Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

UAW aiming for 30% wage bump

The union says that will satisfy members and generate interest from non-members

- By David Welch, Keith Naughto■ a■d Gabrielle Coppola

The United Auto Workers union wants to emerge from its strike against Detroit's three major automakers with at least a 30% pay raise, according to Bloomberg sources.

That's the level — which is lower than the around 40% hike it initially proposed to Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and Stellantis NV — that the union believes will allow it to satisfy existing members and organize non-union plants. It takes into account a cost-of-living allowance, or COLA, and a general wage increase, according to the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private.

Automaker stocks were buoyed by the news. GM and Stellantis' U.S. shares each gained 2.5% on Thursday, while Ford rose 1.4%. GM and Ford have seen steep declines since July amid uncertaint­y about the negotiatio­ns. Stellantis is the outlier, up 36% so far this year.

A wage bump of at least 30% is expected to generate interest from non-unionized auto workers and help grow the union's membership, according to the people.

The union's president, Shawn Fain, is on a mission to expand the UAW by organizing future electric-vehicle battery plants and by targeting workers at Tesla Inc. and the U.S. plants of Asian and European automakers, two people said. Its membership has fallen to 400,000 from more than 1 million in the 1970s.

A UAW spokespers­on declined to comment. GM, Ford and Stellantis also declined to comment.

Ford has already offered a 20% pay increase, plus COLA payments on top of it. The UAW also had lowered its demand for pay raises to 36%. If the COLA formula gives workers additional raises, it represents a smaller gap between the two sides on pay. A UAW source said the union submitted a counterpro­posal to Stellantis on Thursday.

The wage increase is part of a complex puzzle that also includes how much the automakers will invest in their factories to secure jobs for the UAW. Other issues include compensati­on for workers at future battery plants and retiree benefits, including the union's demand for a return to traditiona­l pensions. Each piece has to be agreeable to all parties or the deal will fall apart.

The UAW has been striking the automakers since Sept. 15, the first time it has targeted all three simultaneo­usly. Fain is threatenin­g to widen the strike on Friday if the companies don't show progress at the bargaining table.

Fain already had workers walk out at 38 GM and Stellantis parts distributi­on facilities last week, saying that there was too little progress in talks.

 ?? PHILLIP L. KAPLAN — THE BLADE VIA AP ?? United Auto Workers union members strike for improved compensati­on outside of the Stellantis Toledo Assembly Complex on Thursday in Toledo, Ohio.
PHILLIP L. KAPLAN — THE BLADE VIA AP United Auto Workers union members strike for improved compensati­on outside of the Stellantis Toledo Assembly Complex on Thursday in Toledo, Ohio.

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