Chattanooga Times Free Press

VW aims to hire 600 more workers

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

With Volkswagen’s $800 million Chattanoog­a plant expansion on track and plans to dramatical­ly hike assembly of SUVs, the factory is aiming to hire 600 more employees, officials said Wednesday.

In one of the biggest hiring surges since the plant opened more than a decade ago, the new employees will directly join the automaker rather than first working for an employment contractor.

“We have increased demand for our product,” said Tom du Plessis, president and CEO of VW’s Chattanoog­a operations.

He said it has been since 2009 that VW directly accepted applicatio­ns for production employees.

Higher sales of its popular seven-seat Atlas SUV, coupled with assembly of the new fiveseat Atlas Cross Sport SUV, are leading the German company to bolster hiring, said du Plessis.

Also, the plant expansion underway is readying VW to build a new battery-powered SUV by 2022 and more employees are needed for that milestone, he said.

“As we continue to grow our Tennessee operation as Volkswagen’s North American hub for electric vehicle manufactur­ing, we must also grow our team,” said the Volkswagen CEO.

Volkswagen now employs about 3,800 workers, and the new hires will push the car company to more than 4,000 employees in Chattanoog­a.

Burkhard Ulrich, VW Chattanoog­a’s senior vice president of human resources, said the plant will have about 3,000 production workers when the automaker’s latest round of hiring is finished.

Starting wages for the new VW workers will be $19 per hour, more than the recently

increased pay rate, as much of the new staff will join second and third shifts.

“It’s more because of the shift premium,” Ulrich said.

With overtime, bonus and shift differenti­al, production employees can earn about $46 per hour, according to VW. Maintenanc­e workers, those who keep up and fix the plant’s equipment, can earn about $58 per hour with off-shift overtime, officials said.

VW is accepting applicatio­ns beginning March 23 and continuing through the end of June to fill the 600 posts. To sign up for the slots, people can go online to www.wearevolks­wagen.com.

Positions will be open in the body, assembly and paint shops as well as in quality and logistics, du Plessis said.

“We’re really looking forward to expanding over time,” he said.

Over the past decade, VW has worked with employment contractor Aerotek, and those workers have been on the job for six months to a year before becoming direct VW employees. The VW Chattanoog­a CEO said the automaker is still converting Aerotek workers to meet demand. Some 57 were converted in February alone to VW employees, he said.

The plant plans to expand its parking lot to make way for the new hires, du Plessis said.

Just last month, the company said production and maintenanc­e workers would see a pay hike and a new bonus system. The base production wage rate at the plant will rise by $1.50 per hour, from $16 to $17.50, up about 9.4%, according to the automaker.

 ??  ?? Tom du Plessis
Tom du Plessis

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