Union deal saves auto workers' jobs

CAMI Automotive Inc. employees assemble a 2010 GMC Terrain after a C$90 million investment announcement was made in Ingersoll November 9, 2009. General Motors Co said on Monday that it would invest C$90 million ($85.1 million) to expand a joint venture plant in Canada where it builds the Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain crossovers. GM also said it would recall about 150 workers to the CAMI Automotive plant in Ingersoll, Canada, a joint venture with Suzuki Motor that has about 2,000 hourly workers. REUTERS/Mike Cassese (CANADA TRANSPORT POLITICS EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS)

CAMI Automotive Inc. employees assemble a 2010 GMC Terrain after a C$90 million investment announcement was made in Ingersoll November 9, 2009. General Motors Co said on Monday that it would invest C$90 million ($85.1 million) to expand a joint venture plant in Canada where it builds the Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain crossovers. GM also said it would recall about 150 workers to the CAMI Automotive plant in Ingersoll, Canada, a joint venture with Suzuki Motor that has about 2,000 hourly workers. REUTERS/Mike Cassese (CANADA TRANSPORT POLITICS EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS)

Published Sep 21, 2012

Share

The Canadian Auto Workers union, which reached an agreement earlier this week with Ford, has now struck a deal with GM that will preserve full employment as well as create 1750 new jobs.

“We finally reached a tentative agreement,” CAW president Ken Lewenza told reporters in Toronto, adding that workers had maintained their benefits as management had agreed to a “new, higher proposal.”

He then turned to Chrysler, calling on it to “get serious” and adopt the pattern agreement reached with the other two automakers.

Under so-called pattern bargaining, the union seeks a deal with one auto company and then asks for identical terms from the other two in order to remove labour costs from the competition formula in the auto sector.

“This was a difficult couple of days.”

Lewenza said the union had threatened to strike if its demands were not met.

The GM deal must still be approved by the company's 5600 Canadian employees, who are expected to vote this weekend.

The Ford deal includes no base wage increases for workers, but they will get a cost of living increase of about $2000 (R17 000) to be paid out at contract's end in September 2016.

Lewenza also said Ford planned to add 600 jobs at its Canadian plants by 2016.

The CAW currently represents 21 000 workers at Ford, GM and Chrysler. - AFP

Related Topics:

ford