GM’s Oshawa Assembly plant builds its first Chevy Silverado pickup

General Motors has started production of the Chevrolet Silverado pickup at the Oshawa Assembly plant in Ontario.

The first Silverado, a 2022 heavy-duty High Country trim in red, rolled off the assembly line around 11:45 a.m. Monday, but GM announced it publicly on Wednesday, said Monte Doran, GM spokesman.

It is a remarkable feat considering the plant was slated for closure in 2018 when GM said it would permanently close Oshawa and four other factories in North America in a cost-saving effort. The plants targeted for closure, Oshawa included, all built cars, and consumer tastes had shifted to pickups and SUVs.

But in labor talks last year, Unifor — the union that represents GM auto workers in Canada — struck a deal with GM to build the automaker’s overflow of pickup trucks.

Located about 40 miles east of Toronto near the Lake Ontario shoreline, Oshawa Assembly has undergone a $1.1 billion overhaul and is now building the full-size light-duty and heavy-duty pickups far ahead of schedule to help GM meet increased demand for that vehicle.

“The rapid retooling, hiring, and training needed to reach today’s start of production was an extraordinary accomplishment,” Scott Bell, GM Canada president and managing director, said in a statement. “We continue our work with the federal and Ontario governments toward even larger transformative investments in Canada.”

The retooled facility includes a new body shop that covers 13 acres, 1,200 new robots, 10,300 feet of new conveyors and 310 miles of electric wiring. It contains 5,000 parts from 370 different suppliers, Doran said.

Oshawa will begin shipping trucks to dealers next month. 

But GM Canada will raffle the first one, which will come with an exclusive VIN 001 wrap, to its dealers in Canada to benefit the Durham Children’s Aid Foundation (DCAF). For every $250 a dealer donates to DCAF, it earns an additional entry into the raffle, Doran said. Dealers can donate until Nov. 29 and GM Canada will announce the winner Dec. 8.

It’s common practice for automakers to use the first car off a line to benefit charity.

Donating to DCAF honors former Oshawa employee Sharon Clark, who died last year after battling cancer. For years, Oshawa Assembly employees have donated holiday gifts for children, through “Sharon’s Kids.”

Since 2018, GM Canada and its employees have donated more than $500,000 to Sharon’s Kids, which is now part of DCAF, GM Canada said in a statement.