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GM ups effort to safeguard parts supplied for its truck, SUV plants

- By Jamie L. Lareau

DETROIT — General Motors has its eye south of the border as the coronaviru­s pandemic spreads, restrictin­g the output of parts from some of its suppliers in Mexico.

That, in turn, could further impact GM’s vehicle production at its U.S. factories.

GM has had to either cancel some overtime shifts or run partial shifts at its important Arlington Assembly factory in Texas where it makes hotselling, highly profitable fullsize SUVs, GM spokesman David Barnas said Tuesday. It’s had to cancel some Corvette production recently at Bowling Green Assembly in Kentucky, too, because of parts supply disruption­s.

Closer to home, at Flint Assembly, where GM makes its in- demand heavy- duty pickups, there has been only one disruption to production. Flint gets the wiring used for the electrical system in the pickups from a supplier in Mexico.

“We’ve been minorly affected. GM canceled one production shift this year,” Flint’s UAW Local 598 Shop Chairman Eric Welter said of the impact from Mexico’s restricted output as COVID-19 cases rise.

Still, Welter said he’s as worried about parts supply disruption­s as he is about rising COVID-19 cases at the plant.

For its part, GM said it will make up for any hiccups in production by offering overtime. In the meantime, GM has its Global Purchasing and Supply Chain Command Center working around the clock

to ensure all of GM’s factories get the parts they need. But as Mexico’s COVID-19 cases keep rising, so does the risk to GM’s production.

24/7 focus on Mexico

GM establishe­d its Global Purchasing and Supply Chain Command Center in 2000, then expanded it in 2011 after the Japanese earthquake and tsunami hit. The goal was for it take on a more global role, Barnas said.

The global aspect is significan­t. Mexico has topped 1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases with at least 98,259 deaths as of Saturday, according to the Associated Press. Part of the problem is that since earlier this year, Mexico has administer­ed only about 2.5 million coronaviru­s tests to its citizens. Only seriously ill people get tested there. AP reports that testing roughly 1.9% of the population since the pandemic began has made it difficult to do effective contact tracing to mitigate the spread of the virus.

That spread is hitting sup

pliers’ factories in Mexico. Partly for that reason, a team of “a dozen or so” supply chain specialist­s at GM are working 24/7, Barnas said.

“They continue to work intensely to ensure that all parts continue to flow into all of our facilities,” Barnas said. “Is there a particular focus on Mexico now due to the COVID restrictio­ns? Sure.”

Tight supply of in-demand SUVs

At GM’s Arlington Assembly, the automaker had to run a partial shift late Monday and early Tuesday because of “a temporary supply issue,” Barnas said.

A partial shift means vehicles are still being built, but not all the workers are there and production is not at full volume. There are about 1,690 hourly workers per shift at the plant.

Barnas declined to say how many workers were there or how many vehicles were being made. He said there were “quite a few employees working. We are producing full-size SUVs.”

GM resumed normal operations at Arlington on its third shift Tuesday evening with all employees returning to work on regular production, Barnas said.

But the earlier partial shifts were not the first disruption at that plant. GM had to cancel its overtime shift at Arlington on Nov. 14 because of a parts supply problem that day.

During GM’s third-quarter earnings call Nov. 5, CEO Mary Barra told Wall Street: “Our truck and full-size SUV plants are safely operating on three shifts, building every vehicle possible. Our dealers are doing a great job of maximizing sales and share despite tight supply. They are using GM-developed software that helps them order the highestdem­and, fastest-turning vehicle build configurat­ions.”

Flint is a priority

At Flint, GM makes its fullsize heavy- duty Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups. They are richly profitable products that are in big demand and tight supply. So GM has made sure to protect that assembly line from any parts supply disruption­s.

Flint gets wiring harnesses and other parts from suppliers in Mexico, Welter said. A wiring harness is a set of wires and connectors that run throughout the pickup.

“But GM has put us as a priority and scrambles to make sure we have parts and it’s a babysittin­g job each week,” Welter said. “As Mexico continues to restrict their output, that might be problemati­c.”

 ?? Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press/TNS ?? A GMC Denali HD pulls out for final testing at the General Assembly building at General Motors Flint Assembly in Flint.
Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press/TNS A GMC Denali HD pulls out for final testing at the General Assembly building at General Motors Flint Assembly in Flint.

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