UAW president Shawn Fain trashes Stellantis contract proposal

United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain threw a printed contract proposal from the maker of Jeep SUVs, Ram pickup trucks and other vehicles into the trash Tuesday, accusing the company of reneging on its commitment not to seek a “concessionary agreement” amid national contract talks.

Fain in a Facebook livestream discussed points of Stellantis NV’s counterproposal to the union that were outlined in a flier circulating on social media this week. He said they include adding tiers, threatening profit sharing, cutting medical coverage and 401(k) contributions, reducing vacation time for new hires, allowing the company to reopen the contract and make changes without rank-and-file ratification and keeping the idled Jeep Cherokee plant in Belvidere, Illinois, without product.

“Stellantis’ proposals are a slap in the face,” Fain said. “They’re an insult to our members’ hard work over the last four years. As I said earlier, our members have worked their asses off in the best of times and the worst of times, to produce incredible value for this company. During COVID, UAW members were deemed essential. They risked their lives, and some gave up their lives to keep the lines running. So rather than honoring the sacrifices made by the employees, management chooses to spit in our faces.”

"I'll tell you what I want to do with (Stellantis') proposal," United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain said during a Facebook livestream. "I'm going to file it in its proper place, because that's where it belongs: the trash, because that's what it is."

Fain during the livestream picked up his office trash can and threw the proposal into the garbage.

“I’ll tell you what I want to do with their proposal,” he said. “I’m going to file it in its proper place, because that’s where it belongs: the trash, because that’s what it is.”

The automaker’s proposal as explained by Fain stands distinct from the “members’ demands” from the UAW outlined last week. The union’s proposals include eliminating wage tiers for full-time employees, expanding profit sharing to supplemental employees, providing pensions and retirement health-care coverage for all workers, reducing the work week to 32 hours while paying workers for 40, and granting a 46% wage hike over four years.

Estimates in total say the proposal could increase labor costs to more than $100 per hour per worker at the Detroit Three automakers, roughly double labor costs at foreign automakers assembling vehicles in the United States.