UAW: Stellantis will offer buyouts to cut hourly workforce by 3,500

The maker of Jeep SUVs, Ram pickup trucks and other vehicles is looking to reduce its U.S. hourly workforce by as many as 3,500 employees through buyouts, according to a letter posted by a United Auto Workers local on Facebook.

Stellantis NV spokeswoman Jodi Tinson said she wouldn’t respond Tuesday to the details in the letter dated Monday from Doug McIntosh, president of Local 1264, which represents workers at the automaker’s stamping plant in Sterling Heights.

The maker of Jeep SUVs, Ram pickup trucks and other vehicles is looking to reduce its U.S. hourly workforce by approximately 3,500 employees by offering buyouts, according to a letter posted by United Auto Workers Local 1264 President Doug McIntosh.

Indefinitely laid-off workers would have the opportunity to fill in the created openings, McIntosh noted. The potential offer of incentive packages comes ahead of critical contract negotiations later this year with the UAW that will influence labor costs, product allocation and how workers at plants producing electric vehicles and their components are treated. This all comes as the outlook for the second half of the year remains uncertain, thanks to inflation, higher interest rates and other economic uncertainties.

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The UAW’s newly elected president, Shawn Fain, last week discussed a “fractured” relationship with Stellantis regarding its approach to electrification and following the indefinite idling in February of the Belvidere Assembly Plant in Illinois, which affected 1,350 workers. His remarks reflected the ongoing tension expressed by Fain and other UAW leaders with the Detroit Three automakers, including calling them the “enemies” and that the UAW must “punch them in the mouth.”

Stellantis plans to launch 25 all-electric models for the U.S. market by 2030. CEO Carlos Tavares has emphasized the need to find savings because electric vehicles are 40% more expensive than their internal combustion engine counterparts.

In his letter, McIntosh wrote that the local’s leadership had a conference call with UAW Vice President Rich Boyer, head of the union’s Stellantis Department, about the incentive packages that will be offered corporate-wide for production and skilled trades workers. The UAW and automaker are in talks to accept everyone who signs up for the offer, McIntosh wrote.

He said two packages will be offered. The incentive package for retirement, called “IPR,” would provide $50,000 for seniority workers hired prior to the 2007 agreement. The voluntary termination of employment program, or “VTEP,” provides a “guaranteed lumpsum benefit payment” for employees with at least one year of seniority.