San Diego Union-Tribune

FORD PLANNING TO ADD 6,200 JOBS IN OHIO, MICH. AND MO.

More EVs, redesigned combustion-engine models to be built

- BY TOM KRISHER & PATRICK ORSAGOS Krisher and Orsagos write for The Associated Press.

Ford will add 6,200 factory jobs in Michigan, Missouri and Ohio as it prepares to build more electric vehicles and roll out two redesigned combustion-engine models.

The company says it will invest $3.7 billion in the three states between now and 2026. It also will convert about 3,000 temporary workers to full-time status with pay raises and benefits.

A factory in Avon Lake, Ohio, near Cleveland, will be expanded so it can build an unidentifi­ed new electric commercial vehicle, with 1,800 new jobs. Ninety more jobs will be added in Lima and Sharonvill­e, Ohio.

A plant in Claycomo, Mo., near Kansas City, that makes big electric and combustion-engine Transit vans will get a third shift of 1,100 workers to handle increased demand.

In Michigan, Ford Motor Co. plans to add 2,000 jobs at three assembly plants, and an additional 1,200 at other facilities.

A factory in the Detroit suburb of Wayne that now builds the Ranger midsize pickup will see investment and jobs to make a new Ranger. A plant in Flat Rock south of Detroit will make a new version of the Mustang muscle car. And Ford’s Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn also will see investment and jobs so it can build more F-150 Lightning electric pickups to meet unexpected­ly high demand. The company also will add 600 jobs at a new parts packaging facility in Monroe, Mich., and another 600 at several Michigan component plants.

It’s part of Ford’s plan to be able to make 2 million electric vehicles per year globally by 2026.

Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford Blue, the company’s division that makes internal combustion vehicles, said the EV investment­s are needed in part because Ford underestim­ated demand for EVs.

As soon as Ford opened reservatio­ns for the electric F-150, it began planning to expand the Dearborn plant that makes them, he said. “The reservatio­ns were so much higher than the (production) capacity that we had put in,” Galhotra said. “This is the first time in my career that we were expanding the plant before the plant was built.”

Ford stopped taking reservatio­ns for the F-150 Lightning at 200,000, and it’s now converting reservatio­ns to orders. About two-thirds of those contacted so far are converting, but the company said it didn’t have an exact number. In addition, the Mustang Mach-E SUV and E-Transit vans are sold out for the year,

Galhotra said.

Like other automakers, Ford finds itself adding workers to build both internal combustion and electric vehicles as the industry makes a transition to battery power, said Kristin Dziczek, a policy adviser with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago who follows the industry.

Although studies show that automakers will need fewer workers to build electric vehicles because there are fewer moving parts, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean big layoffs down the road, Dziczek said. Automakers are producing many of their own EV parts such as axles and electric motors in North America to avoid pandemic-related supply chain disruption­s overseas, creating new jobs. Plus there will be worker retirement­s over the next decade during the transition, Dziczek said.

 ?? DAVID RICHARD AP ?? Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford Blue, the division that makes internal combustion vehicles, speaks on Thursday.
DAVID RICHARD AP Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford Blue, the division that makes internal combustion vehicles, speaks on Thursday.

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