Wayne — Negotiations resumed Saturday between the United Auto Workers union and the Detroit Three automakers as the union’s strike against three major plants went into its second day.
The UAW said it had “a reasonably productive” conversation with Ford Motor Co.
Ford Chief Communications Officer Mark Truby said in a statement that the automaker’s leaders “are committed to reaching an agreement with UAW that rewards our workers and allows Ford to invest in the future. We have to win together.”
Meanwhile, Stellantis NV said it offered the UAW nearly 21% compounded wage increase and a pathway to “resolve” Belvidere Assembly Plant, the former Jeep Cherokee factory in north central Illinois that was idled at the end of February, but that the proposal was only on the table until the contract expired at midnight Thursday.
UAW President Shawn Fain said the move is evidence the company sees workers as “a bargaining chip.”
“Belvidere Assembly was a profitable plant that just a few years ago supported around 5,000 workers and their families,” he said. “Now that number is zero, and Stellantis wants to keep playing games. Their attitude is: Stellantis giveth, and Stellantis taketh away. Our attitude is: Save Belvidere.”
Outside Ford’s Michigan Assembly Plant at midday, workers’ energy remained high even at the end of a six-hour shift. Volunteers brought stacks of Little Caesar’s pizzas and Tim Hortons donuts to fuel picketers, and passing traffic honked in support.
Brian Poling, an hourly worker for UAW International, and his wife, Carrie, brought their daughters Kaylee, 7, and Zoe, 4, out to show their support.
“I want them to know that when they grow up, they can get a good job with good wages and good health care, that they can get by without going to paycheck to paycheck by doing an honest day’s work,” he said. “The UAW and other unions are the way to get there.”
Savon Hubbard, 46, and Keyona Clark, 24, work across from each other as sanders in the paint department. They say they’re particularly frustrated by stagnant wages, but they’re committed to striking for all of the union’s major priorities — eliminating tiers, restoring cost-of-living adjustments, guaranteed pensions and more.
Being one of the first plants to go on strike “is scary for sure,” Hubbard said, because the $500 per week workers are getting from the union to remain on strike isn’t enough to sustain their livelihoods for long.
“Hopefully they get everything together before too long,” he said. But he said he likes Fain’s strategy of a rolling strike, adding new plants the longer negotiations continue. “He’s playing chess right now. He’s not letting them know the next move. He’s shutting it down piece by piece. So I like how he’s playing it.”
Michigan Sen. Gary Peters and Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman, both Democrats, arrived at the line shortly before noon to offer their support for workers.
“What’s it like to hear all the support behind you? It’s amazing,” Fetterman told Audrey Hinchman, who works on the line at the Ford plant. “I don’t think they’re honking for the CEOs.”
“No, it’s for us,” she responded, smiling.
Fetterman, who drove more than four hours in his Ford Bronco from Pittsburgh to visit the picket line, said he lives across from a steel mill. “It’s a union town as well. I always stand for unions.”
Peters, coming out to the picket line for the second day, said the negotiations are particularly important as the auto industry transitions to electric vehicles.
“Certainly a big part of this conversation is to make sure, as we make the transition to EVs, that we have union workers making those vehicles in the battery plants and throughout the supply chain,” he said. “It’s an important thing that we stand behind.”
On Friday, Ford announced it would temporarily lay off 600 workers at Michigan Assembly Plant due to the strike impacting production in other parts of the factory.
Hinchman said she is “not happy” with the automaker’s move to lay off the non-striking workers: “They should be brought out here and get strike pay like the rest of us.”
Fain said Friday evening that non-striking workers laid off as a result of the strike may be eligible for strike pay. “It just depends on the scenario,” he said. “Some people qualify for unemployment, some people don’t.”
“Our members are going to be taken care of no matter what happens,” he added.
Josh Allen, 29, is a new hire at the Ford plant. He’s been working there in final assembly for two and a half years.
“I feel like this contract is for us and the temporary workers,” he said. “We want to shorten the years it takes for us to get to a full-time worker and shorten the years it takes to get to top pay.”
Being part of the first wave of workers to go on strike is nerve-racking, Allen said, but “I feel like it’s necessary. So I’m willing to hold out for as long as it takes to get what we need.”
The Republican National Committee weighed in on the strike Saturday, tying ongoing negotiations to reports that the Michigan Legislature is considering ending session in November to allow the upcoming presidential primary election to take place in late February.
“While the state’s economy hangs in balance, Whitmer and Biden’s warped priorities are clear,” Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a statement. “If Democrats truly cared about Michigan autoworkers, the legislature would commit to remaining in session until a solution is found to end this strike.”
Former President Barack Obama also issued a statement in support of the strike Saturday. When the Detroit Three were struggling to survive amid the Great Recession, he said, the UAW “sacrificed pay and benefits to help get the companies back on their feet.”
“Now that our carmakers are enjoying robust profits, it’s time to do right by those same workers so the industry can emerge more united and competitive than ever.”
rbeggin@detroitnews.com
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