Showing posts with label uaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uaw. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2009

The UAW and Chrysler;Concessions or Bankrupt


Latest Article From Time.


Despite the pressure of Chrysler's April 30 deadline to pull off a rescue package — or face potential bankruptcy — the United Auto Workers has been in no rush to make concessions. "As I see it, the United Auto Workers union has a choice. They can [shed] some jobs or they can take a pay cut," says a financial consultant based in Detroit. "Naturally when you're faced with two bad choices, there is a natural tendency to procrastinate."

The carmaker's management is struggling to assemble a rescue package that in addition to any UAW givebacks will have to include closing more plants and getting big help from Italian carmaker Fiat, which would contribute its own small-car designs and technology. Failure would saddle major banks with $7 billion in new losses, leave Chrysler's former owner, Daimler AG on the hook for more than $1 billion in additional pension costs and wipe out the health care for thousands of Chrysler retirees.

The foot dragging on Chrysler is affecting GM, too. In a Friday conference call with the media, GM chairman Fritz Henderson lamented that GM's own union negotiations are being slowed because the UAW won't move forward until the Chrysler/Fiat negotiations are resolved. That makes sense: Whatever terms Chrysler gets will be a precedent for GM, too. GM faces a June 1 deadline from the U.S. government to produce sufficient cuts to ensure viability.

It's understandable why the UAW isn't rushing to embrace a new agreement. According to Harley Shaiken, a labor expert at the University of California at Berkley and occasional consultant to the UAW, the union and its Canadian counterpart are grappling with demands for big cuts in their wages and benefits — on the order of 25% to 30% — by Chrysler and Fiat. The demanded rollbacks could reduce wages and benefits, presently pegged at $29 per hour, by $6 to $8 per hour. "There is no doubt these are very serious cuts and they're being made under very tight deadlines and under very serious pressure," Shaiken says. "That will be a bitter pill on either side of the border," he says. Neither Chrysler nor Fiat has made its demands public.

Many of the current negotiations trace back to the terms of the original government loans. As a condition of Chrysler's loan agreement, the UAW must accept a 50% reduction in payments to its retiree health care trust and match the Japanese transplants' hourly labor costs, says Chrysler spokeswoman Dianna Gutierrez. "The Canadian government has taken a similar position as it relates to the CAW," she notes.

Union representatives in the U.S., however, complain the current demands go beyond those spelled out in the December loan agreement. The union has already committed to eliminating productivity bonuses due this year and next, to changes in the way overtime pay is computed, and to the elimination of the traditional cost-of-living allowances as well as to cuts in the special supplemental unemployment benefits for employees with less than 20 years seniority. Sources close to the negotiations tell TIME that the union has not yet agreed to the changes in funding Chrysler's health-care trust, which was established in 2007.

With the negotiations in a crucial phase, UAW President Ron Gettelfinger declined to discuss Chrysler. "He's not talking to anyone," a UAW spokeswoman said.

Yet the UAW knows where things are headed. "I don't think this is going to have a very happy ending," says one UAW official, who asked not to be identified. But he noted it was inevitable the union will have to accept additional cuts. One of the union's fears, though, is that the negotiations turn into a sort of arbitrage that sets active Chrysler workers against retirees — a split the UAW has always sought to avoid. "People are angry. Where do you draw the line and say to hell with it and just let them go into bankruptcy?" says one disgruntled UAW member.

Some creditors seem to think the company's assets could be worth more if they were divided up in bankruptcy court — an option opposed by Michigan's Democratic governor and congressional representatives, who are putting pressure on the Obama administration to keep the company from being broken up in bankruptcy.

In the meantime, Chrysler is melting away. In response to pressure from Obama administration, Chrysler has proposed more plant shutdowns. Set to be closed, according to sources familiar with the discussions inside the company, are assembly plants in St. Louis, Mo., and Brampton, Ontario; engine plants in Detroit, Trenton, Mich., and Kenosha, Wis.; and another plant in Mexico that builds big engines. Chrysler's assembly plant in Sterling Heights, Mich., also has been identified by some analysts as a possible candidate for closure. If executed, the shutdowns would further downsize a company that is already far smaller than it was only two years ago. Since the beginning of 2007, Chrysler's employment in the U.S. has dropped from 68,000 to around 38,000 today.
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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Chrysler Demands A $19 Per Hour Wage Cut


Chrysler CAW workers are in protest and rightfully so.

Friday CAW workers were told they must make an impossible decision to save Chrysler Canada a $19 per hour Wage cut!

Chrysler Canada workers burned CEO Nardelli's Letter to employees and told Chrysler no way could they cut hourly wages by $19 per hour.

Chrysler claims it will pull operations out of Canada if the Union does not meet it's demands.

The new soon to be Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne makes the same case for the UAW.

Fiat has stated that If it does not take significant hour wage concessions it will walk away from the Chrysler deal and let Chrysler go bankrupt. Once Chrysler goes bankrupt it can buy up what it wants. More than likely that would only be two assembly plants and the dealer network.

Which this the most likely scenario for US Chrysler autoworkers.
The UAW will go down to the second tier rate that was negotiated in 2007 of $14.50 for assembly workers and $17.50 for Skilled Trades workers.

That is a $15 per hour wage cut and that is huge!

The next two weeks are going to be unbearable for Chrysler Workers.

Someone save the middle class.......
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Thursday, April 16, 2009

AP sources: UAW focusing on talks with Chrysler


DETROIT – The United Auto Workers union has placed concession talks with General Motors Corp. on the back burner as it tries to reach a deal with Chrysler LLC before an April 30 government deadline, two people briefed on the negotiations said Thursday.

The decision likely means that any deal with Chrysler will set the pattern for concessions granted to GM as both companies try to show the government they have cut costs enough to get more government loans.

The people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private, said the union is focusing on Chrysler because its government deadline to cut labor costs and swap debt for equity is just two weeks away.

Chrysler also has to ink an alliance deal with Fiat Group SpA by April 30 to get more government aid. Without further help, Chrysler likely would be auctioned off in pieces under bankruptcy court supervision.

GM's government deadline is June 1, but the Obama administration said it will provide bankruptcy financing if the company can't successfully restructure outside of court.

GM spokeswoman Sherrie Childers Arb and UAW spokeswoman Christine Moroski would not comment on the negotiations. Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan would not comment beyond a statement that the company has a goal is to reach a conclusion by April 30.

The Canadian Auto Workers union has said that it plans to resume negotiations with Chrysler on Monday after Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said the Italian automaker will walk away from the proposed tie-up unless Chrysler's unions agree to major cost cuts.

Canadian Industry Minister Tony Clement said Thursday that the CAW must make significant concessions to ensure Chrysler survives. Without a deal in the next two weeks, the Canadian government will also shut down its support for the troubled automaker, Clement said.

Chrysler, GM and Ford Motor Co. all reached concession deals with the UAW in February to limit overtime, cut lump-sum cash bonuses and eliminate cost-of-living pay increases. The union also agreed to suspend the jobs bank in which laid-off workers are paid most of their wages.

Workers at Ford, which is not receiving government aid, ratified their deal, but the GM and Chrysler agreements were never presented to union members because they got hung up on funding for a union-run trust that will take over retiree health care expenses next year.

Then, the Obama administration said last month that the cuts outlined in GM and Chrysler's viability plans didn't go far enough, and the union would have to give up more. Just how much more has not been stated publicly.

GM has received $13.4 billion in government loans and may need more money this month as it tries to survive the worst auto sales downturn in 27 years. Chrysler has received $4 billion and may also need more funding to stay alive until its deadline.

The government said it will lend Chrysler up to $6 billion more if it completes a deal with Fiat and gains concessions from unions and debtholders.

But creditors that hold $6.9 billion in Chrysler debt — mostly banks and hedge funds — have rejected an offer from the Treasury Department to erase the debt for $1 billion. They are preparing a counteroffer that likely will include more cash and an equity stake in the company.

A committee representing the holders of $28 billion in GM bonds is awaiting an offer from the company that aims to slash its unsecured debt by at least two-thirds.

Associated Press Writer Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.
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Monday, February 16, 2009

Chrysler and GM, UAW again seek concessions deal


General Motors Corp., facing a Tuesday deadline to present a long-term viability plan, resumed negotiations with the UAW on Sunday afternoon after talks broke down Friday, the Free Press has learned.

The Detroit automaker is trying to get concessions from the UAW and debt holders as required under the terms of the $13.4-billion loan package approved by the U.S. Treasury Department in December. The deal calls on GM to get the stakeholders to voluntarily reduce the debt GM owes them. But the talks have been difficult, as the various stakeholders vie for a better deal, which would likely mean less favorable conditions for another party.

"This is probably going to go right down to the wire," a person briefed on the efforts said. The person did not want to be named because of the sensitive nature of the negotiations.

Talks between GM and the UAW broke down Friday when the UAW walked out, the source said. On Saturday, the union said it was rejecting the proposals from GM and Chrysler LLC, saying they were unfair to workers and favored bondholders.

Officials from the UAW and GM began talking again Sunday afternoon, though it was not clear at what level, the person said.

GM declined to comment Sunday, and a UAW spokesperson didn't respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, talks between the UAW and Chrysler also continue, the company said in a statement. "The company is working diligently on its viability plan and will submit it by its deadline on Feb. 17," Chrysler said.

Despite the back-and-forth between various stakeholders, White House senior adviser David Axelrod said during NBC's "Meet the Press" that GM and Chrysler's restructuring would require sacrifice from workers, executives and others.

He sidestepped questions about whether the industry could withstand a bankruptcy at GM. A person familiar with GM's negotiations with bondholders told the Free Press last week that bankruptcy remained a "very real risk."

The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday that GM will present two alternatives to the government Tuesday: one calling for billions more in rescue money, and the other calling for financial assistance as part of a bankruptcy filing....More
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Sunday, February 15, 2009

All options on the table for GM; automaker to resume talks with UAW


Gordon Trowbridge / Detroit News Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON -- A top White House adviser on Sunday refused to rule out bankruptcy for General Motors Corp. as the deadline for GM and Chrysler LLC to submit restructuring plans to the government looms this week.

"We're going to need a restructuring of these companies," said David Axelrod, a senior adviser to President Obama, said on NBC's "Meet the Press." "How that restructuring comes about is going to have to be determined."

Meanwhile, GM and the United Auto Workers union are expected to resume negotiations Sunday afternoon on concessions as part of the automaker's restructuring plan.

The plan is a condition of the $13.4 billion federal loan package GM received in December and must outline how the company will return to competitiveness. The government has the option of recalling the loans and essentially forcing a bankruptcy by the end of March if Obama administration officials do not believe the company is making adequate progress. GM has already received $9.4 billion and is set to get the remaining $4 billion on Tuesday.

GM's board of directors will meet by teleconference on the President's Day holiday Monday to review the company's restructuring plan before it is submitted to the U.S. Treasury Department, GM spokesman Steve Harris said on Sunday.

The Detroit automaker's board has been meeting by phone three days a week recently to review the constantly evolving plan.

"It's just a last chance to explain things before it's submitted on the 17th," Harris said.

GM's plan is to outline more significant cost-cutting, including more plant closings, job cuts and expected sacrifices from bondholders and the UAW. GM told Congress in December it planned to cut at least 31,000 jobs and close 9 plants by 2012. The updated plan will outline a more detailed schedule of cuts, but GM isn't expected to announce any final agreements with bondholders or the UAW.

Negotiations between the UAW and GM are expected to resume Sunday afternoon, a source familiar with the situation said. The talks broke down late Friday after the UAW strongly objected to proposals that went beyond what the Treasury Department required in the loan terms over the amount of money GM will pay the union to fund a retiree health-care trust.

The loan terms target paying half of what's owed in cash and the other half in company stock. GM and the UAW agreed to shift responsibility for retiree health care to the union beginning in 2010 as part of a new contract negotiated in 2007.

Last week, GM announced it would cut another 10,000 salaried workers worldwide and institute temporary pay cuts of up to 10 percent for salaried employees.

Chrysler also will file a restructuring plan with the Treasury Department on Tuesday as part of its deal to receive $4 billion in emergency loans. Chrysler says it needs another $3 billion to survive beyond March 31, but has not yet won Treasury Department approval for the additional funds.

Axelrod's comments Sunday continued a pattern by the Obama administration of refusing to address the bankruptcy question directly, either to embrace it or to rule it out. In a roundtable discussion with The Detroit News and other regional newspapers last week, Obama also did not directly address bankruptcy.

Michigan lawmakers have forcefully opposed bankruptcy, saying the companies would be unlikely to emerge from bankruptcy because car buyers would refuse to consider products from a bankrupt company. Any bankruptcy would almost certainly still involve a massive federal financial commitment, because private capital markets are unlikely to provide the financing that would be necessary.

"We need an auto industry in this country," Axelrod said Sunday. "We have an interest in seeing the auto industry survive. But it's going to take a real restructuring."

Axelrod's comments came in response to questions about a Wall Street Journal report on Saturday that GM will offer two options when it files its federal restructuring plan on Tuesday: A continued infusion of federal aid to keep the company in business, or a government-financed bankruptcy. GM has declined to comment on the Journal's report.
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Friday, January 16, 2009

GM UAW News On Concessions


The latest news reported by Fox 2 Detroit:

GM will not ask the UAW for wages concessions.

Probably due to the fact that the last contract in 2007 included wages concessions. The new UAW assembly employees will earn around $14 dollars an hour.
Remember the new car czar will have to approve the companies plan. More than likely the czar will demand pay cuts.
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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Big 3 pension gap grows


Feds warn of risks in rising $41B shortfall
David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON -- The outgoing director of the U.S. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. warned Friday that Detroit's Big Three automakers face a $41 billion pension shortfall.

While the companies continue to meet government funding requirements, the situation raises concerns for the agency, which takes over pensions when companies fail, given the financial problems facing the struggling auto industry.

"We're not trying to tell people that the pension house is on fire," Charles E.F. Millard said in an interview. "The point is that in many ways this has a similar look to other situations, such as a Bethlehem Steel."

The pension corporation assumed the pensions of 95,000 people at Bethlehem Steel in 2002, when the company filed for bankruptcy, and ended up on the hook for $3.7 billion in pension costs. That plan was underfunded by $4.2 billion.

Millard said policymakers need "a clear understanding of the magnitude of the numbers and the risks" associated with the automakers.

In total, the Big Three pensions cover nearly 1.3 million people. If all three automakers were to collapse and turn their plans over to the pension corporation, the agency estimates it would pay out $13 billion of the $41 billion, because of limits set by Congress on how much the pension corporation can cover. The agency generally has a yearly cap of $54,000 in benefits for people who are 65.

A $13 billion payout would more than double the agency's $11 billion deficit.

"It is certainly possible that none of these companies ever files for bankruptcy," Millard said. "It is certainly possible that they all do." He said the risk to the agency "is significantly greater than it was six or seven months ago."

As of Nov. 30, the pension plans for hourly and salaried workers at General Motors Corp. had a combined deficit of $20 billion and Ford Motor Co. had an $11.7 billion deficit, according to Millard; Chrysler LLC had a $9.3 billion deficit as of Jan. 1. ...More
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Friday, January 9, 2009

The UAW Can No Longer Strike! If So All Bailout Money is to be returned.


GM, Chrysler's federal loan deals bar strikes

DETROIT – Provisions of General Motors' and Chrysler's $17.4 billion in federal loans automatically places them in default if union workers go on strike.

A General Motors Corp. filing this week with the Securities and Exchange Commission detailed the provision as part of its $13.4 billion in federal loans.

A person briefed on Chrysler LLC's $4 billion loan, who didn't want to be identified because the company is in talks with the United Auto Workers union about concessions, confirmed Thursday that the Chrysler deal also has a similar provision.

The UAW isn't a party to the deal and hasn't threatened a strike, its most potent weapon against the Detroit automakers.

The UAW and the automakers have a Feb. 17 deadline to agree to concessions to lower labor costs.
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Monday, December 29, 2008

Autoworkers Union Keeps $6 Million Golf Course for Members at $33 Million Lakeside Retreat


The United Auto Workers may be out of the hole now that President Bush has approved a $17 billion bailout of the U.S. auto industry, but the union isn't out of the bunker just yet.

Even as the industry struggles with massive losses, the UAW brass continue to own and operate a $33 million lakeside retreat in Michigan, complete with a $6.4 million designer golf course. And it's costing them millions each year....More
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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

UAW Auto Workers To Hold Emergency Meeting



Auto Workers To Hold Emergency Meeting In Detroit To Help Big 3 Get Government Loans

(CBS/AP) Local United Auto Workers leaders from across the U.S. will hold an emergency meeting in Detroit on Wednesday to discuss concessions the union could make to help auto companies get government loans.

UAW leaders called the meeting Monday night in an e-mail, obtained by The Associated Press, to local union presidents and bargaining chairmen.

Among the subjects to be discussed at the meeting will be the possibility of restructuring the union-administered health care fund so that the automakers can delay payments to the multibillion-dollar fund, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The union leaders will also discuss potentially eliminating the jobs bank, in which laid-off workers keep receiving most of their pay. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the details of the talks haven't been finalized.....Read more
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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

UAW considers reopening contracts


Union summons leaders to Detroit as firms give survival plans to Congress today.
David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON -- As Detroit's Big Three are poised to present their business plans to Congress today justifying quick approval of $25 billion in emergency loans, the United Auto Workers has called an emergency meeting in Detroit on Wednesday during which the union could consider reopening its 2007 contracts with the automakers.

Union leaders representing workers at General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC plants across the country have been called to Detroit for the session, according to sources familiar with the plan.

One local UAW official who has been invited to the meeting expects the union leaders are going to be asked for their support to reopen the 2007 contracts and to agree to concessions that would help make the automakers financially viable.

The business plans GM, Ford and Chrysler have prepared for Congress include seeking additional givebacks from the UAW as one way to cut costs, according to sources with knowledge of the plans.

A person familiar with one automaker's plan said a variety of topics are being explored. Key issues include reopening the contract, eliminating the controversial jobs bank that still pays workers even when they are laid off, and how much and how quickly the automakers will contribute to a trust fund to be run by the UAW that will take over responsibility for retiree health care beginning in 2010. The health care trust was a key part of the landmark contracts negotiated last year.

UAW spokesman Roger Kerson could not be reached for comment late Monday.

Harley Shaiken, a labor expert and professor at the University of California, Berkeley, was unaware of Wednesday's meeting but was not surprised it was called.

"We truly are in uncharted waters, the stakes are enormous and when you have a situation like that, to lead effectively, you need all the local people aware of the choices and hearing directly from the top leadership what the options are."

Wednesday's meeting was first reported by Bloomberg News.

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger was criticized for the jobs bank during congressional hearings last month about giving the automakers federal aid. The number of workers in the programs has been greatly reduced under tougher time restrictions in the 2007 contract but the benefit is derided as a relic of a bygone age that erodes the automakers' ability to compete and that they can no longer afford. Gettelfinger recently said Ford has taken 40,000 workers out since 2005 and GM has removed about 47,000. About 3,500 workers are in the programs today, he said.

"The jobs bank has become the poster boy of what's gone wrong with the industry," Shaiken said. "The union knows it's the reality they have to deal with. To defend the jobs bank is just not done in the current environment."....More
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Thursday, November 6, 2008

Chrysler Only has enough money to last 6 months!


With the Internet a buzz on the massive automotive third quarter losses, Washington better act fast (if At All)

The American auto makers can not wait 12 months for the 25Billion set aside from the Federal Government for retooling plants to build energy efficient vehicles. If they have to wait a year, they won't make it!

Latest for Reuters-

Chrysler cash drains away as crisis deepens: sources

By Poornima Gupta and Kevin Krolicki

DETROIT (Reuters) - Chrysler LLC is rapidly burning through cash and being driven to prepare for a possible break-up if it can't clinch a merger with General Motors Corp or get government funding needed to ride out the economic crisis, people with knowledge of the situation said.

Without new funding or a wrenching restructuring, executives have raised concern about the auto maker's ability to finance its operations from existing cash beyond the first half of 2009, said the sources, who were not authorized to discuss Chrysler's performance.

Chrysler has had to pay out over $100 million a month to support strained suppliers on top of a total $200 million support to sales through dealers in August and September as it suspended vehicle lease financing, the sources said.
The $11.7 billion the struggling automaker said it had as of end-June has seen a substantial decline because of the company's deteriorating performance marked by a 35 percent slide in October sales and increasing cash incentives, they said.

Chrysler and its owner Cerberus Capital Management LP declined to comment.
Cerberus and GM had agreed last month on the broad terms of a merger of Chrysler's loss-making auto operations and those of its crosstown rival but the deal foundered when the Bush administration rebuffed a request for some $10 billion to support it, sources have said.
That setback has put the focus on winning support for a broader federal rescue package for GM, Chrysler, Ford Motor Co and their suppliers that the industry argues would save jobs and protect benefits for retirees.

But Chrysler has been forced to consider a more drastic set of backup plans that could include selling off key business lines -- including Jeep, considered its most valuable brand. It may also outsource its finance and human resources, sources said.
As a step toward that hard-landing scenario, the automaker is moving to split up its replacement parts business based on brand so that its Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge operations could be completely separate, one source briefed on that plan said.
That could make it easier to sell off an individual brand.
LOBBYING WASHINGTON
Chrysler Chief Executive Bob Nardelli joined GM CEO Rick Wagoner and Ford CEO Alan Mulally on Thursday in meetings with U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reed.
The three automakers lobbied the Democratic lawmakers -- who increased their power in Tuesday's election that also saw Barack Obama elected president -- for up to $50 billion in federal aid, sources said.
The push for aid has been accompanied by increasingly dire warnings from industry executives and their political allies about the cost of inaction and the risk of a failure that would cost tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs....More

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Fox News-Pelosi, Auto Execs and UAW to Meet


DETROIT — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will sit down Thursday with the leaders of Detroit's automakers and their workers as the industry seeks federal funding needed to survive a dramatic downturn.

Two people familiar with plans for the meeting said the top executives of General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC, along with the union's president, will meet with Pelosi to talk about the impact of the credit crisis and the industry's access to government funding.

She'll meet in Washington with Bob Nardelli of Chrysler, Alan Mulally of Ford, Rick Wagoner of GM and United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger, the people familiar with the meeting plans said.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because the meeting is private.

Pelosi has called for Congress to enact a stimulus program to shore up the sinking economy during its lame-duck session.

News of the meeting came Wednesday as Detroit automakers and their allies in Congress said Barack Obama's victory could help U.S. automakers line up federal funding.

Obama made it clear during his campaign that he understood the automakers' problems and would work to preserve the industry, U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said Wednesday.

"I'm very optimistic that we're going to have a fighter in the White House for manufacturers, and that's what we need," Levin said.

Levin said he was told Wednesday by Jason Furman, Obama's senior economic adviser, that government aid is atop Obama's agenda. Levin said Furman did not commit to a specific funding path for the industry but was supportive.

Obama has said he would meet with industry leaders and the United Auto Workers immediately to talk about helping automakers, but a meeting has not yet been scheduled.

Levin noted that Obama expressed support for doubling an Energy Department loan program for automakers to develop fuel-saving technology to $50 billion from $25 billion.

Michigan's other senator, Democrat Debbie Stabenow, said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., appears open to supporting another $25 billion in flexible funding.

Reid, she said, appeared open to supporting "whatever we feel is the best approach for the auto industry and can get the consensus in the House to pass."

Levin said members of Michigan's congressional delegation would pursue options to help the industry, including the $700 billion Wall Street bailout or access to Federal Reserve capital.

On Wednesday night, the Department of Energy released rules for getting the $25 billion in loans that could get money into automakers' hands by the end of the year.

Obama's victory over Republican John McCain came just three days before General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. are to release their third-quarter results, which almost certainly will show billions in losses and cash burn rates that will push the companies closer to emptying their treasuries if auto sales don't bounce back soon.

Further job cuts by both automakers are expected on Friday. Analysts say GM could close more plants but Ford has said it will likely do temporary factory shutdowns and overtime cuts at some of its car plants. Some new engines and models will be delayed.

Troy Clarke, GM's president for North America, said in remarks prepared for a speech Wednesday night in Detroit that the next 100 days are critical for GM and the auto industry.

The company, he said, made cuts to save cash earlier this year, but more are coming.

"I'd like to say we're done, but once again, market and economic conditions have continued to decline," he said in a text of the speech provided by GM. "We must be adaptable and ready to make needed changes quickly, particularly over the next 100 days."

GM is talking with Chrysler majority owner Cerberus Capital Management LP about GM acquiring Chrysler. GM reportedly is after Chrysler's roughly $11 billion in cash and is seeking federal aid to make the deal happen.

A person briefed on the GM-Chrysler talks said Wednesday that no announcement of a deal is imminent because much of it hinges on federal aid. The person asked not to be identified because the talks are private.

A further indication of GM's woes came Wednesday when its auto financing arm, GMAC Financial Services, reported a $2.52 billion third-quarter loss. GMAC is 51 percent owned by private equity firm Cerberus, while Detroit-based GM holds the rest.

Also Wednesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi again called for a lame-duck session of Congress to enact a stimulus program to shore up the sinking economy. It was unclear whether aid for the troubled automakers would be part of that package.

Automakers say some sort of government funding is necessary to bail out the troubled industry. They have been lobbying to speed up loans from the Energy Department pot, and for access to part of the $700 billion Wall Street bailout plan and perhaps other funding.

Also on Wednesday, the Center for Automotive Research published a report estimating that about 2.5 million jobs across the economy would disappear in the first year if the U.S. auto industry shrinks by 50 percent.

Only 239,000 of those job losses would be at the Detroit Three — the remainder would be at parts suppliers and related industries, the Ann Arbor-based center said.

Cerberus Chairman John Snow said Wednesday that Obama needs a bipartisan plan to counter the worst economic downturn in about 50 years.

"What we need is to make sure that a vital industry like autos ... which is such a big part of the overall economy, doesn't lead us into a deeper and harsher downturn," Snow, who served as treasury secretary under President Bush from 2003 to 2006, said in an interview on the CNBC cable channel. "The collapse of the auto industry at this time would be devastating for a new president."

GM is burning through more than $1 billion per month and analysts have said the company could reach the minimum cash levels required to operate sometime next year. They say Chrysler could go into bankruptcy next year if it doesn't take on a partner or isn't acquired by another automaker, raising the specter of tens of thousands of lost jobs or the need for the government to take over the company's pension obligations.

GMAC has said it is having discussions with U.S. federal regulators about becoming a bank holding company, a move that could help it access government funding and be part of a potential acquisition of Chrysler.

A GM-Chrysler deal could lead to job cuts of 24,000 to 35,000, according to industry analysts. They have predicted GM could close half of Chrysler's 14 manufacturing plants and consolidate engineering, design, finance and other operations. Another 50,000 auto supplier jobs could also be lost.

Most of the losses would be in Michigan, but analysts say the alternative of Chrysler being sold in pieces would result in many more job cuts than a GM acquisition....Article-FoxNews
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Sunday, November 2, 2008

UAW hires Girsky as adviser on federal bailout, GM-Chrysler


The UAW has hired veteran Wall Street consultant Stephen Girsky to advise the union on automakers' federal bailout talks and a possible tie-up between General Motors and Chrysler LLC, Automotive News learned today.

Girsky, 46, is a former senior auto analyst with Morgan Stanley who became an adviser to GM CEO Rick Wagoner. He left GM in 2006 after less than a year.
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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

GM CHRYSLER MERGER-Will The Feds Help?


While all parties involved with the General Motors and Chrysler merger await any news, the auto analyst believe the deal is coming.

The rumors and reports indicate the deal is done, but still nothing official!

It seems the merger is hinging on an influx of cash from the Treasury to help facilitate the merger,But will the Fed's give up billions with nothing in return?

When the federal Government bailed out Chrysler in the 1980's the UAW had to give up benefits and pay cuts to get the federal aid.

Will GM UAW workers have to give up pay and benefits to save their failing company?

Will thousands of jobs be lost from Chrysler and GM?

This deal is either going to be to complex to help everyone or to simple to believe it happened!

All the auto sources believe we will hear something by 11/1/08!

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Friday, October 24, 2008

Will The Big Three Ask The UAW To Re-Open The 2007 Contract?


More buyouts will not help automakers shed more workers, Gettelfinger says

Louis Aguilar / The Detroit News

DETROIT -- United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger said he didn't think another round of buyouts would help automakers shed more of their hourly work force but he deflected a question on whether the union is considering re-opening the landmark national labor contracts signed last year with the Detroit Big Three automakers.

"I'm not sure the value of a buyout at this point and time," Gettelfinger told reporters this morning at Detroit's Cobo Center, where the labor union president was honored by the Goodfellows charity organization. Gettelfinger reasoned that UAW-protected autoworkers who were in the position to leave their jobs would have taken one of the previous rounds of buyouts and early retirement offers and he didn't see the "effectiveness" of another round.

Gettelfinger acknowledged that he was in discussions with the Big Three automakers as they grapple with the immense impact of the global financing crisis and the worst auto sales market in 15 years, but he declined to provide details.

When asked whether he was discussing the possibility of re-opening last year's labor agreements, Gettelfinger responded: "Next question."

He was far clearer on protecting the independent health care trusts created for retirees.

Under the four-year labor contracts, Detroit's automakers are shifting retiree health care liabilities to the independent health care trusts, known as a Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association, VEBA. The VEBA trusts are scheduled to begin operating Jan. 1, 2010, with about $30 billion of what ultimately will be nearly $52 billion in automaker contributions. The UAW has said in the past the money will last for 80 years.

"We do not want to open up VEBA," Gettelfinger said.

"That was one of the most difficult and challenging decisions I ever had to make," he said, referring to the fund's creation.

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Saturday, October 18, 2008

VEBA Payments By GM are Due To start in 2010! Is this why there is a merger Coming?



The VEBA Payments By GM are Due To start in 2010! and Chrysler Happens to have 11.8Billion Dollars! and GM needs Money! This merger sounds real fishy!

Read this article about the VEBA!


UAW VP: GM Hasn't Sought VEBA Delay, Union Willing To Talk

By Sharon Terlep
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
FLINT, Mich. -(Dow Jones)- General Motors Corp. (GM) hasn't approached the United Auto Workers to push back payments due in 2010 to create a massive fund to pay for retiree health care, a top union official said Thursday.

But the union would "do the right thing" and work with GM if auto makers lacked the funding to pay as scheduled, UAW Vice President Cal Rapson said Thursday at an event to commemorate GM's plans to build a new small-engine factory.

The union and Detroit's Big Three auto makers agreed last year to shift the companies' retiree obligations to the union in the form of company-funded trusts knows at Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Associations, or VEBAs. The VEBAs are slated to take effect in 2010.

GM, burning through an estimated $1 billion a month, has taken a number of dramatic steps in recent months to ensure it has sufficient liquidity to weather the economic downturn and credit crunch. Fears are mounting that the auto maker lacks sufficient cash to survive until 2010, when a number of cost-saving measures will take effect.

Delaying VEBA payments has arisen as a potential option, especially after the UAW agreed to allow GM to push back payments due in 2008 and 2009.

The bulk of VEBA payments begin in 2010.

"We will have to evaluate the situation," Rapson told reporters. "We've got to fund that VEBA and we've got to be able to give our retirees the same service they're getting now."

GM, meantime, is looking to accelerate cost-cutting measures put in place as part of a $15 billion liquidity-boosting plan launched this summer, GM Chief Executive Rick Wagoner reiterated at the same event. The plan calls for saving $10 billion through cuts and raising another $5 billion through asset sales and fundraising moves on capital markets.

Wagoner said the credit crunch and meltdown on Wall Street continue to constrict the company's ability to make deals to either borrow cash or sell assets.

"Our approach is to take as much of this into our own hands as possible," he said.

Wagoner said GM's recent decision to tap the remaining $3.5 billion of its $4.5 billion secured revolving credit facility, a move that raised fears GM was running out of cash faster than expected, was a "defensive measure."

"It made sense to make sure we had the money if we needed it, and the only way to do it is to tap the lines," he said Thursday.

Wagoner also said auto sales remained weak in September, which he described as "not worse, but no better" than August, when GM's sales fell 20%.

U.S. auto sales in recent months have been hit hard by high fuel prices and waning consumer confidence.

-By Sharon Terlep,
Dow Jones Newswires

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Does It Matter if The UAW Opposes Merger?


It does and it doesn't!
A merger between General Motors and Chrysler will mean massive job cuts and plant closings for Chrysler workers.The UAW can't or won't stop it, one thing is they don't have the membership and number two is that not all the VEBA money has been paid!

But both companies know if they close plants and then have to bring them back online a year or two they will save billions!

Under the new UAW agreement, new plants will have the second tier wage structure. Which means they can bring in a new workforce that will make half the wages of what current workers make,they will have little to no benefits and no pensions!

Well you don't have to be an ivy league lawyer to see the plan. From the get go Cerberus was looking a way to flip Chrysler.

It is an awful funny that Cerberus owns the majority stake in GMAC Financing,owns all of Chrysler and is selling Chrysler to GM. Well the financing arm of GM (GMAC) was really the only division the General Motors that was make GM money, until the credit crunch.

Was this whole "merger" scenrio created by Cerberus and GMAC 2 years ago?

Another big question is if this merger happens and thousands of jobs are lost,
what happens to all the VEBA money?

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UAW President Opposes GM and Chrysler Merger!


UAW president opposed to any GM-Chrysler merger

United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger said Tuesday he would oppose a merger between General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC because it would cost workers their jobs.

The union president said the UAW has not had formal discussions with either automaker about the two companies combining, but he would be against any consolidation.

"I personally would not want to see anything that would result in a consolidation that would mean the elimination of additional jobs," Gettelfinger said on a Webcast run by WWJ-AM in Detroit.

Gettelfinger said the union has done a lot to help GM, Chrysler and Ford Motor Co. survive by giving health care concessions in 2005 and with a new contract last year that reduced the automakers' production costs.

GM and Chrysler's owner, Cerberus Capital Management LP, have discussed a merger or acquisition of Chrysler by GM. The talks have been shelved during the financial crisis but could be revived.

Gettelfinger also said that he tells UAW members to stay focused on the quality of the products they build as the industry faces unprecedented upheaval and the automakers struggle with slumping sales, mounting debt and a slowing global economy.

Gettelfinger said he was devastated by GM's announcements Monday that it would close a metal stamping plant near Grand Rapids by the end of next year and move up the end of sport utility vehicle production in Janesville, Wis., to Dec. 23. The moves affect more than 2,500 hourly workers.

"Any time we see a facility go down, we suffer with the people because we know the impact that it's going to have on their lives," he said.

The UAW president said he does not think the housing crisis has bottomed out yet, and he said that has a big impact on pickup truck sales. The key to recovery, he said, is to free up a frozen credit market so people buy vehicles again.

U.S. auto sales in September fell to their lowest level in 15 years, due in part to a lack of credit availability for many buyers. GM's finance arm, GMAC Financial Services, said Monday that it has tightened its criteria for consumer automotive financing by requiring credit scores of 700 or more, and restricting the length of loan terms.

Gettelfinger also predicted that union membership will grow because he said unions are needed today during tough economic times.

"Workers need a voice," he said. "A union is the only instrument that brings any form of equity and justice to the workplace."


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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Chrysler News-UAW’s Gettelfinger opposes GM, Chrysler merger




Not surprisingly, United Auto Workers chief Ron Gettelfinger said today that he would oppose a potential merger between General Motors and Chrysler LLC on the grounds that it would inevitably mean job losses for both companies. Gettelfinger says he hasn’t had any formal discussions on the matter with anyone from GM or Chrysler, however.

“I personally would not want to see anything that would result in a consolidation. That would mean the elimination of additional jobs,” Gettelfinger said during a WWJ-AM political Webcast.

Gettelfinger also wasn’t happy about GM’s decision to end SUV production early in Janesville, Wisconsin, on December 23 - a move that affects more than 2,500 union workers.

“Any time we see a facility go down, we suffer with the people because we know the impact that it’s going to have on their lives,” he said.


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