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workers shouted down officials from the United Auto Workers union and drove them from the meeting—all the forces of the establishment have united to intimidate the workers at the General Motors stamping plant into taking wage and benefit cuts. “When GM announced in 2007 that it would close the plant, nobody said anything. Now that the auto workers are putting up a fight, all of a sudden the politicians can only talk about how they want us to accept the contract so the plant can stay open,” said Carla, an autoworker at the plant.
Meanwhile, workers’ anger has only grown toward the UAW, which is attempting to reopen the plant’s contract despite the fact that they voted 384-22 against the proposal in May.
“The UAW is doing this because they own stock in GM, and they want to keep their business coming in,” said Todd, a worker with ten years. “Once they finish the deal, they’ll build another 100-million-dollar golf course with our strike fund.”
“The union bureaucrats are the benefactors of my blood, and the blood of my coworkers and our forefathers,” said Carla. “The worst thing was that the international went behind our backs with this vote.”
Workers received a 14-page ‘highlights’ package of the contract on Friday and Saturday, were invited to a single informational meeting on Sunday, and were expected by the UAW to vote on the contract on Monday.
The contract being proposed by the UAW spans five years, compared to the more typical three-year period, according to auto workers. “The contract we signed in 2009 lasts till 2011; it explicitly specifies that when a plant is purchased, it will retain its old contract. Couldn’t these people wait one more year?” asked Mark.
“When you make $15 for a family of five, you qualify for federal assistance; we’re being reduced to poverty,” he added.
“I’d like the see a UAW official do what we do every day; to avoid the molten metal and walk on the oily floors,” said Carla. “I invite anyone who thinks we make too much money to shadow me for a day; this plant is a hellhole. There are cockroaches everywhere and half the bathrooms don’t work.”
Temperatures at the plant, flared by molten metal, often reach 120 degrees, but there are no water fountains, and the plant’s supply of bottled water stays locked up unless outside temperatures reach 90 degrees.
“We have people who pass out there in the plant. In the summer, the heat in there is unbearable,” said Jennifer.
“The rumor is that they took out the water fountains because the pipes were so ancient,” said Mark.
Many of the workers in the plant had been transferred multiple times. Over 11 years as an auto worker, Jackquella, a single mother, has been at four plants. “My work has separated me from my son once,” she said.
Jennifer said conditions for temporary workers were even worse. “I get no vacation pay, no holiday. Right now I make 15.60 per hour. I don’t get raises; I’m on the outside looking in.” Jennifer’s daughter has been uninsured for three years, but can’t get Medicaid. She and her husband have to pay all medical expenses out of pocket.
Despite these difficulties, she says she will stand up for her high-seniority brothers and sisters, who are losing out far more than temps. “If I were to go in there and vote for this contract, I wouldn’t be any better than a scab. For the union to say we’re going to go back to the 1950s is unacceptable.”
Workers said they saw themselves fighting not only for their own conditions, but also for those of all workers. “If one plant folds, it’s only a matter of time before another plant does,” said Mark. “If we let this happen the next move they’ll make is to go to another plant and say, ‘We’ll ship your work to Indianapolis unless you take a pay cut.’
“I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror if I knew I had something to do with another man losing his livelihood,” he said. Full story: http://money.cnn.com/2010/08/18/pf/taxes/bush_tax_cuts_rich/index.htmI applaud these workers for fighting back. I know how they feel because I worked as a temp in a GM plant paying union dues for lower pay, zero benefits and absolutly no representation. The only difference I see in this place and where I worked is that we had a few water fountins and the temperatures were not quite as high but I was near heat treat area with no wall between us so it did get pretty hot, the floors were all oily and when I brought up an unsafe machining operation nothing was ever fixed. Air filters were never cleaned so you breathed in oil and cutting fluids constantly. The work was heavy and things like lifts and carts didn't work or at least didn't work right. WE were supposed to rotate jobs to avoid repetative muscle damage but that didn't happen and I worked the same job for six months and damaged both shoulders. All temps are treated horribly and the regular workers have to fight for any little thing. It takes weeks and negotiations and lots of paperwork to get a flickering light bulb replaced in your work area. After six months of working 60 hour weeks I asked for a day off to attend my mother in law's funeral. I was told I could come in a couple hour's late that day. We had a temporary worker's union meeting right after that and the comitteeman announced that temps had no right to expect time off for bereavements or to attend their child's graduation. He said we could remain temporary for years and other plants had temps for over 5 years. He said we should all be gratefull just to have this shot at a possible permanent position with this company. I never went back. GM sold that plant to the Carlyl Group. They have now cut the pay from when I was there to $12 an hour. My husband worked at Navistar and the workers accepted all the consessions but in the end the non-union plant in Huntsville Alabama still got the work and they closed the plant here. My husband (and others) should have according to contract been able to take early retirement but he didn't get it and the union would not help them. They allowed other contract violations before the plant closed that the head union reps would not persue.
Every true believer is someone else's heretic.
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,831 Likes: 180
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,831 Likes: 180 |
The last bastions between the peasants and the Lords are crumbling. Why should anyone here learn a skilled trade when they can make better money flipping burgers? Just as the European Guilds failed, crushed by corporations, so will the Trade Unions fall.
Good coffee, good weed, and time on my hands...
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