Blast at Chrysler plant in Windsor an ‘intentional act,’ police say

Police are calling an explosion Thursday evening at the Chrysler minivan plant in Windsor, Ontario, an “intentional act” and are asking members of the public for any information they may have.

No injuries were reported after the explosion at 5:45 p.m. in a vacant second-floor storage area on the west side of the plant, and there was no active fire as a result, according to the Windsor Police Service. The Explosive Disposal Unit located a “suspicious package” that detonated, and it will undergo further testing and examination as a part of the investigation.

There were no reported injuries after an explosion Thursday evening at the Chrysler minivan plant in Windsor.

Authorities were on the scene, and the plant was evacuated before 6 p.m. “out of an abundance of caution,” said LouAnn Gosselin, spokeswoman for Chrysler brand parent Stellantis NV. The plant was down for the remainder of the afternoon shift and resumed Friday morning as scheduled.

“The space has since been cleared and employees are expected to report to work at their regularly scheduled time,” she said in a statement. “Our employee health and safety, as well as the safety of the community are our top priority.”

Windsor police originally identified the device as an improvised explosive device, but retracted the statement because not all of the components had been tested.

The explosion comes amid some tensions between the automaker and its employees in Windsor. Canadian autoworkers union Unifor is objecting to Stellantis’ plans to enforce a requirement that all workers at its Canadian facilities get the COVID-19 vaccine, or they could face consequences, including termination of employment.

Windsor employs 4,213 hourly and 185 salaried workers on two shifts, but Stellantis last month informed employees it would cut the second shift and about 1,800 jobs in April as a result of the ongoing global microchip shortage after a third shift and 1,500 jobs were dropped last year. The automaker, however, says it will uphold its commitments in its 2019 contract with Unifor, which includes a $1.13 billion investment into Windsor by 2024 for a new platform supporting plug-in hybrid and electric vehicles. Unifor says that will return the plant to three shifts.