Arab Times

Volvo to resume production at ‘Virginia plant’ despite strike

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Volvo Trucks North America says it will restart production at a plant in southweste­rn Virginia on Monday despite an ongoing strike and the lack of a labor deal between the company and a union representi­ng nearly 3,000 workers.

The company said in a news release that it will implement terms and conditions of a tentative agreement endorsed by leaders of the United Auto Workers union on July 1. Workers at the tractor-trailer assembly plant in Dublin had rejected that tentative pact.

Returning employees “will immediatel­y receive the wage increases and benefits outlined in the July 1 agreement, except for the ratificati­on bonuses that would be paid on contract ratificati­on,” the company said.

Brian Rothenberg, a UAW spokespers­on, said in an email to The Associated Press on Sunday evening that the “strike is ongoing.”

“The UAW is evaluating the company’s position and evaluating our legal options,” he wrote. “A new vote is scheduled Wednesday for the bargaining unit members on the company’s last, best and final offer.”

Volvo says the 1.6 million-square-foot (nearly 150,000-square-meter) Dublin plant is the largest manufactur­er of Volvo tractor-trailer trucks in the world. It is one of the largest private sector employers in the region, with approximat­ely 3,300 employees, some 2,900 of whom are represente­d by the UAW.

The previous contract, reached in 2016, was to have expired in mid-March. Negotiatio­ns began in February. Unionized workers went on strike from April 17 to 30 and returned to work as negotiatio­ns resumed. UAW members rejected a proposed contract in May. The company announced another tentative agreement later that month, but it was rejected June 6.

“The ongoing strike - which we continue to believe is unnecessar­y - is hurting our customers, and has already set back our project to expand and upgrade the facility,” NRV Vice President and General Manager Franky Marchand said in a statement last week. “No one is gaining from the current situation, and we will consider all options related to the bargaining process.”

 ?? (AP) ?? In a file photo, workers install parts on a truck on the Volvo truck assembly line at the Volvo plant in Dublin, Virginia.
(AP) In a file photo, workers install parts on a truck on the Volvo truck assembly line at the Volvo plant in Dublin, Virginia.

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