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Tag: United Auto Workers

  • Ford temporarily lays off hundreds of workers at Michigan plant where UAW is on strike

    Ford temporarily lays off hundreds of workers at Michigan plant where UAW is on strike

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    Ford Motor said it had temporarily laid off 600 non-striking workers at its assembly plant in Wayne, Michigan, only hours after other employees at the facility had walked off the job early Friday as part of the United Auto Workers’ historic strike against the Big Three automakers. 

    The labor union launched targeted work stoppages at the plant, along with a General Motors factory in Wentzville, Missouri, and a Stellantis plant in Toledo, Ohio, after failing to reach a new labor agreement with the automakers by a Thursday night deadline. 

    Ford said in a statement that the layoffs in Wayne are tied to the UAW work stoppage, the first time in the union’s history that it has simultaneously launched strikes at all three automakers. 

    “This layoff is a consequence of the strike at Michigan Assembly Plant’s final assembly and paint departments, because the components built by these 600 employees use materials that must be e-coated for protection,” Ford said in a statement Friday. “E-coating is completed in the paint department, which is on strike.”

    Wayne, Michigan, with a population of roughly 17,000, is a suburb about 45 minutes west of Detroit consisting mainly of blue-collar and middle-class families. The Ford plant employs about 3,300 workers, most of whom make Bronco SUVs and Ranger pickup trucks. 

    UAW President Shawn Fain visited the Wayne plant Friday and said the strike will continue until Ford, GM and Stellantis (which owns Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and RAM, along with foreign brands such as Peugeot and Open) lift worker wages and improve job security.

    US-AUTOMOBILE-UNIONS-STRIKE
    UAW union members picket outside the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan, on September 15, 2023. 

    MATTHEW HATCHER/AFP via Getty Images


    Pete Gruich, 56, who has worked at the Wayne factory for 25 years, said working on the assembly line is “hectic, and there’s no down time.”

    “When somebody takes a day off at final [assembly], it takes two people to do that job, sometimes three, because the jobs are so overloaded,” he added.

    Gruich said there is division among employees between those who make higher-tier wages and the ones who earn less. That’s because managers tell lower-tier employees that they’ll move them to the upper tier once a higher paid worker has retired, but that rarely happens, he said. 


    GM CEO Mary Barra defends position amid UAW strike, says company put 4 offers on the table

    05:22

    Tensions were high at the plant for weeks leading up to the strike, Gruich said. On Thursday night, employees represented by UAW’s Local 900 got little work done and were eager to see how labor negotiations would play out, he said.  

    “We basically just sat the whole night until 10 p.m. when Fain decided to strike half of our plant,” he said. 

    Gruich said that shortly after Fain chose their union to strike, managers allowed employees to leave their work stations.

    “We were held in the cafeteria until midnight [and] then they allowed us to go out,” he said. “Nobody was allowed to go back on the floor at that point.”

    Pete Gruich has been an employee at Ford’s Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan, for 25 years. He poses for a picture with UAW President Shawn Fain after Local 900 kicked off a strike against the Big Three Detroit automakers on Friday, September 15, 2023.

    Pete Gruich


    Once outside, the chants in support of the strike began, said Gruich, who noted that the younger workers were generally more animated, while people with more seniority took in the scene in silence.

    Fain hasn’t said why UAW leadership chose the Wayne plant to strike. Gruich said he thinks it’s because workers at the facility also make parts of seven other plants in the Midwest that produce the Ford Escape, F-250 and F-350 vehicles as well as dashboards for the F-150. The parts manufacturing side of Wayne is still operating, but the union could ask those workers to walk out as well, Gruich said. 

    “After like a week or two of Ford not negotiating, they’ll end up shutting down the rest of the plant,” he predicted. “And that will in turn shut down six or seven other plants.”

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  • Thousands of autoworkers go on strike against Big 3

    Thousands of autoworkers go on strike against Big 3

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    Thousands of autoworkers go on strike against Big 3 – CBS News


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    About 13,000 United Auto Workers at plants in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri walked off the job Friday as a historic strike got underway against Ford, General Motors and Stellantis. President Biden is sending top aides to Detroit to help aid in negotiations. Kris Van Cleave reports.

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  • UAW strike brings blue-collar vs. billionaire battle to Detroit

    UAW strike brings blue-collar vs. billionaire battle to Detroit

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    DETROIT — The United Auto Workers strike is bringing a blue-collar versus billionaire battle to the Motor City, just as UAW President Shawn Fain wanted.

    The outspoken union leader has weaponized striking — historically a last resort for the union — after less than 24 hours into a work stoppage arguably better than any UAW president has in modern times.

    It wasn’t by accident.

    Fain, a quirky yet emboldened leader, has meticulously brought the UAW back into the national spotlight after decades of near irrelevance. He wants to represent not just union members but also America’s embattled middle class, which UAW helped create.

    United Auto Workers union President Shawn Fain joins UAW members who are on a strike, on the picket line at the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan, September 15, 2023.

    Rebecca Cook | Reuters

    To do so, he has leveraged a yearslong national labor movement and a growing disgust for wealthy individuals and corporations among many Americans — starting with his first time addressing the union’s more than 400,000 members during his inauguration speech in March.

    “We’re here to come together to ready ourselves for the war against our only one and only true enemy, multibillion-dollar corporations and employers who refuse to give our members their fair share,” Fain said at the time. “It’s a new day in the UAW.”

    Fain’s comments Friday morning as he joined UAW members and supporters picketing outside a Ford plant in Michigan — one of three facilities the company is currently striking — echoed everything he said during that first speech.

    “We got to do what we got to do to get our share of economic and social justice in this strike,” Fain said outside the Ford Bronco SUV and Ranger pickup plant. “We’re going to be out here until we get our share of economic justice. And it doesn’t matter how long it takes.”

    Fain’s upbringing plays into his strong unionism and religious beliefs, which he has growingly talked about with members as he emphasizes “faith” in the UAW’s cause. Two of his grandparents were UAW GM retirees, and one grandfather started at Chrysler in 1937, the year the workers joined the union. Fain, who joined the UAW in 1994, even keeps one of his grandfather’s pay stubs in his wallet as “a reminder” of where he came from. 

    National media and others really started paying attention to Fain when he said the union would withhold a reelection endorsement of President Joe Biden, who has called himself the “most pro-union president in history.” Fain and Biden have spoken and met, but the union leader has not shown much support for the president. In response to comments by the president Friday, Fain said: “Working people are not afraid. You know who’s afraid? The corporate media is afraid. The White House is afraid. The companies are afraid.”

    While many past union leaders have talked such talk, Fain has thus far delivered on his promises to members without batting an eye — causing General Motors, Ford Motor and Stellantis to go into crisis mode this week as the UAW follows through on that promise to members.

    “We’ve never seen anything like this; it’s frustrating,” Ford CEO Jim Farley told CNBC’s Phil LeBeau Thursday as he criticized Fain and the union for what he said was a lack of communication and counteroffers. “I don’t know what Shawn Fain is doing, but he’s not negotiating this contract with us, as it expires.”

    In a statement Friday, Ford said that the UAW’s partial strike at its Michigan Assembly Plant has forced it to lay off about 600 workers.

    “This is not a lockout,” Ford said. “This layoff is a consequence of the strike at Michigan Assembly Plant’s final assembly and paint departments, because the components built by these 600 employees use materials that must be e-coated for protection. E-coating is completed in the paint department, which is on strike.”

    GM CEO Mary Barra echoed Farley’s feelings Friday morning on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

    “I’m extremely frustrated and disappointed,” she said. “We don’t need to be on strike right now.”

    Both CEOs said everything they could to indicate they believe Fain may not be bargaining in good faith without using those exact words, which could justify a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board.

    The UAW in late August filed unfair labor practice charges against GM and Stellantis with the NLRB, alleging they did not bargain with the union in good faith or a timely manner. It did not file a complaint against Ford. GM and Stellantis have denied those allegations.

    Ford CEO Jim Farley: No way we would be sustainable as a company with UAW's wage proposal

    Several past union leaders and company bargainers who spoke to CNBC hailed the way Fain has been able to propel the UAW into the national spotlight, including pausing bargaining for a Friday rally and march with Sen. Bernie Sanders, the progressive lawmaker from Vermont. Sanders, whose surprise 2016 Democratic presidential primary win in Michigan helped cement his national prominence, has lent support to numerous labor movements around the country as he rails against the billionaire class.

    “I think they’re just doing an outstanding job,” said respected former UAW President Bob King, who cited growing support for the union among the public and the union’s own members. “Both those measurements say that UAW communications has been outstanding.”

    UAW members have taken notice — especially after many of them disdained union leadership during and after a yearslong federal corruption investigation that landed two past UAW presidents and more than a dozen others in prison.

    “For all the years that I’ve worked here, it’s never been this strong,” said Anthony Dobbins, a 27-year autoworker, early Friday morning while picketing the Ford plant in Michigan. “This is going to make history right here because we are trying to get what we deserve.”

    Dobbins, a UAW Local 600 union representative, balked at current record offers by the automakers that have included roughly 20% pay increases, thousands of dollars in bonuses, retention of the union’s platinum health care and other sweetened benefits.

    “That’s not working for us. Give us what we asked for,” Dobbins said. “That’s what we want. We have to work seven days, overtime, just to make ends meet.”

    United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, center, poses with Anthony Dobbins, right, a 27-year autoworker, and others as the union pickets a Ford plant in Wayne, Michigan, Sept. 15, 2023.

    Michael Wayland / CNBC

    Key demands from the union have included 40% hourly pay increases; a reduced, 32-hour, workweek; a shift back to traditional pensions; the elimination of compensation tiers; and a restoration of cost-of-living adjustments. Other items on the table include enhanced retiree benefits and better vacation and family leave benefits.

    Automakers have argued such demands would cripple the companies. Farley even said the company would have “gone bankrupt by now” under the union’s current proposals and members would not have benefited from $75,000 in average profit-sharing over the last decade.

    Ford sources said the automaker would have lost $14.4 billion over the last four years if the current demands had been in effect, instead of recording nearly $30 billion in profits.

    Such profits are exactly what Fain has said UAW members deserve to share in. But his strategy to get workers a larger piece of the pie carries great risks.

    “This is not going to be positive from an industry perspective or for GM,” Barra said Friday.

    Many outside the union believe if Fain pushes too hard, it could lead to long-term job losses for the union. A former high-ranking bargainer for one of the automakers told CNBC that it’s nearly guaranteed the companies cut union jobs through product allocation, plant closures or other means to offset increased labor costs.

    “They’re going to have to pay up. The question is how much,” said the longtime bargainer, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity. “This ends up with fewer jobs. That’s how the automakers cut costs.”

    Fain and other union leaders have argued that meeting the companies in the middle has led to dozens of plant closures, fewer union members and a growing divide between blue-collar workers and the wealthy.

    So why not fight?

    “This is about us doing what we got to do to take care of the working class,” Fain said Friday. “This isn’t just about the UAW. This is about working people everywhere in this country. No matter what you do for a living, you deserve your fair share of equity.”

    GM CEO Mary Barra on UAW strike: We put a historic offer on the table

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  • Biden says striking UAW workers deserve

    Biden says striking UAW workers deserve

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    President Biden treaded carefully Friday as he addressed the decision by United Auto Workers to strike, after about 13,000 autoworkers walked off the job at midnight Friday. 

    Mr. Biden, who considers himself the most pro-union president in modern history, said he’s deploying two of his top administration officials to Detroit to assist with negotiations. Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su and senior adviser Gene Sperling are heading to Detroit to work with the UAW and the companies on an agreement. Mr. Biden wants a resolution for UAW workers, but recognizes that a prolonged strike would be bad news for the U.S. economy ahead of an election year, senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe noted.

    “Let’s be clear, no one wants a strike. I’ll say it again — no one wants a strike,” the president said during remarks in the Roosevelt Room, insisting workers deserve a “fair share of the benefits they help create for an enterprise.”

    Mr. Biden said he appreciates that the entities involved have worked “around the clock,” and said companies have made “significant offers,” but need to offer more. At this point, the auto companies are offering a 20% raise, among other things. 

    “Companies have made some significant offers, but I believe it should go further — to ensure record corporate profits mean record contracts,” Mr. Biden said.

    FILE PHOTO: United Auto Workers hold up strike signs right across from the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne
    FILE PHOTO: United Auto Workers hold up strike signs right across from the Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan, U.S., September 15, 2023.

    REBECCA COOK / REUTERS


    The strike began after union leaders were unable to reach an agreement on a new contract with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis. UAW workers want a four-day, 32-hour work week, for the pay of a five-day, 40-hour week, as well as substantial pay raises. They also want more paid time off and pension benefits, instead of 401K savings plans, among other demands. 

    This is the first time in UAW history that workers are striking at all three companies at once, UAW President Shawn Fain said in a Facebook Live address late Thursday night.

    FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Biden visits the Detroit Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan
    FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Joe Biden steps out of an electric Chevrolet Silverado EV pickup truck being shown to him by General Motors Chief Executive Mary Barra during a visit to the Detroit Auto Show to highlight electric vehicle manufacturing in America, in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., September 14, 2022.

    KEVIN LAMARQUE / REUTERS


    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, meanwhile, says Mr. Biden bears part of the blame for the UAW strike. 

    “The UAW strike and indeed the ‘summer of strikes’ is the natural result of the Biden administration’s ‘whole of government’ approach to promoting unionization at all costs,” Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Suzanne P. Clark said Friday. 

    Mr. Biden spoke with UAW leaders in the days leading up to the strike. Asked on Labor Day if he was worried about a UAW strike, Mr. Biden responded, “No, I’m not worried about a strike until it happens.” 

    “I don’t think it’s going to happen,” Mr. Biden said at the time. 

    Other politicians are speaking up, too. On Friday, Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio visited striking UAW workers on the picket line in Toledo. 

    “Today, Ohioans stand in solidarity with autoworkers around our state as they demand the Big Three automakers respect the work they do to make these companies successful. Any union family knows that a strike is always a last resort — autoworkers want to be on the job, not on the picket line,” Brown said. 

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  • Autoworkers strike deadline nears as negotiators rush to avoid historic walkout | CNN Business

    Autoworkers strike deadline nears as negotiators rush to avoid historic walkout | CNN Business

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    Detroit
    CNN
     — 

    With just hours to go before labor contracts expire at America’s three unionized automakers, thousands of autoworkers could walk off the job.

    Those limited, targeted strikes could be enough to grind production to a halt at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, which builds vehicles under the Jeep, Ram, Dodge and Chrysler brands for North America.

    But the uncertainty and confusion underscore the high stakes, with a possible historic strike at all three major automakers, disruptions to the local and national economies, and, perhaps more than anything, a hint at the future of manufacturing jobs in America.

    The union and the automakers continued to negotiate down to the wire on Thursday. GM made a new offer on Thursday afternoon, including a 20% raise, matching Ford’s offer.

    “We don’t want there to be a strike. We’re ready to work until the deadline,” Ford CEO Jim Farley told CNN. “We’d like to make history by making a historic deal, not having a historic strike,” he said.

    And President Joe Biden himself spoke to leaders of the union and the automakers, as a strike could be politically costly for him, as well.

    UAW President Shawn Fain on Wednesday evening announced plans for those targeted strikes at any company that fails to reach a labor deal with the union before contracts expire at 11:59 pm Thursday. Fain suggested the strategy, including the possibility of ramping up strikes as negotiating continues, would give the UAW more leverage. “We have the power to keep escalating and keep taking plants out,” he said.

    But Farley said on CNN Thursday that striking plants that make critical parts could affect workers at downstream assembly plants.

    “We can’t make a vehicle without an engine or transmission or stamping. So those people will, you know, basically be furloughed,” Farley said.

    Slowing or stopping the production of a few engine or transmission plants at each company could be as effective at stopping operations as a full strike at all plants, according to industry experts.

    One engine or transmission location per company might be enough to shut down nearly three-quarters of the US assembly plants, said Jeff Schuster, global head of automotive for GlobalData, an industry consultant.

    “Two plants per company, you can pretty much idle North America,” he said.

    Halting the companies’ assembly lines would likely happen in less than a week that way, Schuster said.

    One advantage for the union of a targeted strike is the potential to save resources and extend a possible walkout. Striking union members are eligible for $500 a week from the union’s strike fund.

    If all 145,000 UAW members among the three automakers were to strike at the same time, it could cost the fund more than $70 million a week, draining the $825 million fund.

    If the companies shut down operations and lay off members who are not technically on strike, those workers could be eligible to receive state unemployment benefits rather than strike benefits, which could preserve the union’s resources.

    Strikers are not eligible for unemployment benefits, but workers on temporary layoff can receive the benefits, which differ by state but would be less than the union’s $500 strike pay. There also are legal questions in different states about qualifying for unemployment.

    An official with Ford told reporters Thursday that under state law, workers in Michigan and Ohio were not eligible to receive unemployment benefits if they were laid off due to lack of parts at their plant caused by a strike. There are some other states, such as Kentucky and Tennessee, where they would be able to receive unemployment benefits, according to the officials.

    But they said none of the Ford UAW members would be eligible for so-called “sub-pay,” which they typically receive during temporary layoffs. Sub pay is far more lucrative, covering most of the gap between unemployment benefits, typically less than $300 a week, and normal company pay, which can be close to $1,300 a week.

    GM CEO Mary Barra sent a letter to employees Thursday saying the company’s latest offer now includes a 20% raise, with an immediate 10% pay hike. The lower paid temporary employees would get $20 an hour, which represents a 20% raise from the current $16.67 an hour they receive. She called the offer “historic.”

    “We are working with urgency and have proposed yet another increasingly strong offer with the goal of reaching an agreement tonight. Remember: we had a strike in 2019 and nobody won,” she said in the letter.

    Farley told CNN the offer from Ford of a 20% raise over the life of the contract is the most lucrative offer the company has made to the union in the 80 years it has been there. But he said meeting the union’s demands of close to a 40% raise, along with a four-day work week and other benefit improvements, would have been unaffordable.

    Farley blamed the union for the lack of progress in negotiations. But the union has blamed the companies for waiting until the end of August or early September to make their first counteroffers.

    The union came up with the 40% raise request based on the increase in the pay of CEOs at the three automakers over the last four years. Ford CEO pay rose 21%, from $17 million for Farley’s predecessor Jim Hackett in 2019, to $21 million for Farley last year. (Farley is the lowest compensated of the three CEOs.)

    Asked why the union workers shouldn’t get the same increases, Farley responded, “We’re really open to huge increases.” As to the 40% increases for CEOs, Farley responded, “I wasn’t CEO four years ago, but we have put on the table huge increases, double digit increases.”

    Ford has not had a strike since 1978; it has more UAW workers than the other two automakers.

    President Joe Biden spoke with Fain and leaders of the major auto companies “to discuss the status of ongoing negotiations,” the White House said Thursday.

    The White House declined to say Wednesday that Biden would support UAW workers if they chose to strike.

    “I’m gonna leave it at, [Biden] believes the auto workers deserve a contract that sustains middle class jobs and wants the parties to stay at the table, to work round the clock to get a win-win agreement,” Council of Economic Advisors Chair Jared Bernstein told reporters during Wednesday’s White House press briefing.

    Biden became directly involved in 11th hour negotiations a year ago to stop engineers and conductors at the nation’s major freight railroad from going on strike and was credited by both sides with a deal being reached at that time. But Biden and Congress had power under a different labor law to keep workers on the job by imposing a contract, a power he used later in the year when rank-and-file rail workers rejected the deal he brokered and again threatened to strike

    The autoworkers fall under a different labor law, one that leaves Biden with no power to stop a walkout. And he has limited influence with the UAW, which has been critical of his push to have the industry convert to electric vehicles, a move that could cost members jobs in the long run.

    In a statement midday Thursday, GM said it remains in “good faith negotiations” with the UAW but cautioned that a strike would be disruptive to its business.

    “Any disruption would negatively impact our employees and customers, and would have an immediate ripple effect across our communities,” a company spokesperson said.

    One sticking point in negotiations is that wages are only part of the gap between the two sides. In some ways it might be the least difficult problem to solve, said Patrick Anderson, CEO of Anderson Economic Group, a Michigan research firm.

    “The difference between the automakers and the unions on wages is a gap that could be closed,” said Anderson. “The differences involving non-wage demands are a gulf, not a gap.”

    The union is attempting to reverse deep concessions that go back as far as 2007. At the time, years of losses had left Ford nearly out of cash, and GM and Chrysler were on their way to bankruptcy and federal bailouts.

    The number one concession the union wants to end is a lower tier of wages and benefits for workers hired since 2007. While top pay for those newer hires, who today make up a majority of membership, is the same as the $32.32 paid to more senior members, it takes many more years to reach that level.

    The union also wants to restore traditional pension plans for those hired since 2007, as the more senior workers now receive, as well as the same retiree health care coverage. And to protect members from rising prices, it wants a return of the cost-of-living adjustments to pay that all employees lost in 2007.

    Even Fain calls those demands “ambitious,” but he said they’re driven by record or near record profits at the automakers.

    Pandemic supply chain disruptions and shortages of some parts, particularly computer chips, have led to record car prices. The average purchase price of a new car in August was nearly $48,000, according to Edmunds. That’s up 30% from August of 2019.

    Automakers have used their limited supply of parts to build vehicles loaded with options to maximize profits. That’s produced a strong bottom line. General Motors reported record profits in 2022, and Ford posted near-record profits as well. Stellantis, a European-based automaker formed in 2021 by the merger of Fiat Chrysler and PSA Group, had 2022 profits up 26% compared to its first year of combined operations.

    A strike that halts production nationwide could also be costly for the automakers at a time of strong demand by car buyers and strong competition from nonunion automakers such as Tesla and foreign brands. GM said it lost $2.9 billion during its 2019 strike.

    While the automakers have done their best to build up inventory at dealerships, car buyers could have trouble finding some of the models they want and could have to wait longer for their choice of colors and options. And limited supplies could put upward pressure on some vehicle prices.

    – CNN’s DJ Judd contributed to this report

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  • Possible strike looms for United Auto Workers as deadline nears

    Possible strike looms for United Auto Workers as deadline nears

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    Possible strike looms for United Auto Workers as deadline nears – CBS News


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    About 150,000 United Auto Workers for Ford, General Motors and Stellantis in Detroit could soon walk off the job if a new labor contract is not reached. The UAW is seeking close to a 40% raise, while the Big Three are offering about half of that. Kris Van Cleave reports.

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  • Higher wages are at the center of UAW’s push for new contract

    Higher wages are at the center of UAW’s push for new contract

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    With just hours left until their existing contract ends, the United Auto Workers and Detroit’s Big Three automakers are still struggling to get over a major speed bump in negotiations: higher wages.

    Ford, General Motors and Stellantis (formerly Fiat Chrysler) have spent weeks in talks with the UAW, mulling over details of a new labor contract that has major implications for the U.S. automotive industry. UAW President Shawn Fain said members deserve hefty pay raises because the auto companies have brought in billions of dollars in profit and boosted CEO pay in recent years. 

    Here’s what you should know about the wages portion of the UAW-Big Three negotiations.

    What is the average U.S. autoworker’s wage?

    In general, factory workers are not salaried, but receive an hourly wage. On average, U.S. autoworkers on manufacturing production lines earned about $28 an hour in August, up $1 from the year prior, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

    For each worker, however, the exact figure varies depending on how long someone has worked for a particular automaker. Under the industry’s tiered wage system, more recent hires start at lower rates of pay than longer-tenured workers.

    Top-tier workers — meaning anyone who joined the company in 2007 or earlier — make roughly $33 an hour on average, contract summaries for the Big Three show. Those hired after 2007 are part of the lower tier and earn approximately up to $17 an hour based on a buildup of 6% annual raises under the last contract. 

    Unlike top-tier employees, lower-tier employees don’t receive defined benefit pensions and their health benefits are less generous. 

    UAW members want the two-tiered pay system abolished, arguing that it reduces lower-tier coworkers to second-class citizens.  

    Loss in real wages

    Adjusting for inflation, automanufacturing workers have seen their average real wages, or wages adjusted for inflation, fall 19.3% since 2008, said Adam Hersh, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute.  That’s because autoworker “concessions made following the 2008 auto industry crisis were never reinstated,” Hersh said, “including a suspension of cost-of-living adjustments.” 

    What’s the average CEO pay for the Big Three? 

    Ford CEO Jim Farley earned $21 million in total compensation last year, the Detroit News reported, while Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares made $24.8 million, according to the Detroit Free Press. GM CEO Mary Barras tallied nearly $29 million in 2022 pay, Automotive News reported. Overall CEO pay at the Big Three companies grew 40% from 2013 to 2022, Hersh said.

    Barras makes 362 times more than the typical GM worker while Tavares makes 365 times more, according to company filings to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Farley at Ford meanwhile makes 281 times more, filings show. 

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  • The UAW in Detroit is barreling toward a strike. Here’s what that would look like.

    The UAW in Detroit is barreling toward a strike. Here’s what that would look like.

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    Autoworkers in Detroit are planning to walk off the job Friday if their union leaders can’t agree on a new labor contract with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis. 

    United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain said during a Facebook Live event late Wednesday that members will use a so-called “stand up” strike strategy in which employees “at a limited number of targeted locations” will be ready to leave their posts starting at midnight ahead of Friday morning. The walkouts will happen at assembly plants and parts distribution centers across the Big Three automakers, he said.

    “Then, based on what’s happening in bargaining, we’re going to announce more locals that are going to bw called to stand up and strike,” Fain said. “These locals will join others that are already on strike, so that our strike at each company will continue to grow over time.”

    Fain said more employees will strike if the Big Three stall the negotiations or continue to send “insulting offers” that don’t meet union members’ requests. 

    If both sides fail to ink a new deal, it would mark the first UAW strike since auto workers walked out on GM in 2019 and culminate in the nation’s largest strike by active employees in 25 years. The strike could cause a surge in car prices, result in $5.6 billion in economic losses for the automakers, according to one forecast and reduce the nation’s GDP by as much as 0.3%, according to Oxford Economics.  

    What are their demands?

    At the top of UAW’s list of demands are hefty pay raises for members. 

    The UAW began this week asking for a 46% pay raise over four years. However, the union has backed off that number and is now asking for a 36% wage increase, said Garrett Nelson, an automotive analyst for CFRA Research. That would play out as an 18% immediate raise followed by annual increases of 4% or 5% for the remainder of the contract, Nelson said in a research note Tuesday. 

    Union demands also include pension benefits for all employees; limiting the use of temporary workers; more paid time off, including a four-day workweek; and more job protections, including the right to strike over plant closings


    What a potential United Auto Workers union strike could look like

    04:32

    The UAW also wants the two-tiered pay system present at all three companies eliminated because members say it unfairly reduces some of their colleagues to second-class workers. Higher tier workers — anyone who joined the company before 2007 — make roughly $33 an hour while anyone who joined after that year is part of the lower tier and make around $17 an hour. Lower tier employees also don’t receive defined benefit pensions and their health benefits are less generous.

    “Most generous offer in 80 years”

    The Big Three haven’t been willing to fully meet union demands, but said they’ve made reasonable counteroffers and are willing to negotiate further. The companies argue that they’re under tremendous pressure to keep costs and car prices low in order to compete with Tesla and overseas automakers. 

    Ford Motor CEO Jim Farley said earlier this week that the company offered UAW members pay increases, elimination of tiers, inflation protection, five weeks of vacation, 17 paid holidays and bigger contributions for retirement — a package he described as the “most generous offer in 80 years.” Farley said Ford made four offers in total but hasn’t heard back from the UAW since its latest offer. 

    “It’s hard to negotiate a contract when there’s no one to negotiate with,” he said Wednesday night. “It was fully competitive with all of the UAW-negotiated settlements, sometimes after strikes, with other industrial companies and we heard nothing.” 

    Stellantis said it’s also waiting on the UAW to respond to its latest offer.

    “Our focus remains on bargaining in good faith to have a tentative agreement on the table before tomorrow’s deadline,” Tobin Williams, senior vice president of human resources, said in a letter to employees Wednesday. “The future for our represented employees and their families deserves nothing less.”

    ford-farley.jpg
    Ford Motor CEO Jim Farley said earlier this week that the company offered UAW members the “most generous offer in 80 years,” but hasn’t heard back from the union. 

    Paul Sancya/AP


    Adam Hersh, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, said the Big Three can afford to pay workers more. In a blog post Tuesday, Hersh noted that the Big Three saw combined profits of $250 billion between 2013 to 2022 and expect to bring in more than $32 billion in additional profits for 2023. Hersh said in the post that the Big Three is arguing that paying workers more would jeopardize their efforts in producing more electric vehicles.

    “Despite all the company tricks, there is more than enough money for them to make EV investments, to pay their workers a fair share, and to maintain healthy profits,” Hersh wrote in the post. 

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  • Autoworkers strike: What to watch for as the clock ticks down | CNN Business

    Autoworkers strike: What to watch for as the clock ticks down | CNN Business

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    New York
    CNN
     — 

    Time is running out to avert a strike that could shut down America’s unionized auto assembly plants and other manufacturing facilities.

    The United Auto Workers contracts with General Motors, Ford and Stellantis expire at 11:59 pm Thursday. The contracts cover 145,000 UAW members at the three companies.

    If there’s no new deal by the contract expiration, the union has said it will start targeted strikes against a undisclosed number of facilities at each company.

    Here’s what to watch as the clock ticks down:

    It might not take much to virtually shut down the output from all the companies.

    The companies operate a complex network of plants that depend on getting parts from different facilities.

    Slowing or stopping the production of a few engine or transmission plants at each company could be as effective at stopping operations as a full strike at all plants, according to industry experts.

    One engine or transmission location per company might be enough to shut down nearly three-quarters of the US assembly plants, said Jeff Schuster, global head of automotive for GlobalData, an industry consultant.

    “Two plants per company, you can pretty much idle North America,” he said.

    Halting the companies’ assembly lines would likely happen in less than a week that way, Schuster said.

    One advantage of a targeted strike for the union is the potential to save resources and extend a possible walkout. Striking union members are eligible for $500 a week from the union’s strike fund.

    If all 145,000 UAW members among the three automakers were to strike at the same time, it could cost the fund more than $70 million a week, draining the $825 million fund.

    With targeted strikes, it’s possible that the companies will shut down operations and lay off members who are not technically on strike. That could make them eligible to receive state unemployment benefits rather than strike benefits, which could preserve the union’s resources. But there are legal questions about qualifying for unemployment.

    UAW President Shawn Fain told his members in a Facebook Live appearance Wednesday evening that if they are not in one of the plants that the union picks to go on strike, they should stay on the job. He said in that case they would be working under an expired contract, rather than on an extended contract.

    Fain said he would announce at 10 pm Thursday which plants have been selected to go on strike. Among the likely targets, Schuster said, are a Stellantis transmission plant in Kokomo, Indiana, a GM transmission plant in Toledo, Ohio, and a Ford transmission plant in Livonia, Michigan. Those three plants have just over 6,000 UAW members on staff, according to figures available from the companies’ websites.

    But there is still a chance no plants will go on strike and no operations will be disrupted. While Fain warned members that a strike appeared likely – “We’re likely going to have to take action,” he said during his remarks Wednesday – he also said there had been movement at the bargaining tables.

    Fain said that all the automakers had boosted the amount they were offering to raise wages, with Ford now offering a 20% raise during the life of the contract, GM is offering 18% and Stellantis is offering 17.5%, although Fain cautioned that still did not meet the union members’ needs, which had started with a demand for an immediate 20%, and four additional raises of 5% each over the course of a four-year deal.

    And all the automakers issued statements saying they want to reach tentative labor deals before the deadline that would avoid a strike. Despite the difference, there is a chance for an 11th hour settlement or settlements.

    There are separate union contracts at each of the traditional Big Three. That means there could be a tentative labor deal reached at Ford and GM that keeps those workers on the job, while the employees at Stellantis could go out on strike.

    Ford has not had a national strike since 1976 and has not had a strike of any kind at its US plants since 1978.

    In contrast, experts say Stellantis, which builds vehicles under the Jeep, Ram, Dodge and Chrysler brands, could see workers walk off.

    “I think there’s a 99% chance of a strike at Stellantis,” said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University’s Industrial and Labor Relations school in Buffalo.

    If the two sides are close to a deal at the deadline, they could agree to a temporary contract extension for hours or even days. That extension could even go on for months, as with the West Coast ports during negotiations with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union last year and earlier this year.

    Fain has repeatedly said that the 11:59 pm contract expiration is a “deadline, not a reference point.” In past negotiations, the union has sometimes chosen only one automaker to strike, while staying on the job at the other two. Once a deal was reached, the union moved to get the other automakers to accept that “pattern” as the basis for their own contract.

    But Fain insists the union will not follow that playbook this time.

    Sometimes one or both sides will walk away before the final minute before a contract expiration. Although the strike might not start until after the deadline, a breakdown of talks could kill the chance for an 11th-hour deal.

    That’s what happened in bargaining in May between the Writers Guild of America, which represents 11,000 writers, and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents major studios and streaming services in the contract negotiations. While the contract was due to end at midnight PDT, the talks ended about three hours earlier.

    Sometimes after talks break down, the parties can return to the table and reach a deal without a strike. That happened in July at UPS, as talks between the company and the Teamsters union ended after a marathon negotiating session in the early hours of July 5. Official talks did not resume for nearly three weeks. But when the two sides met again on July 25, they quickly reached a deal that averted an August 1 strike.

    But a break in talks at any of the automakers at this late date would not be a good sign.

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  • Here’s How The Auto Workers Strike Will Play Out, According To The Union’s President

    Here’s How The Auto Workers Strike Will Play Out, According To The Union’s President

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    The United Auto Workers (UAW) president laid out the union’s strategy for striking the “Big Three” automakers, telling members on Wednesday that they may carry out targeted walkouts to keep the companies off-balance.

    The UAW’s contracts with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, which owns the Dodge and Jeep brands, all expire at midnight Friday morning. The union has said it would strike any company where they didn’t have a satisfactory deal in place by the deadline.

    Never before has the union struck all three companies at once. As HuffPost reported earlier this week, it was possible the union would decide to strike select facilities to disrupt production rather than wage a more costly concurrent work stoppage across an entire company or all three.

    Shawn Fain, the UAW president, said in an online town hall Wednesday that the union would take the targeted approach. He called it the “standup strike” strategy, an homage to the famous “sitdown” strike that began in Flint, Michigan, in late 1936.

    “This is going to create confusion for the companies. It’s going to keep them guessing on what might happen next.”

    – UAW President Shawn Fain

    This is going to create confusion for the companies,” Fain said. “It’s going to keep them guessing on what might happen next. And it will turbocharge the power of our negotiators.”

    Fain said the union would inform local affiliates two hours before the strike deadline on Thursday whether they were expected to strike. Those not told to strike would be expected to hold back.

    “This strike requires us to be very disciplined,” Fain said.

    Although such a strategy would inflict less pain on the auto companies, it would also inflict less pain on workers. The union has a strike fund of $825 million, which would pay workers $500 per week, much less than they earn on the job. The fund could last an estimated 11 weeks if all 150,000 workers under the three contracts were on the picket lines at once.

    With targeted strikes, many members could remain on the job while the union still managed to create production and distribution headaches.

    The UAW’s contracts with Ford, GM and Stellantis all expire at midnight Thursday night.

    The union is trying to reach new four-year agreements with the companies, but Fain said that despite progress, the two sides remain far apart on certain key issues.

    The union has proposed 40% pay increases over the life of the contract to make up for inflation and previous concessions. Fain said Ford had come up to 20%, GM to 18% and Stellantis to 17.5%, but the union still considers those offers insufficient.

    Fain also said the companies have moved on the “two-tier” system that pays newer workers less for performing the same work as veterans. It currently takes eight years to “progress” to the top pay rate. Fain said all companies have offered to cut that timeline in half to four years, but the union has said workers should reach the top rate in 90 days.

    He said other differences remained on the issues of profit sharing, temporary employees and plant closures.

    Ford CEO Jim Farley said in a statement Wednesday that his company had made “increasingly generous” offers to the union, and that he hoped the two sides could avoid “a disastrous outcome.”

    “If there is a strike, it’s not because Ford didn’t make a great offer. We have and that’s what we can control,” Farley said.

    Fain said the union would still consider the possibility of striking everywhere depending on how talks progressed, but he made it clear the union would start with more limited disruptions.

    He said, “Your local will only strike if you are called upon to do so.”

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  • Auto workers could go on strike within days. Here’s what to know.

    Auto workers could go on strike within days. Here’s what to know.

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    The clock is ticking for Detroit’s Big Three automakers to ink a new labor contract and avoid a work stoppage that could cost the U.S. economy billions of dollars. 

    Ford, General Motors and Stellantis (formerly Fiat Chrysler) have until 11:59 on Thursday to reach an agreement or face a potential strike by more than 140,000 members of the United Auto Workers union. The labor negotiations come as car manufacturers are investing billions of dollars to produce electric and hybrid vehicles, a vital market for the companies.

    If both sides fail to strike a deal in the next two days, it could mark the first UAW strike since auto workers walked out on GM in 2019 and culminate in the nation’s largest strike by active employees in 25 years.

    Here’s what to know about a possible UAW strike. 

    What the UAW wants 

    Topping auto workers’ demands is a 46% pay raise over four years. Full-time assembly plant workers at Ford and GM currently make $32.32 an hour, while part-timers earn about $17 an hour. At Stellantis, full-time employees earn $31.77 an hour and part-time workers make almost $16 an hour. 

    Automakers can afford pay raises because each of them has recorded hefty profits this year, UAW President Shawn Fain said.

    “After a decade of hard work by our members, they’ve had massive profits and continued massive profits — $21 billion in the first six months of this year between the Big Three,” he told told reporters in Detroit last week. “Our workers deserve their share of equity in this and they’re not getting it.” 

    Although a sharp pay hike would benefit workers, some experts think it could lead to higher prices for electric vehicles.

    “The big issue for GM and Ford as well as investors is if anywhere near a 40% wage increase gets approved,” analysts with Wedbush Securities said in a report this week “This will be a major headwind on the cost front and ultimately in some way be passed down to the consumer and through EV prices.”

    Perhaps most important to the union is that it be allowed to represent workers at 10 electric vehicle battery factories, most of which are being built by joint ventures between automakers and South Korean battery makers. The union wants those plants to receive top UAW wages.

    Aside from pay, the union also wants management to limit the use of temporary workers and to impose forced overtime. UAW members said they’re looking for more time off, including a four-day workweek, and are asking for additional job protections, including the right to strike over plant closings.


    United Auto Workers poised to strike if no deal reached this week

    04:08

    What automakers have offered 

    So far, the automakers’ latest counteroffers include a much more modest wage hike. Stellantis has offered a 14.5% pay bump over four years. Ford and GM have offered roughly 10% raises for its employees over four years. UAW leaders have called the proposals unfair and disappointing. 

    The UAW and automakers continued their negotiations Tuesday, but for now the sides remain far apart on wages and the working conditions at EV plants, said Benjamin Salisbury, an analyst at Height Securities.

    “While the continued exchange of counterproposals between the union and the automakers shows progress, it does not eliminate the risk of a strike,” Salisbury said Tuesday in an investors’ note. 

    Fain told CNN on Monday that negotiations are progressing but that both sides are divided on cost of living allowances and job security. 

    “Our members are being left behind not just with the transition to EV, but just with product placement, retirement security,” he said. “There’s a lot of issues feeding into this.”

    How a strike could impact car buyers and the economy

    The average new vehicle in the U.S. costs $48,451, according to August data from Kelley Blue Book. A UAW strike that lasts two weeks could push up prices for new vehicle by 2%, automotive consulting firm J.D. Power told Reuters. 

    That’s because a worker walkout would choke production for new Ford, GM and Stellantis models. With sudden uncertainty on when new cars would arrive on their lots, car dealerships would likely raise the sticker price for their existing inventory.

    At the end of August, the three automakers collectively had enough vehicles to last for 70 days. After that, they would run short. Buyers who need vehicles would likely go to nonunion competitors, who would be able to charge them more.

    “A work stoppage of three weeks or more would quickly drain the excess supply, raising vehicle prices and pushing more sales to non-union brands,” said Sam Fiorani, an analyst with consulting firm AutoForecast Solutions.

    Auto production at the Big Three could fall by 150,000 vehicles per week in North America, and prices would climb soon after, said Garrett Nelson, an automotive analyst at CFRA Research.

    For the U.S. as a whole, reduced auto production resulting from a UAW strike affecting the Big Three would reduce economic growth by up to 0.1 percentage points for each week it lasted, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report. “Auto production would likely fall sharply — we assume to roughly zero — at any company impacted by a strike,” they wrote.

    Unions have stepped up their activity

    The UAW’s contentious talks with Detroit automakers comes as a large swath of unionized workers in a range of industries pushes for better pay and working conditions. Organized labor groups have been flexing their muscles and winning enhanced contracts.

    Museum workers in Chicago, police officers in Los Angeles, thousands of American Airlines pilots, college professors in New Jersey and Oakland, California hospital workers have all seen pay increases. UPS drivers in August approved a five-year contract that brings their average annual pay to $170,000.

    So far this year, 247 strikes have occurred involving 341,000 workers — the most since Cornell University began tracking strikes in 2021, though still well below the numbers during the 1970s and 1980s.

    “With the recent UPS union deal sealed, this puts more pressure on the UAW leadership to deliver a big win,” Wedbush analysts said. 

    —The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Stellantis offers 14.5% pay increase to UAW workers in latest contract negotiation talks

    Stellantis offers 14.5% pay increase to UAW workers in latest contract negotiation talks

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    How potential UAW strike could impact the economy


    How potential UAW strike could impact the economy

    07:28

    Automaker Stellantis on Friday offered the United Auto Workers a new four-year deal that would increase employees wages by 14.5%, the latest back and forth between the company and its employees as they try to hammer out a new labor contract before the current one expires. 

    The wage increases, which would be for most workers, wouldn’t include any lump sum payments, Mark Stewart, chief operating officer of Stellantis North America, said in a letter to employees.

    The proposal by Stellantis, formerly Fiat Chrysler, is a counteroffer to the UAW, which is seeking much heftier pay bumps. The proposal also includes a $6,000 one-time inflation protection payment in the first year of the contract and $4,500 in inflation protection payments over the final three years of the contract.

    In addition, the counteroffer includes boosting hourly wages from $15.78 to $20 for temporary workers and speeding up the progression timeline from eight years to six years for employees who are moving through the pay scale from starting wages.

    The proposal from Stellantis, formed in a 2021 merger of Fiat Chrysler and France’s PSA Peugeot, is closer to the union’s demands of 46% across-the-board increases over four years, but both sides still are far apart. 

    The union’s demands also include a 32-hour week with 40 hours of pay, restoration of traditional pensions for new hires, union representation of workers at new battery plants and a restoration of traditional pensions. Top-scale UAW assembly plant workers make about $32 an hour, plus annual profit sharing checks.

    About 146,000 UAW members at the three Detroit automakers could go on strike when their contracts expire at 11:59 p.m. Thursday.


    United Auto Workers union finalizing strike vote

    06:26

    “We remain committed to bargaining in good faith and reaching a fair agreement by the deadline,” Stewart said. “With this equitable offer, we are seeking a timely resolution to our discussions.” 

    In a statement Friday, the union called counteroffers from Stellantis, General Motors and Ford “disappointing” and said President Shawn Fain will discuss them with members.

    Fain warned earlier this week that the union plans to go on strike against any Detroit automaker that hasn’t reached a new agreement by the time contracts expire.

    Chances of a strike

    Even though wage increases are still being negotiated, there’s still a 60% to 65% chance the auto workers will strike next week, said Benjamin Salisbury, analyst at Height Securities. The UAW is financially prepared for the strike to be lengthy, Salisbury said in a research note. 

    “The UAW reportedly has an $825 million strike fund, which it uses to pay eligible members who are on strike,” Salisbury said. “The strike pay is $500 per week for each member. If all UAW members at GM, Ford, and Stellantis, strike and make use of the strike fund, it would last approximately 11 weeks.”

    Detroit’s big three automakers would lose more than $5 billion if union employees stopped working after 10 days, according to analysis from Michigan consulting firm Anderson Economic Group.

    A strike against all three major automakers could cause damage not only to the industry but also to the Midwest and even national economy, depending on how long it lasts. The auto industry accounts for about 3% of the nation’s economic output. A prolonged strike could also lead eventually to higher vehicle prices.

    Ford’s counterproposal offered 9% raises and lump sum payments over four years, while GM’s offered 10% plus lump sums.

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  • UAW chief says time is running out for Ford, GM and Stellantis to avoid a strike

    UAW chief says time is running out for Ford, GM and Stellantis to avoid a strike

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    What a potential UAW strike could mean for the supply chain


    What a potential UAW strike could mean for the supply chain

    06:28

    The head of the United Auto Workers warned Wednesday that the union plans to go on strike against any Detroit automaker that hasn’t reached a new agreement by the time contracts expire next week.

    “That’s the plan,” President Shawn Fain responded when asked if the union would strike any of the companies that haven’t reached a tentative deal by the time their national contracts end.

    A strike against all three major automakers — General Motors, Stellantis and Ford — could cause damage not only to the industry as a whole but also to the Midwest and even national economy, depending on how long it lasted. The auto industry accounts for about 3% of the nation’s economic output. A prolonged strike could also lead eventually to higher vehicle prices.

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Fain left open the possibility of avoiding a strike. He acknowledged, more explicitly than he has before, that the union will have to give up some of its demands to reach agreements. Contracts with the three companies will all expire at 11:59 p.m. Sept. 14.

    “There’s a lot of back and forth in bargaining,” he said, “and naturally, when you go into bargaining, you don’t always get everything you demand. Our workers have high expectations. We made a lot of sacrifices going back to the economic recession.”

    Still time to strike a deal

    In the interview, Fain did report some progress in the negotiations, saying the union will meet Thursday with GM to hear the company’s response to the UAW’s economic demands. In addition, discussions are under way with Ford on wages and benefits. Stellantis, formerly Fiat Chrysler, has yet to make a counteroffer on wage and benefit demands, he said.

    Stellantis declined to comment Wednesday.


    Businesses near auto plants plan to support UAW members if they strike

    02:07

    Last week, the union filed charges of unfair labor practices against Stellantis and GM, and it said Ford’s economic offer fell far short of its demands.

    Marick Masters, a business professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, said he thought Fain’s latest remarks suggest “that he is opening up to the realities of bargaining” as the strike deadline nears.

    “As you get close to the deadline,” Masters said, “you begin to realize the importance of trying to resolve a problem rather than make a point. Strikes are painful, especially for workers, and also for companies.”

    Fain’s willingness to acknowledge publicly that he isn’t going to achieve all the union’s demands shows there is more flexibility in his approach than previously thought, Masters said.

    Some signs of movement in the negotiations have emerged, raising the possibility, Masters said, that an agreement might be reached with one automaker that would set the pattern for the others.

    “I think if they can avoid having to go out on strike and the pain that occurs and still get a very good bargain, I think they’ll be better off,” he said.


    Former UAW President Bob King discusses current negotiations with the Big Three

    06:05

    The union’s demands include 46% across-the-board pay raises, a 32-hour week with 40 hours of pay, restoration of traditional pensions for new hires, union representation of workers at new battery plants and a restoration of traditional pensions. Top-scale UAW assembly plant workers make about $32 an hour, plus annual profit sharing checks.

    “Wages aren’t the problem”

    iIn his remarks to the AP, Fain argued that worker pay isn’t what has driven up vehicle prices. The average price of a new car has leaped to more than $48,000 on average, in part because of still-scarce supplies resulting from a global shortage of computer chips.

    “In the last four years, the price of vehicles went up 30%,” he said. “Our wages went up 6%. There were billions of dollars in shareholder dividends. So our wages aren’t the problem.”

    While saying a strike by up to 146,000 members against all three major automakers is a real possibility, Fain said the union doesn’t want to strike and would prefer to to reach new contracts with them.

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  • UAWs presses Big 3 with

    UAWs presses Big 3 with

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    A 46% pay raise. A 32-hour week with 40 hours of pay. A restoration of traditional pensions.

    The demands that a more combative United Auto Workers union has pressed on General Motors, Stellantis and Ford — demands that even the UAW’s own president calls “audacious” — are edging it closer to a strike when its contract ends September 14.

    The automakers, which are making billions in profits, have dismissed the UAW’s wish list. They argue that its demands are unrealistic at a time of fierce competition from Tesla and lower-wage foreign automakers as the world shifts from internal combustion engines to electric vehicles. The wide gulf between the sides could mean a strike against one or more of the automakers, which could send already-inflated vehicle prices even higher.

    “Our employers only value one thing, profit; they do not value us. And the only way the working class advances is if we stand together,” Shawn Fain, the pugnacious new leader of the UAW, said in a Facebook Live Friday morning.

    A potential strike by 146,000 UAW members comes against the backdrop of increasingly emboldened U.S. unions of all kinds. The number of strikes and threatened strikes is growing, involving Hollywood actors and writers, sizable settlements with railroads and major concessions by corporate giants like UPS.

    Fain has characterized the contract talks with Detroit’s automakers as a form of war between billionaires and ordinary middle-class workers. Last month, in an act of showmanship during the Facebook Live event, Fain condemned a contract proposal from Stellantis as “trash” — and tossed a copy of it into a wastebasket, “where it belongs,” he said.

    US-AUTO-ECONOMY-LABOUR-CONTRACTS
    Shawn Fain, the pugnacious new leader of the UAW, last month, condemned a contract proposal from Stellantis as “trash” — and tossed a copy of it into a wastebasket, “where it belongs,” he said.

    JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images


    Robust profit-makers

    Over the past decade, the Detroit Three have emerged as robust profit-makers. They’ve collectively posted net income of $164 billion over the past decade, $20 billion of it this year. The CEOs of all three major automakers earn multiple millions in annual compensation.

    Speaking last month to Ford workers at a plant in Louisville, Kentucky, Fain complained about one standard for the corporate class and another for ordinary workers.

    “They get out-of-control salaries,” he said. “They get pensions they don’t even need. They get top-rate health care. They work whatever schedule they want. The majority of our members do not get a pension nowadays. It’s crazy. We get substandard health care. We don’t get to work remotely.”

    UAW members have voted overwhelmingly to authorize its leaders to call a strike. So, too, have Canadian auto workers, whose contracts ends four days later and who have designated Ford as their target.


    “We’re going to win:” UAW president announces strike vote results

    02:13

    The UAW hasn’t said whether it will select one target automaker. It could strike all three, though doing so could deplete the union’s strike fund in under three months.

    On the other hand, if a strike lasted even just 10 days, it would cost the three automakers nearly a billion dollars, the Anderson Economic Group has calculated. During a 40-day UAW strike in 2019, GM alone lost $3.6 billion.

    Union accuses Stellantis, GM of unfair labor practices

    Last week, the union filed charges of unfair labor practices against Stellantis and GM, which it said have yet to offer counterproposals. As for Ford, Fain asserted that its response, by rejecting most of the union’s demands, “insults our very worth.”

    All three automakers have countered that the union’s charges are baseless and that they’re seeking a fair deal that would allow them to invest in the future.

    Marick Masters, a business professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, suggested that the strong U.S. job market and the companies’ outsize profits have given Fain leverage in negotiations. In addition, he noted, the automakers are poised to release a slew of new electric vehicles that would be delayed by a strike. And they have only a limited supply of vehicles to withstand a prolonged walkout.

    “They are vulnerable,” Masters said.

    “The question really is,” he said, “are the parties willing to move on some of these things at the table? That hasn’t been evident yet.”

    Fain, who won the UAW’s presidency this spring in the first direct election by members, has set expectations high. He has assured the workers that they can achieve significant gains if they’re willing to walk picket lines.

    Yet even Fain has described the union’s proposals as “audacious” in demanding the restoration of traditional defined-benefit pensions for new hires; an end to tiers of wages; pension increases for retirees; and — perhaps most audaciously — a 32-hour week for 40 hours of pay.

    Currently, UAW workers who were hired after 2007 don’t receive defined benefit pensions. Their health benefits are less generous, too. For years, the union gave up general pay raises and lost cost-of-living wage increases to help the companies control costs. Though top-scale assembly workers earn $32.32 an hour, temporary workers start at just under $17. Still, full-time workers have received profit-sharing checks ranging this year from $9,716 at Ford to $14,760 at Stellantis.

    Chris Lindsey, a union member who builds Ford trucks at a Louisville plant, argues that workers deserve a larger share of Ford’s sizable profits.

    “We keep giving up, but nothing in return,” Lindsey said. “We just want something fair.”


    Auto workers leader slams companies for slow bargaining, files labor complaint with government

    02:33

    Focus on EV battery workers

    Perhaps the biggest issue blocking a contract agreement is union representation at 10 EV battery plants that the companies have proposed. Most of these plants are joint ventures with South Korean battery makers, which want to pay less.

    “These battery workers deserve the same wage and salary standards that generations of auto workers have fought for,” Fain told members.

    The union fears that because EVs are simpler to build, with fewer moving parts, fewer workers will be needed to assemble them. In addition, workers at combustion engine and transmission plants will likely lose jobs in the transition; they’ll need a place to go.


    Automakers team up to build electric vehicle charging network amid threat of worker strike

    07:04

    Fain, a 54-year-old electrician who came out of a Chrysler factory in Kokomo, Indiana, is among several labor leaders across the economy who have been escalating their demands and flexing their muscles. So far this year, 247 strikes have occurred involving 341,000 workers — the most since Cornell University began tracking strikes in 2021, though still well below the numbers during the 1970s and 1980s.

    Masters suggested that the automakers wouldn’t be able to quickly replace striking workers. The tight job market, diminished interest in manufacturing jobs and comparatively modest wages would make it difficult to hire enough workers.

    Some auto workers regard the UPS contract, with a $49-an-hour top wage for experienced drivers, as a benchmark for their negotiations. Others say they’re just hoping to get near that figure.

    But automakers say a generous settlement would stick them with costs far above their competitors’ just as they start producing more EVs. The inability to bring Hyundai-Kia, Nissan, Volkswagen, Honda and Toyota factories into the union has weakened the UAW’s leverage, said Harry Katz, a labor professor at Cornell.

    Current U.S. automakers salary: $60 an hour 

    If you include the value of their benefits, workers at the Detroit 3 automakers receive around $60 an hour. The corresponding figure at foreign-based automakers with U.S. factories is just $40 to $45, Katz said. Much of the disparity reflects pensions and health care.

    If the Detroit companies end up with higher labor costs, they’ll pass them on to consumers, making vehicles more expensive, said Sam Fiorani, an analyst with AutoForecast Solutions, a consulting firm.

    “More than half of the vehicles built in the U.S. are in nonunion plants,” he said. “So if you raise the price to build a unionized vehicle, you could price yourself out of competition with vehicles already built in North America.”

    A strike of more than a couple of weeks would reduce still-tight supplies of vehicles on Detroit automakers’ dealer lots. With demand still strong, prices would rise.

    The UAW’s members are “reminding management that management can’t operate those factories without a settlement,” Katz said.

    Masters and Katz say there’s still time to settle without a strike. Katz predicts a settlement short of UPS numbers, possibly with 3% general pay raises plus cost-of-living adjustments, increased company contributions to 401(k) accounts for newer workers and faster transitions to top pay.

    That said, Katz suggested, Fain has to back up his tough talk: “He’s got to prove himself.”

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  • United Auto Workers give approval for potential strike

    United Auto Workers give approval for potential strike

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    United Auto Workers give approval for potential strike – CBS News


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    Members of the United Auto Workers union at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis auto plants gave their leadership approval Friday to call a strike in the event a new labor contract is not reached.

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  • Biden urges UAW and Big Three automakers to reach deal to avoid strike | CNN Business

    Biden urges UAW and Big Three automakers to reach deal to avoid strike | CNN Business

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    Washington DC
    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden sought to ramp up pressure on the United Auto Workers union and the nation’s three unionized automakers – Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis, known as the “Big Three” – one month ahead of a critical deadline for labor talks.

    “As the Big Three auto companies and the United Auto Workers come together — one month before the expiration of their contract — to negotiate a new agreement, I want to be clear about where I stand. I’m asking all sides to work together to forge a fair agreement,” Biden said in a new statement Monday.

    The White House has been closely monitoring the talks as the two sides appear far apart. The union is demanding significant pay raises of 40% or more for members to match increases in CEO pay at the companies over the last four years and a reversal of past concessions by the union.

    Negotiations could put the White House at odds with the union. While the AFL-CIO, which is made up of multiple independent unions, has already endorsed Biden’s reelection bid, calling him the “most pro-union president in our lifetimes,” the UAW itself has yet to join in that endorsement. A strike could have massive economic – and political – consequences. Biden and UAW President Shawn Fain met briefly in the West Wing last month while UAW leadership was at the White House briefing senior staff on their positions.

    The three contracts between the UAW and General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, which sells cars and trucks under the Dodge, Ram and Chrysler brands, are due to expire September 14. Fain last week denounced the most recent offer from Stellantis, throwing a copy of the offer in the trash during a video for members. Plans for strike authorization votes at all three companies is expected to be announced soon, the union said Monday.

    Traditionally the UAW will select one of the three companies to go first and have the other two put on hold while it concentrates on reaching a deal, then the union will push for similar from the other two automakers as part of a “pattern.”

    The UAW is pushing for an aggressive set of demands at the negotiating table, and has been critical of the Biden administration’s financial support for the transition to electric vehicles, arguing that the Biden administration has been overly supportive of automakers’ plans for EV battery plants that are expected to pay far less than union wages. Fain has publicly warned that UAW is prepared to strike, saying nearly 150,000 members will strike if the three automakers do not meet their demands.

    CNN has previously reported that while Biden enjoys hefty support from leadership of many unions, he has also faced lingering mistrust and concern among some of the rank-and-file of the UAW, according to people familiar with the dynamics, a perception fueled in part by the president’s intervention to avert a freight rail strike in December.

    In a nod to the UAW’s demands, Biden used the union’s “fair transition” to clean energy language.

    “I support a fair transition to a clean energy future. That means ensuring that Big Three auto jobs are good jobs that can support a family; that auto companies should honor the right to organize; take every possible step to avoid painful plant closings; and ensure that when transitions are needed, the transitions are fair and look to retool, reboot, and rehire in the same factories and communities at comparable wages, while giving existing workers the first shot to fill those jobs,” Biden said in the statement.

    The UAW said it saw the White House statement as an endorsement of it bargaining position.

    “We appreciate President Biden’s support for strong contracts that ensure good paying union jobs now and pave the way for a just transition to an EV future,” Fain said in a statement. “We agree with the president that the Big Three’s joint venture battery plants should have the same strong pay and safety standards that generations of UAW members have fought for.”

    The three automakers said they, too, want to reach deals that would avoid a strike.

    Ford pointed out that it employs more UAW members and builds more cars and trucks at US plants than any other automaker.

    “We look forward to working with the UAW on creative solutions during this time when our dramatically changing industry needs a skilled and competitive workforce more than ever,” it said.

    “Stellantis remains committed to working constructively and collaboratively with the UAW to negotiate a new agreement that balances the concerns of our 43,000 employees with our vision for the future,” said that company.

    “We will continue to bargain in good faith with the UAW to maintain our momentum and to provide opportunities for all in our EV future,” GM said in a statement.

    The union is concerned about the plans by all three automakers to convert from traditional gasoline powered vehicles to EVs in the coming decades. it takes an estimated one third less hours of work to assemble an EV than a car with an internal combustion engine, since that engine and the transmission that goes with it has so many moving parts missing from an EV.

    The Biden administration has been active in supporting the switch to EVs, providing tax credits for EV buyers and loans to build plants necessary for EVs, such as those that make batteries.

    There are about a dozen EV battery plants now under construction nationwide. For the most part, those plants are joint ventures between automakers and battery makers, and thus will not be covered under the UAW contracts with the Big Three. Workers at the one battery plant for one of the Big Three to open so far, a Warren, Ohio, plant for the joint venture between GM and LG, voted 98% in favor of joining the UAW. But the union has yet to reach a deal with plant management on a contract, and workers there are paid about half of what UAW members are paid at the Big Three.

    – CNN’s Vanessa Yurkevich contributed to this story

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  • Stellantis to put second battery plant in town where EVs threaten current jobs | CNN Business

    Stellantis to put second battery plant in town where EVs threaten current jobs | CNN Business

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    New York
    CNN
     — 

    Stellantis and Samsung plan to build a second EV battery plant in Kokomo, Indiana, a town where many current Stellantis workers see such plants as a threat to their current jobs.

    EV battery plants are a critical part of the plans of traditional automakers to transition from gasoline-powered cars to electric vehicles in coming decades. But they could be a threat to existing jobs building engines and transmissions, which are not needed in an EV. Stellantis has four plants in Kokomo alone building engines and transmissions, employing more than 5,000 hourly workers between them.

    Stellantis, which builds cars under the Jeep, Ram, Dodge and Chrysler brands, along with unionized rivals General Motors and Ford, are now in the fourth week of a strike by the United Auto Workers union, and the future of jobs building EVs are a central issue in the strike.

    While the four Kokomo plants are not on strike, the union is on strike at Stellantis’ assembly complex in Toledo, Ohio, as well as at 20 parts and distribution centers spread across 14 states.

    All the automakers are in the process of building EV battery plants, and all of them are using joint ventures with battery manufacturers such as Samsung to build and run the plants. They have all insisted that will make the employees of the plants employees of the joint ventures, not the automakers themselves. And the pay at US EV battery plants that have opened so far is a fraction of what UAW members get when working for the automakers.

    UAW President Shawn Fain announced Friday that GM had agreed to a key union demand that employees at its EV battery plants will be part of the company’s national master labor agreement with the UAW. GM has not confirmed that agreement, and details of how much those workers would be paid and if they’ll be considered GM employees or covered in the agreement as employees of separate companies is not yet known.

    But Fain hailed that agreement as a major win for the union and said it would now press Ford and Stellantis to agree to similar terms if they want to end the strike.

    Samsung and Stellantis announced plans for its latest battery plant in the wake of that announcement.

    The two companies announced Wednesday that they are investing more than $3.2 billion to build the new plant, which will open in early 2027 and have an annual capacity of 34 gigawatt hours. Its opening will bring about 1,400 new jobs to Kokomo, located an hour north of Indianapolis.

    StarPlus Energy, the joint venture formed by Samsung and Stellantis, previously chose Kokomo for its first gigafactory that’s currently under construction and scheduled to open in 2025.

    In total, the two factories will produce 67 gigawatt hours annually. “Indiana’s economy is on a roll,” said Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb in a press release, adding that the second plant means the companies are doubling their capital investment and the amount of new jobs being created.

    The factories will help Stellantis meet its goal for battery electric passenger cars to make up 100% of its sales in Europe, and 50% of its sales in the US, by 2030. Stellantis announced in 2021 an “aggressive” investment of $35 billion for electric vehicle production and needs 400 gigawatt hours annually to meet its 2030 goal.

    Stellantis was created in 2021 through the merger of Fiat Chrysler and PSA Group, maker of Peugeot, Citroën, Opel and Vauxhall cars in Europe. Shares rose nearly 2% in premarket trading.

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  • Tesla organizers say they were fired a day after launching union drive

    Tesla organizers say they were fired a day after launching union drive

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    Several employees at a Tesla facility in Buffalo, New York, have been fired the day after they announced a union drive, according to Tesla Workers United.

    The group said in a statement on Thursday that workers received an email around 7 p.m. on Wednesday updating them on a new policy that prohibits them from recording workplace meetings without all participants’ permission. TWU said that the policy violates federal labor law and flouts New York’s one-party consent law to record conversations.

    “I feel blindsided, I got COVID and was out of the office, then I had to take a bereavement leave. I returned to work, was told I was exceeding expectations and then Wednesday came along,” organizing committee member Arian Berek, who is one of the fired employees, said in a statement. “I strongly feel this is in retaliation to the committee announcement, and it’s shameful.”

    The Tesla gigafactory, which makes solar panels and other renewable energy technology, is not far away from a Starbucks location where workers voted to unionize last year.

    TWU said that “dozens” of workers were fired. The group called the dismissals unacceptable, and said that the expectations of Tesla workers are “unfair, unattainable, ambiguous and ever-changing.”

    “We’re angry. But this won’t slow us down or stop us. They want us to be scared, but they just started a stampede,” the union said in a tweet. “These firings are the exact reason why we need a union. We believe we can do this, but more importantly we believe we WILL do this.”

    Complaint filed

    The Rochester Regional Joint Board of Workers United has filed a complaint against Tesla with the National Labor Relations Board, accusing the electric vehicle maker of unfair labor practices.

    In the complaint, the group lists the names of several employees who were part of the factory’s autopilot department, who were fired. The group said it believes Tesla “terminated these individuals in retaliation for union activity and to discourage union activity.” It is asking the NLRB for injunctive relief “to prevent irreparable destruction of employee rights resulting from Tesla’s unlawful conduct.”

    As part of union organizing efforts, the Tesla Workers United organizing committee said in a letter to management Tuesday that employees are seeking a voice on the job at the plant in Buffalo and want to “build an even more collaborative environment that will strengthen the company.”

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk has taken a hard line against organized labor, despite an invitation to the United Auto Workers union to hold an organizing vote at Tesla’s factory in Fremont, California.

    In 2021, Tesla was ordered by the National Labor Relations Board to make Musk delete a 2018 tweet in which the board said Musk unlawfully threatened to take away employees’ stock options if they chose to be represented by the UAW. (The tweet remains on the platform.) Musk has also referred to unions as “just another corporation.”

    An email was sent to Tesla seeking comment, but bounced back as undeliverable. It has been widely reported that Tesla has disbanded its media relations team.

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  • University of California workers end strike, ratify contract

    University of California workers end strike, ratify contract

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    LOS ANGELES — Striking graduate students at the University of California approved a bargaining agreement Friday, ending an unprecedented 40-day strike that snarled classes at the prestigious university system.

    Union representatives said Friday a majority of striking graduate students and teaching assistants approved two contracts to formally end the work stoppage.

    Wages will rise up to 80% for some of the lowest-paid workers, with all workers seeing a boost in pay, union representatives said. The contracts also improve benefits to help workers cover child care expenses and health costs and will help intentional students, they said.

    The bargaining units were represented by the United Auto Workers.

    “The dramatic improvements to our salaries and working conditions are the result of tens of thousands of workers striking together in unity,” Rafael Jaime, president of UAW 2865, said in a statement. “These agreements redefine what is possible in terms of how universities support their workers, who are the backbone of their research and education enterprise.”

    The university system applauded the new contracts, which it said will take immediate effect and run through May 31, 2025.

    “Today’s ratification demonstrates yet again the University’s strong commitment to providing every one of our hardworking employees with competitive compensation and benefit packages that honor their many contributions to our institution, to our community, and to the state of California,” UC said in a statement.

    The agreements cover about 36,000 workers, many of whom make as little as $24,000 annually, a paltry salary for living in cities like Los Angeles, San Diego and Berkeley, where the university system has campuses.

    The union said the strike, which began in mid-November, was largest ever among academic workers. It was being closely watched by other university campuses around the country.

    About 12,000 other striking workers, mainly postdoctoral students and academic researchers, already ratified an agreement that will boost their pay by 29%. They will also get better family leave, child care subsidies and job security.

    The strike lasted for a month before a tentative agreement was reached last Friday. Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg served as a mediator after several failed attempts to reach a deal.

    By the end of 2024, the minimum pay for teaching assistants will be at least $36,000, with higher pay for students on campuses in particularly expensive cities. Graduate student researchers will make at least $40,000, according to union representatives.

    Workers can get childcare subsidies of more than $2,000 a semester.

    A group of workers branded as “Strike to Win” urged workers to vote against the tentative agreement, saying it failed to meet demands of a $54,000 base wage, more financial support for international students, $2,000 a month for childcare subsidies and expanded protections for people with disabilities.

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  • ‘An Extraordinarily Hostile Move’: New School Threatens to Withhold Pay in Adjunct Strike

    ‘An Extraordinarily Hostile Move’: New School Threatens to Withhold Pay in Adjunct Strike

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    Nearly 1,800 part-time faculty members at the New School, who have been on strike since November 16 for better pay and working conditions, remained out of work and on the picket lines on Wednesday even as the university said it would start withholding their pay. Meanwhile, the university, which faces a threatened lawsuit by angry parents, has demanded that all full-time faculty members, many of whom sympathize with the strikers, prove they’re working.

    Part-time workers make up more than 80 percent of the teaching faculty at the private liberal-arts university in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The workers contend that their real wages have declined, given inflation, since their last raise. Adjunct professors earn $5,753 for a three-credit course. The university says that covers 45 hours of scheduled teaching, including “course-related work.” But officials of the United Auto Workers Local 7902, a union representing the instructors, say that encompasses about 135 hours of work, including such out-of-class duties as preparing for lessons, grading assignments, and advising students.

    The university has said the union demands would push the university into financial crisis and could lead to tuition increases. Both sides were scheduled for another round of bargaining late Wednesday.

    The striking workers are among the rapidly growing ranks of contingent or adjunct faculty members nationwide, who are often forced to cobble together six or more courses a semester or live on food stamps in order to cover their basic living costs. Classes are often assigned just weeks before the semester, making planning difficult.

    The New School strike comes at a time when academic workers on the opposite coast — nearly 48,000 graduate students, postdocs, and researchers across the University of California system — were withholding work in what has been billed as the largest higher-education strike in American history. Postdocs and academic researchers there reached a settlement with the university last week that includes significant pay raises, but the money would come mostly from grants that principal investigators bring in.

    The New School, a progressive university started in 1919, houses five schools and colleges, including the Parsons School of Design and the New School for Social Research.

    A ‘Last, Best, and Final Offer’

    In a phone call late Wednesday, the New School’s president, Dwight A. McBride, said he understands that people are upset about not being paid. “What gets lost in the discussion is that for three weeks, we have paid our striking employees, and we’ve done that in the hopes that we might come to a deal quickly,” he said. “But we have to divert those funds to grading … and the possibility of hiring new faculty in the spring if this drags on.”

    McBride assured about 1,000 parents during a Zoom call on Saturday that the university was doing all it could to resolve the standoff. He told them the union had rejected the school’s “last, best, and final offer” of an 18-percent pay raise over five years and better access to subsidized health care. Union representatives countered that they’d been flexible in the negotiations, cutting their wage demands in half.

    Meanwhile, a group representing more than 1,500 parents has threatened to file a class-action lawsuit against the university and to withhold tuition payments unless the dispute is resolved. The school, a lawyer for the parents wrote, “refuses to use tuition monies already received — in many cases close to $80,000 per year per student — to provide adequate compensation and benefits to the faculty charged with providing our clients’ children with their education.”

    In a message posted on Tuesday, university leaders reiterated why they’d decided to stop paying faculty members who weren’t teaching, and assured students and their families that they’d be able to complete the semester. The statement was signed by President McBride; the university’s provost, Renée T. White; and its executive vice president for business and operations, Tokumbo Shobowale.

    Students, they said, would receive grades “in an educationally responsible manner” so they could progress in their academic studies and not risk losing financial-aid eligibility, visa status, or their ability to graduate.

    Starting this week, all full-time faculty members, many of whom have pledged to support the striking workers by not crossing picket lines, must fill out weekly “work certification” forms that attest they’re working. That move prompted a backlash on social media.

    Paulo L. dos Santos, an associate professor of economics, said in an interview on Wednesday that the new requirement amounts to “a serious escalation that poisons the atmosphere and ultimately boils down to an effort to coerce faculty back into the classroom.”

    Faculty members at the New School, he said, “are particularly motivated by a sense of identity and mission, by notions of egalitarianism and social justice and bold, if not radical, change. To see the administration’s approach to this dispute is thoroughly demoralizing.”

    In an email to the faculty on Wednesday that was shared with The Chronicle, the university’s vice president for human resources, Sonya Williams, wrote that the required certification forms will allow faculty members to demonstrate that they’re fulfilling their teaching, research, and service responsibilities. It will also, she wrote, assure the university’s accreditors that it’s continuing to deliver its curriculum “even if, in a moment of protest, that delivery looks different in mode, platform, or format than usual.”

    We have faced a period of tumult and discord that feels to me like the fabric of our university has been torn apart.

    In a message to the community last week, White, the provost, said the university was at a crossroads. “We have faced a period of tumult and discord that feels to me like the fabric of our university has been torn apart, but hopefully not irreparably,” she wrote. “This is an opportunity for us to be courageous in building a vision of the New School that works for everyone: all part-time and full-time faculty, students, and staff.”

    The university’s leadership, she wrote, is committed to working with the community to develop “creative solutions that bring equity and repair trust.”

    New School leaders said, in the negotiation updates posted on the university’s website, that they understood that withholding pay, including contributions to health-insurance and retirement benefits, would cause frustration and anger. “As we enter the fourth week of disruptions, we must use our resources carefully to ensure that our students’ academic needs are met,” they wrote.

    The union’s proposed compensation package would cost the university more than $200 million over the course of the five-year contract, university officials wrote. For perspective, they wrote that the amount is nearly 50 percent of the university’s annual operating budget of around $460 million.

    Tactics of ‘Corporate Behemoths’

    The union’s president, Zoe Carey, a doctoral candidate in sociology and part-time instructor, said in a blog post on Tuesday that many workers would be boycotting university events to protest the administration’s latest moves.

    “The threat to strip workers of wages and health insurance is an extraordinarily hostile move, throwing almost the entirety of the university’s faculty into significant financial insecurity,” she wrote. The school also threatened to withhold pay from faculty members and graduate-student workers who refuse to cross picket lines, she said.

    “By threatening the livelihoods of those joining the strike in solidarity, the university is pitting its workers against each other, while stoking the fears of our students — these tactics are typical of corporate behemoths, not purportedly progressive institutions, as the New School claims to be,” Carey wrote. She urged faculty members to ignore the work-certification forms they’ve been told to fill out.

    Jerzy Gwiazdowski, a part-time faculty member and member of the union’s bargaining team, said in an interview on Wednesday that the union had made significant compromises in its demands and that none of them would create a financial hardship for the university.

    He said he understands why many parents and students are upset. “I’m angry, too,” he said. “This strike never should have happened. The university did everything in its power to drag this on as long as possible. They’re using students as pawns” to try to get the faculty to return to work, he said. Faculty members want to finish the semester with their students, “but we need to be paid fairly to do it — we need to pay our rent and be compensated for the many hours we spend working outside the classroom.”

    Gwiazdowski, who teaches in the School of Drama, said he picks up gigs and takes other jobs in the arts to make ends meet. When his classes were moved to Zoom during the Covid outbreaks, “I would hop in a truck and deliver beer” around Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens, he said.

    Asked about concerns that adjuncts couldn’t afford to live on their pay, McBride said no one doubts that living in New York is expensive. “But if you’re working part time in any job, you can’t expect that part-time wages are going to be sufficient alone to pay your living expenses,” he said. In addition to wages, part-timers at the New School receive health and retirement benefits that adjuncts at many other campuses lack, the president said.

    Sanjay G. Reddy, an associate professor of economics, argued in a blog post on Tuesday that the university’s approach “threatens to bring about the very financial crisis that it claims to forestall, by causing a precipitous collapse in student enrollments.”

    The university has taken issue with Reddy’s assertions that the university’s finances are opaque, its administration bloated, and many of its investment decisions ill planned, as “misleading or incorrect.”

    Controversy erupted last week when the university sent hiring managers an email seeking “temporary progress reviewers” to grade students’ work. The reviewers would need a master’s degree and teaching experience, but wouldn’t have to be subject experts, the email said. Three days later, the university described the email as an unapproved message that had been sent out by mistake.

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    Katherine Mangan

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