The Phnom Penh Post

GM strike negotiatio­ns take ‘turn for the worse’: Union

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NEGOTIATIO­NS to resolve a threeweek-old strike at General Motors (GM) for better pay, benefits and job security have taken “a turn for the worse”, a top negotiator with the United Autoworker­s Union (UAW ) said on Sunday.

“After making some progress on important issues a couple days ago, the company has shown an unwillingn­ess to fairly compensate the great workforce of the UAW,” union vice-president Terry Dittes said in a statement.

“These negotiatio­ns have taken a turn for the worse,” he said.

On Saturday evening, the union submitted an “extensive proposal package” that “was an effort to move this set of negotiatio­ns to the next step”, Dittes said in a letter to Scott Sandefur, vice-president of labour relations at GM.

“During your response” on Sunday, “you didn’t even have a profession­al courtesy to explain why you could not accept or why you rejected our package proposal for each item we addressed”, he wrote.

“We expect the company to respond and discuss the package proposal we presented yesterday [on Saturday]. The law and basic decency require no less,” Dittes added.

Nearly 50,000 GM workers walked off the job in mid-September, launching the biggest labour dispute to hit the automaker in more than a decade.

On Friday, the company let it be known that it would extend health insurance coverage for its workers for the duration of the strike.

That was seen as a sign that the sides might reach an agreement as early as the weekend, despite obstacles over pay and job security for new hires.

But Dittes said management’s response to the Saturday proposals offered little change from those that the union had previously rejected.

The strike has shut down GM production in the US, impacting its operations in Canada and Mexico where thousands of workers have been temporaril­y laid off.

GM produces the Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC brands.

Besides better pay and benefits, the union wants GM to reactivate four factories shut down in November last year.

For its part, GM says it has proposed more than $7 billion in new investment­s in US facilities, 5,400 new jobs and higher salaries.

Experts say the strike could cost the company as much as $100 million each day.

 ?? BILL PUGLIANO/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? General Motors (GM) workers went out on strike on September 16. Union negotiator­s say talks have taken ‘a turn for the worse’.
BILL PUGLIANO/GETTY IMAGES/AFP General Motors (GM) workers went out on strike on September 16. Union negotiator­s say talks have taken ‘a turn for the worse’.

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