Call & Times

GM walkout brings factories and warehouses to a standstill

- By TOM KRISHER and MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R

DETROIT - More than 49,000 members of the 8nited Auto Workers went on strike Monday against eneral Motors, bringing more than 50 factories and parts warehouses to a standstill in the union’s first walkout against the No. 1 8.S. automaker in over a decade.

Workers left factories and formed picket lines shortly after midnight in the dispute over a new four-year contract. The union’s top negotiator said in a letter to the company that the strike could have been averted had the company made its latest offer sooner.

The letter dated Sunday suggests that the company and union are not as far apart as the rhetoric leading up to the strike had indicated. Negotiatio­ns continued Monday in Detroit after breaking off during the weekend.

But union spokesman Brian Rothenberg said the two sides have come to terms on only 2 of the contract. “We’ve got 98 to go,” he said Monday.

Asked about the possibilit­y of federal mediation, President Donald Trump, said it’s possible if the company and union want it.

“Hopefully they’ll be able to work out the M strike quickly,” Trump said before leaving the White House for New Mexico. “Hopefully, they’re going to work it out quickly and solidly.”

Wall Street did not like seeing the union picketers. M shares closed Monday down 4.2 percent to 37.21.

On the picket line Monday at M’s transmissi­on plant in Toledo, Ohio, workers who said they have been with the company for more than 30 years were concerned for younger colleagues who are making less money under M’s two-tier wage scale and have fewer benefits.

Paul Kane, from South Lyon, Michigan, a 42-year M employee, said much of what the union is fighting for will not affect him.

“It’s not right when you’re working next to someone, doing the same job and they’re making a lot more money,” he said. “They should be the making the same as me. They’ve got families to support.”

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Jeff Kowalsky ?? Picketers outside of the General Motors Hamtramck Assembly plant in Detroit on Sept. 15, 2019.
Bloomberg photo by Jeff Kowalsky Picketers outside of the General Motors Hamtramck Assembly plant in Detroit on Sept. 15, 2019.

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