Labor strikes will never succeed at US Airways

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Veteran
Contributor
May 8, 2007
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Disenfranchisement and devaluation methods of the various union groups, especially among pilots, will never lead to unified and cohesive job actions at US Airways such as what the UAW has done for the auto unions.

UAW settles with Chrysler, ratifies GM

By TOM KRISHER and DEE-ANN DURBIN

It took two short strikes, but the United Auto Workers union has new contracts with General Motors and Chrysler, and now it will move on to struggling Ford.

The union reached a tentative four-year deal with Chrysler LLC on Wednesday after a six-hour walkout. News of the pact came shortly after the UAW announced that General Motors Corp. workers had ratified their four-year agreement with the company.

But Ford Motor Co., which lost $12.6 billion last year, could be the toughest bargainer yet because of its weakened financial position. Industry analysts have said that Ford likely will seek a different deal than Chrysler and GM, perhaps with deeper concessions.

Ford spokesman Marcey Evans said Wednesday night the company had not heard from the union on when talks might resume.

A person with knowledge of the Chrysler agreement said it includes some guarantees that vehicles will be produced at U.S. factories, a company-funded union-run trust that will pay much of Chrysler's $18 billion in long-term retiree health care costs, and a lower wage scale for some newly hired workers.

The person, who requested anonymity because the contract has not been ratified by union members, said Chrysler's vehicle guarantees, which translate into job security for union workers, are not as extensive as those given by GM.

The guarantees are in many cases only for the life of current products, the person said. GM made guarantees at many factories that include the next generation of cars, trucks and parts.

The new lower wage scale, the person said, covers new hires who would replace Chrysler Mopar parts transportation workers. Buyout and early retirement offers would be made to current workers in an effort to get them to leave, the person said.

The lower wage scale is similar to the one negotiated by GM, the person said.

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger wouldn't release details of the agreement with Chrysler, which is now 80.1 percent owned by private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP.

"This agreement was made possible because UAW workers made it clear to Chrysler that we needed an agreement that rewards the contributions they have made to the success of this company," Gettelfinger said in a statement.

Chrysler said the tentative agreement, which covers about 45,000 workers and 78,000 retirees and spouses, includes the retiree health care trust, but the newly private company didn't say how much money it will contribute to the trust.

"The national agreement is consistent with the economic pattern and balances the needs of our employees and company by providing a framework to improve our long-term manufacturing competitiveness," Chrysler Vice Chairman and President Tom LaSorda said in a statement.

The UAW said its historic contract with GM, which also includes a retiree health care trust, was approved by 66 percent of production workers and 64 percent of skilled trades workers. The deal was reached Sept. 26 after a two-day nationwide strike.

The UAW's strike at 19 of Chrysler's 24 U.S. manufacturing plants began at 11 a.m. Wednesday, but with an agreement reached six hours later, Gettelfinger said the walkout would end immediately. Workers didn't strike at plants that were already scheduled to be idled.

Talks between the UAW and Chrysler began in July but accelerated last weekend. Among the major issues were the retiree health care trust, the company's desire to outsource parts-trucking jobs, promises that future products will be built at U.S. factories, and parity with health care concessions that were given to Ford and GM two years ago.

Chrysler was considered the wild card in this year's contract talks because it became a private company in August, when Cerberus bought its stake in the automaker from the former DaimlerChrysler AG for $7.4 billion. Analysts predicted Cerberus would push for short-term gains to generate more cash from its investment.

But Ford generally is seen as the weakest of the Detroit Three automakers. It has mortgaged its factories to secure a $23.4 billion line of credit to cover losses and fund its restructuring plan, which calls for closing 16 facilities by 2012. The company has identified 10 of the closures but has yet to announce the remaining six.

Gary Chaison, a labor specialist at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., said the union will almost have to strike Ford now that workers have walked off the job at GM and Chrysler. But Chaison said that's unfortunate, since a strike could do serious damage to Ford.

"I don't think the UAW has fully appreciated how much the industry has changed," Chaison said. "The idea of imposing an agreement by one of them with the threat of a strike might not be really relevant anymore."
 
The UAW is not relevant anymore!

They are completely unrealistic. The Ford contract will be almost impossible to get, and will pale in comparison to Chrysler and GM.