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US autoworkers angered as negotiations drag on
By Jerry White
24 September 2007
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Talks between the United Auto Workers union and General Motors
for a new four-year contract continued Sunday for the ninth day
after the September 14 expiration of the labor agreement covering
73,000 GM workers. It has been 25 years since talks dragged on
this long without a settlement at one of the Big Three automakers.
UAW leaders reiterated Friday that they had no intention of
calling a strike and would remain at the bargaining table indefinitely,
as the contract is extended hour-by-hour.
Anger against the UAW among auto workers, who are being told
nothing by the union, is growing. Behind the backs of its members,
the UAW is preparing to accept agreements that will impose historic
concessions on 180,000 workers at GM, Ford and Chrysler and another
540,000 retirees and dependents. This includes sweeping pay and
benefit cuts for new-hires and a voluntary employee beneficiary
association, or VEBA, that will allow automakers to transfer
responsibility for nearly $100 billion in hourly retiree health
care commitments to a union-controlled trust fund.
A worker at Chryslers Warren Truck plant near Detroit
spoke to the World Socialist Web Site about the mood of
workers in the plants. Just today, while discussing the
negotiations, I spoke about the VEBA with coworkers. We are wondering
what happens when the fund has a surplus or deficit.
We are pretty nervous. It seems that every day we hear
crazy stuff and it is hard to get any understanding of what is
going on. I think both sides want it that waythings like
Super VEBA, pay cut/freeze, and a substantial bonus. They are
playing the membership against each other.
Now they tell us a VEBA is needed to keep the auto companies
going. What happens if that doesnt make them strong? Theyll
just come for more. Look at Northwest Airlinesmanagement
blames the workers for all their problems. How can that be? Workers
and customers are the enemies in this screwed-up world, while
shareholders and CEOs pretend to be victims and are robbing us
blind.
In a memorandum to union locals, UAW President Ron Gettelfinger
urged members to remain patient, while re-stating he would not
release any information on the progress of the talks. We
want you to know once again that we do not take your patience
for granted, and GM should know not to take the patience of your
bargaining committee for granted either.
He continued, In any negotiations, things change from
one day to the next, and until we have a tentative settlement,
or until the negotiations process breaks down, it is difficult
to get information to you, Gettelfinger claimed.
There is little doubt that the framework for an agreement has
already been reached. The overriding concern of the UAW bureaucracy
is the defense of the income and privileges of the small army
of well-paid union officials. At the same time, the union is looking
for sufficient sweeteners from GM so that it can sell
an agreement to its members.
There have been conflicting reports as to whether GM and the
union have worked out differences concerning the VEBA. GM is determined
to spin off much of its $50 billion in obligations to its retirees
and their families. For its part, the UAW is looking to get control
of what would be one of the largest investment funds in the US,
making it, in the words of the Wall Street Journal, a
significant player in financial circles.
Such a scheme would help the bureaucracy offset the loss of
dues income from the massive decline in UAW membership. The Big
Three have cut 600,000 union jobs since 1979 and more than 100,000
since the last contract was signed in 2003.
The VEBA would, however, spell financial disaster for retired
and current autoworkers. The UAW would be responsible to make
up any shortfall in the fund by imposing higher out-of-pocket
expenses on retirees.
The VEBA set up by the UAW at heavy equipment manufacturer
Caterpillar ran out of money, leading to the imposition of high
co-pays and premiums on retirees. The UAW agreed to a 50 percent
cut in the pay of new-hires, saying this was required to replenish
the exhausted fund.
GM and the UAW are apparently haggling over how much the automaker
will contribute to the fund, with GM saying it will pay no more
than 65-70 cents on every dollar it owes. The union is reportedly
pressing the automakers to guarantee future contributions if rising
health care costs outstrip projections. A source close to the
negotiations told the Wall Street Journal that automakers
might be willing to backstop the fund, but any contributions
would be defined and capped and not open-ended.
GM also wants to spread out payments over several years and
finance them with stock and real estate, along with cash. The
UAW has expressed concern over this proposal. Already seen by
autoworkers as little more than a company union, the UAW, if it
took possession of billions in GM stock, would have a direct stake
in driving up the exploitation of its own members in order to
boost the value of its shares.
There are evidently concerns within the UAW leadership that
the rank-and-file will reject the eventual agreement. In 2005,
after the UAW imposed first-time-ever health care concessions
on GM retirees, 49 percent of Ford workers opposed a similar deal.
This prompted the union to drop its effort to reach an agreement
at Chrysler.
The UAW is reportedly seeking some cosmetic guarantees for
factory investments and protection against outsourcing, as well
as a large signing bonus, in order to sell an agreement to its
members.
See Also:
US auto union extends contract as deadline
passes
[17 September 2007]
As contract deadline approaches
US auto union poised to accept sweeping concessions
[14 September 2007]
US auto union accepts massive
wage cuts and layoffs in tentative pact with Delphi
[25 June 2007]
The Cerberus-Chrysler deal:
The case for public ownership of the auto industry
[30 May 2007]
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