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GM workers in Detroit voice frustration at UAW leadership
By our reporting team
25 September 2007
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A World Socialist Web Site reporting team was at the
Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plant Monday morning when workers walked
out. The plant builds the Buick Lucerne and the Cadillac DTS.
Workers leaving the plant indicated they had been given no
advance warning by the United Auto Workers union that there would
be a strike and complained that they had been kept in the dark
throughout the negotiations.
At 11 A.M. one union official, UAW Local 22 Plant Chairman
Frank Moultrie, appeared at the gate. When asked by a WSWS reporter
to explain the issues in dispute he replied, We havent
been given the details.
Asked to explain why the union wasnt providing workers
with any information, Moultrie replied, We cant have
any discussion in the media. When the time comes [UAW President
Ron] Gettelfinger will make a statement. Theyll give us
the details when theyre ready.

Following the strike announcement, workers left the Hamtramck
plant and congregated, along with others, at the Local 22 union
hall in southwest Detroit. The hall sits across the street from
a huge empty lot where the former Cadillac Assembly plant once
stood. The plant, which once employed 10,000 workers, closed in
1987 and was subsequently demolished. Its sister plantFleetwood
Bodywhere 6,000 UAW members worked at one time, also shut
down that year. The Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plant, built after
razing the Poletown neighborhood, today employs less then 3,000
workers.
The GM closures devastated the area. One out of three people
on Detroits southwest side currently lives below the national
poverty line.
Workers at the hall expressed anger at the lack of information
provided by the union and skepticism over the proposal for a Voluntary
Employee Beneficiary Association (VEBA), under which which the
companies would give the union control of retiree health care
obligations, while paying only a fraction on each dollar.
Reginald, a worker with 22 years seniority who works at the
Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plant, told the WSWS, I dont
want the VEBA. They have had one at Goodyear for only a year and
already they are suing. The union should take care of union business
and the company should take care of company business.
I have watched the UAW get really, really weak. Now it
seems they have union and management together, and that is the
way they want it.
You just get bits and pieces of information from the
union. I get most of my information off the Internet. All you
can do is to try and keep yourself informed as best you can.
John, a worker with 28 years at the plant, said, Two
years ago GM began claiming it was not making enough money. How
do you stay the number one company for 50 years without making
any money?
Theyre making profits whether they are keeping
up with the Japanese companies or not.
The big investors are saying lets make more profits
by cutting these workers. Every one of these executives wants
to make millions. Theyre making more money than can be spent
in an entire lifetime.
The retirees worked under the worst conditions thirty
years ago, with tools that had a maximum torque. They paid their
dues and now the companies want to take their benefits from them.
As for this VEBA, I dont want the union to control
the benefits. We think this is a joke. Look what happened at Caterpillar
where they ran out of money and starting cutting benefits.
Inside the plant we say the union is hee-hawing with
management. Everyone knows that the union is part of management.
Look at the union officials going off and partying at the Black
Lake resort.
I think this strike is just a smokescreen to make like
the union is fighting.
Kelly Williams, a worker at the
Livonia Engine plant said. I hired into Delphi after the
1998 strike, then I transferred to GM. I dont want any wage
cuts and I wont vote for anything like this VEBA if it is
going to take away benefits from retirees.
At Delphi the workers took a $7 an hour wage cut. You
cant raise a family on that. I am a single mother with two
kids. If they cut my wages it would be devastating. I have to
drive from Toledo every day [a distance of 60 miles]. Every month
I was paying $200 for gas. Now Im paying $400. I may be
forced to sell my house.
The Livonia Powertrain plant may be closed if they dont
get a new engine product. There were 1,100 workers there when
I got hired in 1999. Now they are down to 290 with all the people
retiring, taking buyouts and transferring.
Robert Kirby, another Local 22
member with 27 years at GM, said, This VEBA is going to
be paid for by the company handing the union billions of dollars.
People dont trust the union. I heard theyll get millions
just to administer the fund.
Over the last 10 years the union has gone down. They
dont fight like they used to. Years ago when you called
a union representative to get help they would come down to the
plant floor and talk to you first before going to management.
Now they talk to the boss first and work out a deal, or they just
tell you wait a month for an answer.
The company and union turn one plant against the other.
A new car model will go to the plant that is willing to accept
the most cuts, not build the best product. Youve got to
give up wages or your break time to get the job. If not, theyll
close your plant.
They always want us to work for less money. But its
not like we live in a low-cost state. Theyre always talking
about us making $30 an hour, but what about the $600 a month we
pay for gas or the $4,000 we pay for taxes on our homes?
The union doesnt strike at the right time when
it would really hurt the company. They let them stockpile tons
of cars. GM is saying a strike is good because it will allow them
to reduce their inventory.
The company is crying broke but they are making profits
hand over fist. Its like they want to go back to the days
of slavery where the rich sit back and we do all the work for
nothing. Im afraid for my grand kids and what kind of world
they are going to grow up in.
There are billions for the war and nothing for the 50
million poor people who dont have health insurance. The
president is an oilman and everybody knows this is a war for oil.
If there was no oil in the Middle East, the US wouldnt be
concerned with terrorism.
Another senior Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly worker told the WSWS,
There are only 2,500 workers at the plant now, including
skilled trades. We realized that jobs would be eliminated due
to technology, but it seems that whatever we do to make them more
competitive, it is not enough. We gave up COLA, and it is still
not enough. I dont see how a company executive can get a
$10 million bonus and yet you still have a loss.
This two tier system is nothing new. We have temporary
employees making $18 an hour and no benefits. They work them as
temps indefinitely. If they complain, they get somebody else.
We have one full line that is nothing but temporaries, and believe
me, theyre working hard.
See Also:
US auto workers shut down General Motors
[25 September 2007]
US auto workers angered as negotiations
drag on
[24 September 2007]
US auto union extends contract as deadline
passes
[17 September 2007]
The Cerberus-Chrysler deal:
The case for public ownership of the auto industry
[30 May 2007]
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