Austin American-Statesman

Fiat Chrysler workers may soon be on strike

- By Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin

The threat of a — strike was looming as Fiat Chrysler and the United Auto Workers continued negotiatin­g a new contract Wednesday.

The union sent Fiat Chyrsler Automobile­s (FCA) a strike notice Tuesday, and a walkout was possible late Wednesday.

A strike notice doesn’t mean a strike will happen. FCA and the union could reach a new tentative agreement before the deadline, or the union could put talks with FCA on hold and bargain with Ford Motor Co. or General Motors Co. instead.

If workers do strike, the UAW could call off workers only at some key plants or it could order a strike at all of FCA’s 23 U.S. plants. The UAW rep- resents around 40,000 factory workers in the U.S.

FCA workers haven’t gone on strike since 2007, when workers walked off the job for seven hours during contract negotiatio­ns. In 2011, they were prohibited from striking under terms of FCA’s government-funded bankruptcy.

Union members overwhelmi­ngly rejected a tentative agreement with the company last week, saying it didn’t go far enough in restoring benefits workers lost in previous contracts. Members want an end to the current two-tier pay structure, more specific guarantees of new vehicles for U.S. factories and a return of cost-of-living pay raises that the union gave up to help the company in bad times. Now that Fiat Chrysler is profit- able, members want a bigger slice.

But a strike would be painful for the company, which could retaliate by sending more work to lower-wage countries like Mexico. A weeklong strike could cost the company as much as $1.7 billion in revenue and $35 million in net income, according to Sean McAlinden, chief economist for the Michigan-based Center for Automotive Research.

When they kicked off contract talks in July, both UAW President Dennis Williams and FCA CEO Sergio Marchionne said they would consider it a personal failure if they can’t reach an agreement and workers strike.

The union’s four-year contracts with FCA, Ford and GM expired Sept. 14, but workers have remained on the job under an extension.

 ?? BILL PUGLIANO / GETTY IMAGES ?? Workers with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s leave the Warren Truck Assembly Plant in Warren, Mich., on Wednesday. The United Auto Workers union issued a strike notice Tuesday, and a walkout loomed late Wednesday as negotiator­s for FCA and the UAW met to...
BILL PUGLIANO / GETTY IMAGES Workers with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s leave the Warren Truck Assembly Plant in Warren, Mich., on Wednesday. The United Auto Workers union issued a strike notice Tuesday, and a walkout loomed late Wednesday as negotiator­s for FCA and the UAW met to...

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