The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

EVs hold promise, risks for Michigan economy

Autoworker­s unsure if they’ll be job killers — or job creators.

- Peter S. Goodman

WAYNE, MICH. — Last fall, Tiffanie Simmons, a second-generation autoworker, endured a six-week strike at the Ford Motor factory just west of Detroit where she builds Bronco SUVs. That yielded a pay raise of 25% over the next four years, easing the pain of reductions that she and other union workers swallowed more than a decade ago.

But as Simmons, 38, contemplat­es prospects for the American auto industry in the state that invented it, she worries about a new force: the shift toward electric vehicles. She is dismayed that the transition has been championed by President Joe Biden, whose pro-labor credential­s are at the heart of his bid for reelection, and who recently gained the endorsemen­t of her union, the United Auto Workers.

The Biden administra­tion has embraced electric vehicles as a means of generating high-paying jobs while cutting emissions. It has dispensed tax credits to encourage consumers to buy electric cars, while limiting the benefits to models that use U.S.-made parts.

But autoworker­s fixate on the assumption that electric cars — simpler machines than their gas-powered forebears — will require fewer hands to build. They accuse Biden of jeopardizi­ng their livelihood­s.

“I was disappoint­ed,” Simmons said of the president. “We trust you to make sure that Americans are employed.”

Michigan is one of six battlegrou­nd states that could determine the winner of the presidenti­al election. The auto industry has long been at the center of the state’s economic prospects, propelling the middle class through much of the 20th century, before shedding jobs and pushing down living standards in more recent decades.

Today, the fortunes of Michigan’s auto industry revolve around a key variable: Is the shift to electric vehicles a fresh source of dynamism and paychecks, or the latest reason to fret about the fate of U.S. factory workers?

“It’s still early days,” said Gabriel Ehrlich, an economic forecaster at the University of Michigan. “There’s a widespread but not universal feeling that electric vehicles will require less labor to produce. In the long run, we do expect labor demand to decline in auto manufactur­ing.”

Indignatio­n over the prospect of job losses among autoworker­s — a crucial voting bloc — has reportedly prompted the Biden administra­tion to consider relaxing its stringent auto emissions standards, slowing the transition toward electric vehicles. Tighter limits on emissions had been a central plank of the administra­tion’s efforts to force carmakers to manufactur­e more electric models.

In Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, has bolstered training programs to help workers get jobs in emerging areas of manufactur­ing, and especially electric vehicles.

“This is where the world is going to go,” said Jonathan Smith, senior chief deputy director of Michigan’s Department of Labor and Economic Opportunit­y, who is overseeing the creation of a state office to aid workers in forging careers in the electric vehicle industry. “The question is, do we prepare Michigan?”

Former President Donald Trump, Biden’s presumptiv­e opponent, has made inroads with autoworker­s by accusing the White House of pursuing a “job-killing EV mandate.” Many of them dismiss electric vehicles as unwanted, unaffordab­le and impractica­l given the need to charge them. They nurse a sense of grievance that their jobs are being risked for the goal of limiting carbon emissions, while many question the scientific consensus behind climate change.

“It’s scary right now with the whole electric push,” said Nelson Westrick, 48, who works at a Ford plant in Sterling Heights, Michigan, an industrial suburb north of Detroit. “This electric stuff is going to kill, just kill, thousands and thousands of jobs.”

A father of four, he belongs to a group called Autoworker­s for Trump. His plant makes the mechanical works that link the transmissi­on and the wheels of a gas-powered car. If electric vehicles take over, “my entire plant would be nonexisten­t,” he said.

Simmons, despite feeling betrayed by Biden, said she would not vote for Trump, whom she dismisses as an “entertaine­r.” But she also views electric vehicles as antithetic­al to the interests of blue-collar workers.

When Henry Ford pioneered the modern assembly line, he was intent on building huge numbers of cars to push down their prices, allowing his employees to drive them home. Today’s autoworker­s scoff at EVs as luxury items for people with three-car garages.

“There are weeks that I see my daughter two days out of seven days, and I go in there to build something that helps somebody else take their daughter or their son to soccer practice,” Simmons said. “It sucks to build something that you can’t even afford to buy.”

Michigan’s seminal industry

Detroit has been a hub of industry since the late 19th century, owing to its proximity to the Great Lakes, a natural transporta­tion system that allowed raw materials to be brought in from everywhere. Local factories made rail cars, ovens and stoves. Much like Silicon Valley decades later, the city was full of tinkerers and entreprene­urs wielding creative powers in the hunt for wealth.

Henry Ford turned his Model T into the world’s first mass-produced car, and mastered the intricacie­s of the assembly line at his enormous Highland Park factory.

Michigan was transforme­d from an agrarian state into one where virtually anyone willing to hoist a wrench could earn enough in a factory to buy a home and take the family on vacation — often, behind the wheel of a Ford. By 1950, Michigan was the 10th-richest state in per capita personal income, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

But over the following decades, Michigan devolved into an emblem of the forces assailing American middle-class security. Internatio­nal trade and container shipping allowed companies to shift factory production to Asia and Latin America. Union power was decimated, especially as U.S. manufactur­ers moved work to nonunion plants in the South. With more automation, factories produced more goods with fewer hands.

By 2009, a financial crisis and flagging sales had pushed major automakers to the brink of bankruptcy. Michigan’s manufactur­ing jobs had dropped roughly in half from a decade earlier.

And by 2021, Michigan had slipped to 37th among all states in per capita personal income. Detroit became synonymous with the consequenc­es of deindustri­alization, its urban core pockmarked by abandonmen­t.

Ford’s Highland Park factory today sits vacant, its broken windows looking out on cracked pavement. A nearby shopping mall, the Model T Plaza, includes a payday lender and an outlet where people sell their plasma.

But across the street from the lifeless factory, a job center refers those seeking work to community colleges offering training for positions in electric vehicle and battery plants.

“There’s a lot of opportunit­ies out there,” said Malik Broadnax, 27, who was beginning a four-month technical program at Macomb Community College on how to program robots. Tuition was almost entirely covered by a state grant.

Broadnax had worked lowwage jobs — cleaning hotel rooms, changing tires. After he finishes the program, he figures to start in a factory for at least $25 an hour.

In downtown Detroit, Ford has invested nearly $1 billion in the redevelopm­ent of a district known as Michigan Central, including the restoratio­n of a magnificen­t yet derelict old train station. A former post office has been refashione­d into a startup incubator where some 80 companies — most of them in the electric vehicle industry — share manufactur­ing space.

Marcus Glenn was preparing to graduate from a course convened inside the building that had trained him for a job installing or maintainin­g EV charging stations. The Biden administra­tion has dedicated $7.5 billion for public stations.

Glenn, 35, saw the training program as his portal to the future, expressing confidence that he would quickly find a job for at least $35 an hour.

“It puts me in the door to this field,” he said. “The sky’s the limit.”

An uncertain future

But how quickly will the promised electric future materializ­e? And how long will the gas-powered automobile industry remain?

Over the next few years, Michigan is likely to see an increase in jobs, because automakers will continue to make gas-powered vehicles even as they add plants to produce electric models and batteries, said Ehrlich, the University of Michigan economist.

Then the picture gets murky.

In one possible outcome, where electric vehicles advance gradually and make up 100% of new car sales by 2050, Ehrlich forecasts, Michigan’s total auto manufactur­ing jobs will increase slightly, to 180,000, and then dip to 150,000.

But if the transition proceeds faster, and if Michigan loses investment­s to states where unions hold less sway, the job losses could be steeper, leaving perhaps 90,000 positions by 2050. That could eliminate another 330,000 jobs in supporting services like insurance and trucking.

Ehrlich hastens to add that, for now, the trend lines look good.

Union leaders echo that stance while vowing to organize workers at more factories. They note that their new contracts with Detroit’s automakers bar the shifting of production of emerging technologi­es to subsidiari­es where employees are not unionized.

Under the new contracts, the top rate of pay will exceed $40 an hour, up from about $32 under the previous deals. Starting pay will exceed $30 an hour as compared to $18 under previous contracts.

“Everyone is going to be in this transition,” said Laura Dickerson, a regional director of United Auto Workers representi­ng a section of southeaste­rn Michigan. “We have to embrace it because it’s coming.”

 ?? NICK HAGEN/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Tiffanie Simmons, who works in a Ford factory that builds Broncos, visits the United Automobile Workers’ local hall in Wayne, Michigan, recently. She is dismayed that the transition to electric vehicles has been championed by President Joe Biden, whose pro-labor credential­s are at the heart of his bid for reelection.
NICK HAGEN/NEW YORK TIMES Tiffanie Simmons, who works in a Ford factory that builds Broncos, visits the United Automobile Workers’ local hall in Wayne, Michigan, recently. She is dismayed that the transition to electric vehicles has been championed by President Joe Biden, whose pro-labor credential­s are at the heart of his bid for reelection.

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