Santa Fe New Mexican

Headed for picket line

Union votes to strike at GM’s U.S. plants; negotiatio­ns will continue

- By Tom Krisher

Roughly 49,000 workers at General Motors plants in the U.S. planned to go on strike overnight, but talks between the United Auto Workers and the automaker will resume.

About 200 plant-level union leaders voted unanimousl­y in favor of a walkout during a meeting Sunday morning in Detroit. Union leaders said the sides were still far apart on several major issues and they apparently weren’t swayed by a GM offer to make new products at or near two of the four plants it had been planning to close, according to someone briefed on the matter.

“We stood up for General Motors when they needed us most,” union Vice President Terry Dittes said in a statement, referring to union concession­s that helped GM survive bankruptcy protection in 2009. “Now we are standing together in unity and solidarity for our members.”

UAW spokesman Brian Rothenberg said Sunday evening that contract talks would resume at 10 a.m. Monday, but the strike was still expected to go ahead.

GM on Friday offered to build a new allelectri­c pickup truck at a factory in Detroit that is slated to close next year, according someone who spoke to the Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because that person wasn’t authorized to disclose details of the negotiatio­ns, which hadn’t been released to the public. The automaker also offered to open an electric vehicle battery plant in Lordstown, Ohio, where it has a plant that has already stopped making cars. The new factory would be in addition to a proposal to make electric vehicles for a company called Workhorse, the person said.

It’s unclear how many workers the two plants would employ. The closures, especially of the Ohio plant, have become issues in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign. President Donald Trump has consistent­ly criticized the company and demanded that Lordstown be reopened.

The UAW union said it would strike for fair wages, affordable health care, profit sharing, job security and a path to permanent employment for temporary workers.

In a statement, GM also said the offer made to the union on Saturday included more than $7 billion in U.S. factory investment­s and the creation of 5,400 new positions, a minority of which would be filled by existing employees. GM would not give a precise number. The investment­s would be made at factories in four states, two of which were not identified. The statement also said the company offered “best in class wages and benefits,” improved profit sharing and a payment of $8,000 to each worker upon ratificati­on. The offer included wage or lump sum increases in all four years of the deal, plus “nationally leading” health benefits.

The announceme­nt came hours after the union let its contract with GM expire Saturday night.

If there is a strike, picketers would shut down a total of 53 GM facilities, including 33 manufactur­ing sites and 22 parts distributi­on warehouses. GM has factories in Michigan, Ohio, New York, Kentucky, Tennessee, Texas, Missouri, Indiana and Kansas.

On Saturday, Dittes, the union’s chief bargainer, said in a letter to GM members that after months of bargaining, both the union and GM were far apart on issues such as wages, health care, temporary employees, job security and profit sharing. The letter to members and another one to GM were aimed at turning up the pressure on GM negotiator­s.

A strike would bring to a halt GM’s U.S. production, and would likely stop the company from making vehicles in Canada and Mexico as well. That would mean fewer vehicles for consumers to choose from on dealer lots, and it would make it impossible to build specially ordered cars and trucks.

The strike would be the union’s first since a two-day work stoppage at GM in 2007.

On Friday, union leaders extended contracts with Ford and Fiat Chrysler indefinite­ly, but the pact with General Motors was still set to expire Saturday night. The union picked GM as the focus for bargaining because it is more profitable than Ford and Fiat Chrysler.

Talks between the union and GM were tense from the start, largely because GM plans to close four U.S. factories, including the one on the Detroit border with the enclave of Hamtramck, and Lordstown. The union has promised to fight the closures.

 ?? JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP ?? Flint resident Jashanti Walker, who has been a first shift team leader in the body shop for two years, demonstrat­es with more than a dozen other General Motors employees outside of the Flint Assembly Plant on Sunday in Flint, Mich. The United Auto Workers union says its contract negotiatio­ns with GM have broken down, and its members will go on strike just before midnight Sunday.
JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP Flint resident Jashanti Walker, who has been a first shift team leader in the body shop for two years, demonstrat­es with more than a dozen other General Motors employees outside of the Flint Assembly Plant on Sunday in Flint, Mich. The United Auto Workers union says its contract negotiatio­ns with GM have broken down, and its members will go on strike just before midnight Sunday.

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