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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Strike Over: Did UAW Sell Out Future Auto Workers to Protect Current Membership?

By Max Fraser, The Nation. Posted September 26, 2007.


The details of UAW's deal with GM haven't been made public, but reports suggest a troubling possibility for one of the few industries with high-paying manufacturing jobs ...
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The UAW's national strike against General Motors came to a quick end at 4 a.m. today, with the announcement that a tentative agreement had been reached. Though most details of the agreement are not yet available, it does include a provision for the creation of a VEBA health care trust. UAW President Ron Gettelfinger has assured his membership and the New York Times that the deal "will absolutely protect their jobs and keep jobs from being reduced." But he has not provided specific information on the job security guarantees the union was seeking when it walked out Monday morning.

According to a report in the Detroit Free Press, the deal also includes an attrition program to clear out current workers whose positions will be re-classified as "non-core" and their wages reduced, while implementing a two-tier wage scale and benefits packages for new hires.

If this is the case, and pending any further details that emerge on the agreement, the UAW leadership would appear to have acquiesced on GM's two most significant demands--the VEBA trust and the two-tier wage plan--and will now have to see if it can sell its membership on a disappointing contract that is sure to enflame dissidents within the union who have already been critical of the way Gettelfinger has handled negotiations.

Assuming the contract is ratified, expect Ford and Chrysler to quickly follow suit with their own health care liabilities; and the UAW's already diminished position in the domestic auto industry to be rendered even more irrelevant after effectively selling out future auto workers for the sake of the current membership.

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It's events such as this one that
Posted by: Gegner on Sep 27, 2007 10:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
makes the average worker question the value of union membership.

Once again the company gets what it wants while giving nothing in return....or like many unionized employers, the job itself is their 'gift' to their employees.

Somehow, union leadership doesn't seem to understand that the duespaying workers are the lifeblood of the company.

I've seen this sort of thing play itself out before (IUE/GE.)

The Union kept giving until there weren't enough members to support the union hall...which was sold. The Lynn plant went from 40,000 workers to 2,000...so much for 'job protection' launguage.

The ironic ultimate outcome here is GE now finds itself unable to elevate its share price..could this be due to 'Neutron Jack' eliminating all the 'value' (employees) from the company?

Could this be what's really 'plaguing' GM and other US automakers? Is the relentless pursuit of profits (at the expense of the employee) turning them into hollowed out shells of their former might?

Sure looks that way.

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