Ottawa Citizen

Fiat Chrysler adds 1,200 jobs to Windsor plant in preparatio­n for its new Pacifica minivan model

- KRISTINE OWRAM

FCA Canada’s $3.7-billion overhaul of its Windsor, Ont., minivan plant has created 1,200 new jobs, an indication that Canada will play an important role in Fiat Chrysler NV’s future as it restructur­es its operations.

The company revealed its new Pacifica minivan, built in Windsor, to a Canadian audience for the first time Thursday at the Canadian Internatio­nal Auto Show in Toronto.

The Pacifica fits well into the parent company’s new strategy of building more pickup trucks, SUVs and crossovers at the expense of passenger cars, said Reid Bigland, chief executive of FCA Canada.

The corporate overhaul includes a plan to kill the smaller Dodge Dart and Chrysler 200 in response to what CEO Sergio Marchionne believes is a “permanent shift” away from passenger cars.

This may have been troubling news to Fiat Chrysler’s workers in Brampton, Ont., who build the Dodge Charger, Dodge Challenger and Chrysler 300 sedans.

But Bigland pledged Thursday that “Brampton is steady as she goes.”

“With respect to the full-sized vehicles and especially the more muscle-car oriented (vehicles), certainly the benefit of low fuel prices plays right into those vehicles’ wheelhouse­s,” Bigland said, adding that demand for them is stronger than it has ever been.

When asked if the company’s bigcar-and-truck strategy could backfire if gasoline prices rise again, Bigland said he’s not worried.

“I think the fallacy out there is when fuel prices are up, people want small cars, and that’s not the case,” said Bigland, who is also Fiat Chrysler’s head of U.S. sales and head of the Alfa Romeo brand in North America. “What people want is fuel-efficient vehicles ... so the real key is to make large vehicles more relevant for a $4-a-gallon gasoline environmen­t.”

 ??  ?? Reid Bigland
Reid Bigland

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