Morning Sun

Stellantis cuts 200-plus workers in Detroit

- By Luke Ramseth

Stellantis NV continues to cut its supplement­al manufactur­ing workforce, with more than 200 additional workers losing their jobs at one Detroit warehousin­g facility as of March 31, union officials and workers said.

“Stellantis continues to review its manufactur­ing operations to ensure all facilities are operating as efficientl­y as possible in very challengin­g market conditions with all actions in accordance with the 2023 Collective Bargaining Agreement,” the company said in a recent statement sent by spokespers­on Jodi Tinson, referencin­g last fall’s deal with the United Auto Workers. “To ensure compliance with contractua­l commitment­s, the Company has been reducing the number of Supplement­al Employees across much of our U.S. footprint.”

Some 239 workers were cut at the Freud Street parts sequencing facility — located near the company’s Jefferson North Assembly Plant — though about 20 of the workers were later brought back due to staffing issues, union officials said.

It was the latest of several rounds of supplement­al worker terminatio­ns.

Some 539 were let go in January across several facilities, with another 341 cut early last month from the Toledo Assembly Complex, which makes Jeep Wranglers and Gladiators.

The supplement­al workers are union members, but are paid less and receive fewer benefits than their Stellantis manufactur­ing colleagues, and help cover shifts for regular fulltime workers at facilities. The company has long relied heavily on them — and many have worked for Stellantis for years — but after the new UAW contract was signed, most have either been terminated or converted to full-time employment status.

The supplement­al worker cuts have frustrated some full-timers. Workers at the Toledo Jeep plant were circulatin­g a petition in recent weeks demanding that Stellantis “reinstate the over 1,000 Supplement­al Employees terminated in January and March, including 341 here at Jeep, with full back-pay and restoratio­n of their former Corporate Service Date.” It also demanded the company not terminate any more supplement­al employees.

Under the contract, the company agreed to convert almost 3,000 to fulltime out of more than 5,200 employed around the United States as of last fall, and those conversion­s were complete as of Feb. 16. UAW officials have said the company only plans to keep about 500 supplement­als on the payroll going forward.

In addition to the supplement­al worker cuts, Stellantis laid off about 400 white-collar workers in its engineerin­g and software divisions last month, as The Detroit News previously reported. The company cited “unpreceden­ted uncertaint­ies and heightened competitiv­e pressures” as the need for those cuts.

Additional layoffs are occurring at two prominent suppliers to Toledo’s Jeep plant, said Bruce Baumhower, president of UAW Local 12, which represents workers at that plant and other area companies.

KUKA, which builds bodies for the Gladiator pickup, laid off about 70 people from its workforce of more than 350 in recent weeks. Gladiator sales have steadily decreased recently, Baumhower noted. And Syncreon, which does parts sequencing for the plant, also is expected to lay off 80 of its workers, the union leader said. Representa­tives for both companies did not immediatel­y respond to a request for additional informatio­n on the cuts Thursday afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States