Tag Archives: United Auto Workers

Nissan to increase pay at Tenn. and Miss. plants

Nissan Motor Co. will raise pay for its employees in Mississippi and Tennessee.

The company has told its employees it will increase their wages starting in October at its Canton, Miss., and Smyrna, Tenn., assembly plants, as well as its Decherd, Tenn., engine plant.

Nissan says pay will go up by 55 cents an hour for production employees and 65 cents an hour for maintenance technicians, spokesman Justin Saia said. That’s about a 2 percent increase over the average hourly wage that workers in Smyrna and Canton make now. Production and maintenance workers make $2 an hour less, on average, in Canton than in Smyrna.

The pay raises come as the United Auto Workers try to unionize workers at the Canton and Smyrna plants. The UAW has appealed to Mississippi workers in part by noting the pay gap between Mississippi and Tennessee plants. So far, the union has not filed for an election at either plant. Nissan has said it pays less in Mississippi because wages in general are lower in the state.

It’s the first raise for Nissan’s American workers since 2006. The company says auto sales are improving and the economy is strengthening.

“Obviously, that means more stability and security for all of our employees and an even bigger economic impact on the state of Mississippi,” Dan Bednarzyk, the head of Nissan’s Mississippi operations, told members of the Mississippi Economic Council during a Thursday meeting.

Nissan and its contractors employ 5,200 workers in Canton, more than 6,000 in Smyrna and more than 1,400 in Decherd. Those totals include a number of contract employees who don’t work directly for Nissan. The company has ramped up hiring in the past two years, as auto sales increase, Nissan tries to shift production from Japan to the United States, and the company tries to capture 10 percent of the U.S. market. More hires are planned in Canton as the company moves to start assembling the Murano model in late 2014.

Saia said all workers, including contract workers, will receive what Nissan calls “recognition payments” in June. Those bonus payments were stopped for a time during the recession.

Nissan says production workers in Canton now make an average of $24.47 an hour, while maintenance workers make $28.49, on average. In Smyrna, the company says production workers make $26.47 on average, while maintenance workers make $30.49 on average.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/wE0O9ng0DYA/

Another Union Is Mad at General Motors

By John Rosevear, The Motley Fool

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It seemed like a completely well-intentioned remark, the kind of thing that any concerned global CEO would say.

But when General Motors CEO Dan Akerson said that GM is making “contingency plans” for its operations in South Korea as tensions in the region rise, he may have opened a big can of worms.

Now, leaders of GM‘s Korean union are hopping mad, complaining that Akerson is trying to bully them into concessions ahead of annual wage talks.

That could turn out to be another headache for GM in one of the company’s most important global outposts.

Korea is big part of GM’s global operation
GM doesn’t sell all that many cars in South Korea, but it’s still the country’s largest automaker after local giants Hyundai and Kia, which are corporate cousins. GM‘s five Korean factories produce almost 1.5 million vehicles a year, most of which are exported to markets around the world – including the United States.

In fact, on a global basis, South Korea produces more than 40% of the new vehicles wearing a Chevrolet badge every year. Many of those Chevys are exported to Europe, where Chevrolet is positioned as an entry-level brand priced below GM‘s German-based (and mostly Europe-built) Opels.

GM Korea, in other words, is heavily dependent on conditions in faraway markets. As a result, GM wants its Korean operation to be as flexible as possible. But the local union takes a more parochial view – and GM‘s union leaders in Korea have been fiercely resistant to the auto giant’s push to change.

Union: Akerson’s comments were a threat
What Akerson said last week was that the company was considering “contingency plans”, including the possibility of moving its Korean operations, should tensions with North Korea continue to rise. GM‘s Korean headquarters is only about 20 miles from the demilitarized zone that separates South Korea from the communist North, and – at least to this Western observer – it seems prudent for Akerson to be concerned about the safety of GM‘s employees there.

But the union didn’t take it that way. A union spokesperson told Reuters that Akerson’s remarks were intended “to make the union feel jittery” and characterized them as “a threat”. Such remarks are typical for the Korean union, which has taken a bellicose approach to negotiating with GM.

GM executives have said that they would like a much more “collaborative” relationship with the Korean union, more like GM‘s relationship with the United Auto Workers here in the U.S., where the union acknowledges the realities of the global auto business and works with the company to get the best situation it can for its members.

But that’s not how it has gone so far.

The upshot: another headache brewing for GM
GM‘s labor costs in Korea have risen sharply in recent years, a result of relentless pressure from the union that has included litigation. GM Korea executives have openly questioned whether continued investment in Korea is the …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Report: VW's Browning says TN workers to decide whether they want union

By Zach Bowman

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Jonathan Browning, Volkswagen North America CEO, has said that workers at the company’s Chattanooga, Tennessee manufacturing facility will decide if they want union representation. Browning made the comment while speaking to reporters at the New York Auto Show, according to Reuters. Browning also made it clear that the United Auto Workers isn’t the only option open to employees at the plant.

“If employees vote in favor of formal representation, then it’s important to understand that there are a number of alternatives that may or may not include the UAW,” Browning said.

Technically, the company hasn’t scheduled a vote on unionization at the Chattanooga factory, but Browning says the company is in the early stages of discussions on the matter. The automaker’s board has not discussed the topic in an official capacity.

If the workforce does decide to join the UAW, it would be the first foreign-owned plant to do so. The union has been courting plants owned by foreign automakers for years, but has never managed to sway workers.

VW’s Browning says TN workers to decide whether they want union originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 04 Apr 2013 10:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Report: UAW membership up for third straight year

By Zach Bowman

UAW President Bob King

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The Detroit News reports that the United Auto Workers union has seen membership increase for the third straight year. The organization is now 382,513 members strong, which marks a jump of about 1,800 over 2011. That doesn’t include workers who are represented but don’t have a contract with the union.

UAW membership continues on a steady path of recovery, even in the face of concerted attacks on workers and collective bargaining,” UAW President Bob King said in a statement.

Even so, the union continues to struggle in its effort to garner the support of workers at manufacturing facilities owned by foreign automakers. The Detroit News reports UAW members were handing out leaflets at the New York Auto Show criticizing Nissan for not allowing the union access to plant workers in Mississippi, and we witnessed the exact same tactic ourselves at the Chicago Auto Show earlier this year. King has said that if workers at those facilities aren’t unionized, suppliers and new autoworkers won’t see their wages increase.

Meanwhile, the UAW said it spent around $9.1 million on “political activities and lobbying” in 2012, up from $300,000 in 2011. The jump was thanks largely to the fact that 2012 was a presidential election year.

UAW membership up for third straight year originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Apr 2013 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Report: Audi rumored to buy Alfa Romeo, officials deny it

By Jonathon Ramsey

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C live at Geneva Motor Show reveal

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For more than two years, Volkswagen has been making public statements about its willingness to buy Alfa Romeo and quadruple the Italian brand’s sales, and for just as long, Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne has replied with some version of “Mr. Piëch, drop it.” According to a report in Ward’s Auto, all that jousting might be over: it claims that sources close to both Marchionne and Audi CEO Rupert Stadler admit that the two are in talks for Audi to buy not just Alfa Romeo, but a production plant in Italy. In fact, a final deal could possibly include partsmaker Magnetti Marelli.

Against that backdrop, a report by German news weekly Stern quotes a Fiat spokesmen as saying it doesn’t comment on rumors and an Audi rep has said flatly that “There is no substance in the news.” If a sale is being arranged, the timing would seem to point to how eager Fiat is to raise cash to complete its major initiatives. Even though Alfa Romeo continues to delay its return to the US, it just showed off the production version of the 4C at the Geneva Motor Show (shown above) and said that preferred Fiat dealerships here would get them. Then there’s Alfa’s recently concluded deal with Mazda to develop a roadster based on the next generation MX-5 Miata – a deal that would seem to help both the Italian and Japanese brands.

The monetary issues are troublesome, though. Fiat is taking a beating in the European market and its weak-kneed balance sheet is delaying gotta-have-it products like the Jeep Cherokee. Fiat has been talking to banks about getting money to buy the rest of Chrysler and those financial institutions have also raised issues about debt and cash reserves, and the nasty game of chess Fiat is playing with the United Auto Workers (and now the court system about the portion of Chrysler it doesn’t own) could end up blowing another hole in Marchionne’s plans. It is possible that this could finally have convinced Fiat to at least see how serious Audi’s parent company, Volkswagen, is about buying Alfa Romeo. Or it could be just another rumor.

Beyond Alfa Romeo, the report says the deal being discussed would include the rather modern Pomigliano d’Arco plant built just for the production of Alfa Romeos. Audi’s interest in Magnetti Marelli is claimed to be because the German brand wants a components maker and it would also like to establish an R&D center in Italy, where its holdings already include Lamborghini, Ducati and the styling house Italdesign-Guigiaro.

Audi rumored to buy Alfa Romeo, officials deny it originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 28 Mar 2013 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Report: Chrysler's internal documents question Ram quality as workers protest

By Zach Bowman

2013 Ram 1500 - front three-quarter view

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Chrysler is reportedly having a hard time ramping up production of its 2013 Ram 1500. According to The Detroit News, only 16 of the 58 trucks built at the Warren Truck Assembly Plant during the model’s first hour passed final inspection. While quality eventually improved over the course of the day, just over half of the units built on Thursday were approved for shipment. Even with workers ordered to stay late to fix their mistakes, some 1,078 units remained outside the facility with defects. The problem, according to workers at the plant, is morale.

According to the report, Chrysler recently changed the shift schedule at the plant and workers are unhappy with the new situation. The new plan has workers split into three shifts, each covering four 10-hour days. With the shifts staggered, some workers now have to work nights and on Saturdays. Some employees are so upset that they’ve taken to protesting, though the move isn’t sanctioned by the United Auto Workers.

Meanwhile, Chrysler admits there were internal issues with the launch, but that the company was able to contain them. A spokesperson has said “plant quality indicators are getting progressively better.”

Chrysler’s internal documents question Ram quality as workers protest originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 01 Mar 2013 10:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Report: Fiat talking with banks about buying rest of Chrysler

By Jeffrey N. Ross

Fiat and Chrysler logos

Filed under: All that stands in the way of Fiat’s total ownership of Chrysler is a 41.5-percent stake currently held by the United Auto Workers healthcare trust, but according to SFGate.com, Sergio Marchionne is currently trying to raise the capital to complete the acquisition. The article says that a deal could be completed in as soon as 12 months, and the estimate for the remaining stake could cost Fiat SpA around $2.98 billion.

With a goal of completing the deal by the end of 2014, Marchionne is said to be in talks with various banks to help finance some of the deal. According to the report, the banks have indicated a need for a stronger balance sheet, controlled debt and reserve cash.

Two things that don’t seem to be on the table to get the deal completed include issuing new shares to raise the capital or selling a stake in Ferrari. Fiat started with a 20 percent share of Chrysler in June 2009, and it raised its stake up to 58.5 percent in January 2012.

Fiat talking with banks about buying rest of Chrysler originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 13 Feb 2013 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Oscars Excitement Won’t Include “2016: Obama’s America”

By Breaking News

Barack Obama speech 9 SC Oscars Excitement Won’t Include “2016: Obama’s America”

February 24th will mark the 85th Anniversary of the Academy Awards and Hollywood will be festive and totally consumed with it’s annual star-studded tradition that day. Hotels throughout Beverly Hills and the Westside of Los Angeles are all largely booked, and restaurant reservations at Spago, CUT and The Ivy cannot be found for those not really, really rich or highly famous. But sadly, one terrific film project that proved to be a box office smash in 2012 will be completely over-looked: conservative author Dinesh D’Souza’s “2016: Obama’s America,” a gripping documentary produced by Oscar-award winner Gerald Molen (Shindler’s List) that earned a record $33.4 million.

Apparently Hollywood’s bias against anything conservative or anything mildly realistic about Obama contributed to the oversight of even a nomination for the film, which was passed over for 15 other lesser grossing documentaries, and liberal films, including “Sugar Man” (how two Cape Town residents tracked down 1970s singer Sixto Rodriguez), “Detopia” (a story about Detriot’s steep decline) and “Ethel” (a film about the Kennedy family). Of these, “Detopia” is most of interest, though the true sources of Detroit’s decline, namely over-reaching by the United Auto Workers contributing to high-costs and the resulting failure of the auto industry, wasteful public spending by liberal Democratic politicians, unbridled welfare and pension policies leading to public agency bankruptcy, crime, and rampant corruption in City Hall, which are the true causes of Detriot’s hardships, are hardly touched on in the film. Instead “downsizing” and “greedy auto executives” forced to “outsource” manufacturing (by whom may we ask??!!) are made the culprit. And that is an evident lie. But it is a lie that liberal Hollywood easily embraces. Look for Detopia to get the Oscar.

 Read More at CA Political Review . By James V. Lacy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Official: Ford hiring 2,200 salaried US workers this year

By Jeffrey N. Ross

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With its influx of popular new products made in the US, Ford Motor Company has announced that it intends to hire 2,200 new salaried workers domestically this year. This is the biggest increase of salaried workers for Ford in the last 10 years, and it is all a part of Ford’s contract commitment to the United Auto Workers union to bring 12,000 new jobs to the US by 2015.

There were no specifics as to where in the US these job openings will be, but Ford did reiterate that it will be spending $773 million on equipment upgrades and capacity expansion at six plants located in southeast Michigan; as a whole, Ford is investing a total of $6.2 billion to its US assembly plants over the next couple years. According to recently appointed president of the Americas Joe Hinrichs, the new jobs will be focused on areas such as engineering, manufacturing and computer software. Ford will post its job openings online at careers.ford.com, and it will also use social media sites like Facebook and Twitter to recruit new workers, including military veterans.

Scroll down for more about Ford’s planned job growth as well as how to go about applying for said openings.

Continue reading Ford hiring 2,200 salaried US workers this year

Ford hiring 2,200 salaried US workers this year originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 11 Jan 2013 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog