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WSWS : News
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America
Union agrees to plant closure, concessions
US Goodyear strike ends
By Shannon Jones
3 January 2007
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After a 12-week strike, 14,000 Goodyear workers at 10 US plants
voted to ratify a three-year contract with the global tire maker.
The United Steelworkers of America (USWA) did not release the
vote count, but indicated that at least one third of the workers
voted to oppose the contract, which accepts the destruction of
more than a thousand jobs and other wage and benefit concessions.
Meanwhile, 400 striking Goodyear workers in Canada are voting
on a separate agreement.
Following the announcement of the ratification, Goodyear share
prices jumped 98 cents, to their highest level in one year. Goodyear
CEO Robert Keegan praised the deal, saying it would make the company
a strong global competitor.
The USWA surrendered its stated goal of preventing further
plant closings and agreed to the closure of the Tyler, Texas plant,
after a one-year delay, which will result in the loss of some
1,100 jobs. It also agreed to a two-tier wage structure that will
slash pay and benefits for new hires at a time when a large percentage
of current Goodyear workers are approaching retirement age and
are set to be replaced with younger workers, who will make substantial
lower wages. These measures alone will save the company hundreds
of millions of dollars.
The strike was conducted in such a way as to have the minimum
impact on Goodyears operations. No serious attempt was made
to halt production at the plants involved, where the company was
able to maintain partial operations using strikebreakers and supervisory
personnel, and production continued at Goodyears non-union
facilities. The USWA limited its solidarity actions
to the standard toothless consumer boycott.
In comments on web logs and in the news media, Goodyear workers
expressed particular concern over the establishment of the two-tier
system, justifiably fearing that it would lead to frictions between
older and younger workers and provide the company with an additional
incentive to get rid of more senior workers.
Given the miserable settlement, a number of Goodyear workers
expressed the well-founded suspicion that the prolonged character
of the strike was due largely to the determination of the USWA
bureaucracy to protect its own interests, not concern for workers.
The latest agreement follows concessions made in the 2003 contract,
when Goodyear was facing bankruptcy. At the time the USWA agreed
to plant closures that resulted in the loss of some 6,000 jobs
and concessions totaling $2 billion.
Since that time the company returned to profitability, but
it has continued to insist on the need for drastic cuts.
The agreement contains no general wage increase, although it
provides for the continuation of cost-of-living (COLA) increases.
However, a portion of the inadequate COLA payments will be diverted
to help fund retiree health benefits.
The USWA claims that the new agreement protects retired workers
healthcare benefits. However, a close examination of the contract
shows that this is not the case. The contract establishes a Voluntary
Employees Beneficiary Association (VEBA), which Goodyear
has agreed to fund with $1 billion in stock and cash.
Even with the diversion from workers COLA increases added
in, this amount is less than the total needed to fully fund retiree
benefits. At the same time the contract allows Goodyear to cap
its obligation for retiree health care.
Further, the arrangement takes retiree healthcare out of the
collective bargaining agreement. All decisions regarding premiums
and benefit payments, following a transition period, will be made
by the VEBA, opening the door to wholesale cuts.
However, from the standpoint of the USWA bureaucracy, this
arrangement has many advantages. The VEBA will be independent
of Goodyear. It will be managed by three USWA trustees and four
additional trustees appointed jointly by the company and the union,
providing the USWA bureaucracy with a new source of potential
income and financial leverage that would continue even if Goodyear
filed for bankruptcy.
The entire arrangement is subject to approval by the courts.
A court veto of the proposed VEBA would result in the termination
of the 2006 contract.
The settlement at Goodyear follows the concessions contract
negotiated with BF Goodrich in August. That agreement also established
a two-tier pay scale and provided for the diversion of workers
COLA payments to fund retiree healthcare.
Now the USWA will turn its attentions to negotiations with
Bridgestone/Firestone, which had been suspended during the Goodyear
strike. Earlier this month the company permanently closed its
light truck and passenger tire plant in Oklahoma City as previously
announced, citing low demand.
See Also:
Goodyear strike in
North America enters seventh week
[21 November 2006]
Strike by US and Canadian
Goodyear workers in third week
[23 October 2006]
Workers strike Goodyear
tire plants in US and Canada
[10 October 2006]
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