess where they’re taking it out of ?” said Dias. “It’s all intertwine­d. GM is leaving Canada, and we’re not going to let them.”

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