GM: 19,000 hourly workers have taken buyouts

UAW agrees to new contract in Lordstown, Ohio



Craig Trudell

Automotive News | May 29, 2008 - 2:17 pm EST

 

 

DETROIT — General Motors said today that about 19,000 hourly employees have taken the latest round of buyouts this year. Most will leave the automaker no later than July 1.

“Despite significant challenges in the U.S. market, we continue to reshape our business for long-term success,” Troy Clarke, president of GM North America, said in a statement.

“This attrition program gives us an opportunity to restructure our U.S. work force through the entry-level wage and benefit structure for new hourly employees.”

GM said that whenever possible, current employees will fill the openings created as a result of the buyouts, in compliance with the national agreement it reached with the UAW last fall.

New employees will be hired at the entry-level wage and benefit structure negotiated last year with the union.

The acceptance rate for the cost-cutting program was lower than a similar offer GM made in 2006 for its union workers and broadly in line with expectations.

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger said in February he expected fewer than 20,000 GM workers to accept buyouts. Gettelfinger said then he expected economic uncertainty and other concerns to limit the number of union workers taking the offers to leave the payroll.

GM’s statements come as another UAW local said it reached a tentative local agreement with the automaker.

UAW Local 1112 in Lordstown, Ohio said in a posting on its Web site that an agreement was reached late Wednesday night. The Lordstown assembly plant makes the Chevrolet Cobalt and Pontiac G5.

The posting said highlights of the contract were being compiled and the local is in the process of scheduling dates for a vote on the deal. A GM spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment.

The Lordstown plant is not included in GM’s list of the 19 plants still stopped or slowed after the three-month-long UAW strike against American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings Inc. Six of those plants remain completely shut down, GM said this morning.

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