Current:Home > ScamsDetroit automakers and union leaders spar over 4,800 layoffs at non-striking factories -Secure Horizon Growth
Detroit automakers and union leaders spar over 4,800 layoffs at non-striking factories
View
Date:2025-04-16 11:47:43
DETROIT (AP) — Detroit’s three automakers have laid off roughly 4,800 workers at factories that are not among the plants that have been hit by the United Auto Workers strikes, which have lasted for nearly four weeks.
The companies say the strikes have nevertheless forced them to impose those layoffs. They note that the job cuts have occurred mainly at factories that make parts for assembly plants that were closed by strikes. In one case, layoffs have been imposed at a factory that uses supplies from a parts factory on strike.
The UAW rejects that argument. It contends that the layoffs are unjustified and were imposed as part of the companies’ pressure campaign to persuade UAW members to accept less favorable terms in negotiations with automakers. The factories that have been affected by layoffs are in six states: Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Kansas, Indiana and New York.
Sam Fiorani, an analyst with AutoForecast Solutions, a consulting firm, said he thinks the layoffs reflect a simple reality: The automakers are losing money because of the strikes. By slowing or idling factories that are running below their capacities because of strike-related parts shortages, Fiorani said, the companies can mitigate further losses.
“It doesn’t make sense to keep running at 30% or 40% of capacity when it normally runs at 100%,” he said. “We’re not looking at huge numbers of workers relative to the ones actually being struck. But there is fallout.”
In a statement, Bryce Currie, vice president of Americas manufacturing at Ford, said: “While we are doing what we can to avoid layoffs, we have no choice but to reduce production of parts that would be destined for a plant that is on strike.”
UAW President Shawn Fain countered in a statement that the automakers were using layoffs to pressure the union into settling the strike. With billions in profits, Fain argued, the companies don’t have to lay off a single employee.
The UAW began striking against General Motors, Ford and Stellantis on Sept. 15, with one assembly plant from each company. The next week, the union expanded the strike to 38 GM and Stellantis parts warehouses. Assembly plants from Ford and GM were added the week after that. All told, about 25,000 workers have walked off their jobs at the three automakers.
Striking workers are receiving $500 a week from the union’s strike pay fund. By contrast, anyone who is laid off would qualify for state unemployment aid, which, depending on a variety of circumstances, could be less or more than $500 a week.
“Their plan won’t work,” Fain said. “The UAW will make sure any worker laid off in the Big Three’s latest attack will not go without an income.”
GM said it has laid off 2,330 workers, including 1,600 at a temporarily closed assembly plant in Kansas City, Kansas, that makes the Chevrolet Malibu sedan and Cadillac XT4 small SUV. The plant uses metal parts produced at the GM plant in Wentzville, Missouri, which is on strike.
Other GM facilities that have been affected by layoffs are in Lockport, New York; Toledo, Ohio; Marion, Indiana; Parma, Ohio; and Lansing, Michigan.
Ford said it has laid off 1,865 workers. They include 600 auto-body and parts-stamping employees in Wayne, Michigan, who are not on strike but who have been affected by a nearby assembly plant that has been struck. Other Ford locations with layoffs include Chicago; Sterling Heights and Livonia, Michigan; and Cleveland and Lima, Ohio.
Stellantis said late Monday that it had laid off about 640 workers, including 520 at an engine factory complex in Trenton, Michigan, that supplies a Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio, that is on strike. Other locations with layoffs include a metal casting plant in Kokomo, Indiana, and a machining factory in Toledo.
Fiorani said that if the strike widens, more workers will likely be laid off at non-striking plants. Once metal stamping factories that supply multiple assembly plants have produced enough parts for non-striking facilities, the companies would likely shut them down.
“Once you’ve filled up the stocks for the other plants you supply,” he said, “you have to lay off the workers and wait out the strike.”
Separate companies that manufacture parts for the automakers are likely to have laid off workers but might not report them publicly, said Patrick Anderson, CEO of the Anderson Economic Group in Lansing, Michigan.
A survey of parts supply companies by a trade association called MEMA Original Equipment Suppliers found that 30% of members have laid off workers and that more than 60% expect to start layoffs in mid-October.
Fiorani said that while larger parts suppliers can likely withstand the strike, smaller companies that make parts for the bigger companies might not have enough cash or the ability to borrow to outlast the job actions. Some, he said, may have a couple dozen workers “and don’t have billions in value to use as collateral in loans,” he said.
Thus far, the union has decided to target a small number of plants from each company rather than have all 146,000 UAW members at the automakers go on strike at the same time.
Last week, the union reported progress in the talks and decided not to add any more plants. This came after GM agreed to bring joint-venture electric vehicle battery factories into the national master contract, almost assuring that the plants will be unionized.
Battery plants are a major point of contention in the negotiations. The UAW wants those plants to be unionized to assure jobs and top wages for workers who will be displaced by the industry’s ongoing transition to electric vehicles.
veryGood! (873)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- New York library won't let man with autism use children's room. His family called the restriction 'callous'
- WWE Alum and Congressional Candidate Daniel Rodimer Accused of Murder by Las Vegas Police
- Was Facebook down on Super Tuesday? Users reported outages on primary election day
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Are you moving? Don't forget your change of address. Here's how to easily swap info.
- 2024 outfield rankings: Ronald Acuña isn't the only one with elite all-around skills
- Activist to foundation leader: JPB’s Deepak Bhargava to deliver ‘lightning bolt’ to philanthropy
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- 2024 outfield rankings: Ronald Acuña isn't the only one with elite all-around skills
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Houston police chief apologizes for department not investigating 264K cases due to staffing issues
- Proposed transmission line for renewable power from Canada to New England canceled
- Iowa poised to end gender parity rule for governing bodies as diversity policies targeted nationwide
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- When does Biden's State of the Union for 2024 start and end tonight? Key times to know
- US applications for jobless claims hold at healthy levels
- Miami Seaquarium gets eviction notice several months after death of Lolita the orca
Recommendation
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Federal Reserve’s Powell: Regulatory proposal criticized by banks will be revised by end of year
Alabama lawmakers have approved a school choice program
Canadian town mourns ‘devastating loss’ of family killed in Nashville plane crash
What to watch: O Jolie night
Iditarod musher Dallas Seavey penalized for not properly gutting moose that he killed to protect his dogs
The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra will tour Asia for the first time in June
Democrats walk out of Kentucky hearing on legislation dealing with support for nonviable pregnancies