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Detroit Chrysler worker speaks out on impact of mass layoffs
This is a major change in our lives and we have no control
over it
By Jerry White
14 April 2007
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The downsizing of the US auto industry is having a devastating
effect on the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, particularly
in the midwestern US states of Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri.
Over the past 18 months the Big Three automakersGeneral
Motors, Ford and Chrysleralong with their parts suppliers
have announced the elimination of more than 150,000 jobs. Unlike
the early 1980swhen the downturn in the industry was followed
by a period of re-hiringanalysts are quick to point out
that todays job cuts are part of the permanent shrinking
of the US auto industry in line with the smaller market share
controlled by the Big Three. In addition, for every job eliminated
by the auto corporations an estimated nine others will be wiped
out at auto suppliers, car dealers and other dependent businesses.
In February, DaimlerChrysler revealed plans to wipe out 13,000
jobs at its Chrysler Group plants in the US and Canada. The companys
German executives also made clear their intention to end the nine-year-old
merger with Chrysler and spin off the money-losing US operation.
This has sparked a wave of takeover offers from private equity
firms, billionaire speculator Kirk Kerkorian and the non-union
Canadian auto parts giant Magna. The outcome of such a takeover
would be the gutting of the wages as well as health care and retirement
benefits of Chrysler employees. The new owners would likely sell
off the corporations most profitable assets and dismantle
the 80-year-old auto company.

The threatened carve up of Chrysler is the latest blow to the
state of Michigan, which is already reeling from decades of plant
closings and layoffs. In the 1950s, when the US auto makers enjoyed
a near global monopoly, producing four out of every five of the
worlds cars, the states manufacturing centersDetroit,
Flint, Lansing and Saginawboasted some of the highest rates
of home ownership and per capita income in the US. Today, Michigans
official jobless rate6.6 percentis second only to
hurricane-torn Mississippi, and neighborhoods that were once the
home to the highest paid industrial workers in America are experiencing
a record number of home foreclosures, bankruptcies and demands
for emergency food and medical assistance.
The exodus of workers and their families from the state has
prompted comparisons to the mass migration of the Dust Bowl era
of the 1930s, when tens of thousands of ruined farmers from Oklahoma
and other states packed up their meager belongings and left for
California. According to the US Census Bureau, 42,300 people left
Michigan last year, up from 29,700 in 2005, and by far the largest
migration out of the state since 1984, when the near-Depression
conditions in the auto industry forced thousands of workers and
young people to leave Michigan in search of oil industry jobs
in Texas and other southwestern states. Describing current conditions
in working class areas in Michigan, a New York Times writer
recently noted, In some Michigan neighborhoods that have
been home to auto workers, houses are now selling for less than
the prices of some of the vehicles rolling off of assembly lines
in Detroit, Dearborn, Lansing and elsewhere in the state.
Autoworkers and their families have been left entirely on their
own by the United Auto Workers union, which, rather than opposing
the mass layoffs, is assisting the auto bosses in the orderly
downsizing of the industry. After decades of labor-management
collaboration at the expense of its members, the UAW bureaucracy
is not even making a pretense of defending autoworkers jobs
and living standards. On the contrary, the UAW recently suppressed
a wildcat strike by workers at a North Carolina plant owned by
DaimlerChryslers Freightliner truck division, where 1,200
out of 4,000 workers are slated to lose their jobs. In exchange
for the unions cooperation in the dismantling of Chrysler,
the companys potential buyers are reportedly considering
giving the UAW bureaucracy an equity stake in the
new company, including possible control of its multi-billion dollar
pension fund.
UAW members have been forced to make the choice of taking a
buyout to leave the industry or to try to hang on,
hoping that they will survive the next round of mass layoffs.
The buyout package, for eligible UAW members with at least a year
of seniority, includes a $100,000 lump sum and six months of limited
medical coverage. Having no confidence in the UAW, more than 4,300
Chrysler workers have already chosen to take early retirement
or buyout packages, leaving their jobs, benefits and retirement
packages behind them.
Weve been given only a few weeks to make a life-changing
decision, said Robert who has worked at a Chrysler plant
in the Detroit area for more than 15 years. If I dont
take the buyout and then get laid off, you will get put in the
Jobs Bank, where you continue to get paid. But after the next
labor contract is signed in September, the Jobs Bank might be
gone and well be put out on the streets with nothing.
If we have to relocate to find work somewhere else, we
cant sell our homes because housing prices have plunged
and foreclosures have skyrocketed. Well have to take the
kids out of school, with all the trauma that would cause, and
move to another state. Even if I were able to sell my house, I
would take a big hit. A lot of workers have been in denial, saying
this cant happen to us, but it is. Ive been rushing
around getting dental care for my kids because in a few weeks
time I may not have coverage any more.
This is a major change in our entire lives and we have
no control over it. The people in power are making a lot of money.
How much money do they need$40 million, $50 million? Look
at the lives they have destroyed. These buyouts are a horrible
thing for the working class.
The Valentines Day massacre
Robert described the mood of workers on shop floor as they
awaited the long-anticipated downsizing announcement scheduled
for Valentines Day, February 14. For six weeks before
the announcement we knew it was going to be bad news, we just
didnt know how bad. Weve heard a constant barrage
of rumors. There was talk two years ago about the possible sale
of the company, but the top executives denied it. Then they said,
yes, they were looking for people to buy the company. The German
division wants to dump the American division, and I think they
are going to do it any way they can. We are trying to get through
this, but were watching the factory disintegrate before
our eyes. The company began painting the massive stamping presses
white, instead of Chrysler blue, and we told ourselves this place
is getting ready to be sold.
Maximizing profits in the short-term is all they are
concerned with. We had a multi-million dollar piece of equipment
that broke down. Three or four years ago they would have flown
someone in from Germany to get it going immediately. This time
it took 10 days just to get someone to look at it. They wont
put the money out, and theyve laid off most of the machine
repairmen. This is a major sign to the employees that they are
just going to let the plant die. My personal belief is they will
sell our building to an outside company to manage it. It isnt
going to be Chrysler anymore.
When Tom LaSorda took over the Chrysler division as CEO,
one of the first things he said was that his responsibility was
to the shareholders, not the employees. Its to the guys
in the investment companies that are owned by elites, not guys
like me who have 100 shares in my 401K. After the job-cutting
announcement, the stock went up $5.40. If I sold them, what would
I make, $540 dollars? The big guys made millions and they knew
what was going to happen beforehand. They make more in a one-day
transaction than a Chrysler worker makes in his entire career.
Were just trying to make ends meet and put food on the table
for our kids. Everyday weve got this hanging over our heads.
These people are controlling our lives.
This is a very bad way of doing things. You would think
that there would be laws and corporate charters. They are supposed
to be socially responsible when they do business. But obviously
these things will never come up. The Democrats are just like the
Republicans. They dont care. What happens when you lose
your house? What are they going to do? [Michigan Governor] Granholm
and the Democrats say they are for the working class and social
programs, but in reality they are cutting the programs for the
people also, while they are spending billions for the war in Iraq.
The Democrats speak for the corporations, not for the working
people.
Globalization
Robert addressed the efforts by Granholm and other Democratic
politicians, as well as the UAW, to blame the loss of jobs on
unfair foreign competition, in particular from the
Asian carmakers. Toyota is not the reason we are losing
our jobs, he said. The reason is that the people on
the top of Chrysler just want to make more. I call that the law
of capitalism. They need to keep expanding and making more money.
And they cant get it out of the consumer who isnt
going to pay more for a car. People are going to go with the cheapest
car because they are struggling too. What are you going to do
if you can get a Toyota cheaper than a gas-guzzling Chrysler?
Im not against globalization. The nationalist Buy
American thing doesnt solve the problem. These are
multinational corporations that are abusing people all over the
world, not just here in Detroit. We need globalization, but there
has to be a fairer way to do these things so that it helps everyone
out, not just a few people at the top that are taking advantage
of labor all over the world. They are always searching for cheaper
labor.
The UAW at Chrysler says Buy Chrysler. Well,
Chrysler isnt an American company anymoreits
a German company. As a whole, the company made $1.7 billion in
profits last year. We only began losing money the
minute we refused to give up the same health care concessions
as the GM and Ford workers did. DaimlerChrysler has cut jobs in
Germany too. Workers all over the world are facing the same struggle.
The Ford workers at the Fiesta plant in Russia just went on strike,
and the company settled it by giving them an extra nickel.
Chrysler workers have been hit with one restructuring
after another since the 1998 merger between Chrysler and Daimler
Benz, including in 2001 when the company eliminated 26,000 jobs
or one fifth of its blue and white collar workforce. The United
Auto Workers union, which along with the German IG Metall union,
sits on DaimlerChryslers supervisory board, has pressured
its members into accepting speed-up and other cost-cutting measures,
supposedly to save jobs. The result has been the worsening of
conditions of auto workers on the one side, and a windfall in
payoffs to the companys German and US-based executives on
the other. Although the company lost $1.5 billion last year, Chrysler
CEO Tom LaSorda pocketed $3 million in compensation, including
a $1.1-million annual bonus, plus $2 million worth of shares.
Robert commented, They cannot increase profits any more
by reducing the materials coming into the factory. Now they are
going to start hitting us up for health care. The shareholders
are not making enough money. They need to keep it coming in. The
only place they can squeeze it out of is the employees. Theyve
already done everything to cut costs on steel. Theyve gone
down to such thin gauge of metal weve actually had the steel
go through the whole process and customers will look at the body
lines on the showroom floor and the panel will be splitting because
the metal is so weak. Thats unacceptable. You cant
produce cars like that. But theyve shrunk down the amount
of metal so much for one thing: to save money.
Betrayed by the UAW
The union has enabled the destruction of jobs,
Robert said. There used to be a pattern for improvements
every contract, now its for concessions and reductions.
The auto companies already made these cutstheyre supposed
to be financially sound. How many of these turnarounds
are we supposed to go through? We went through a turnaround in
2001 that cost tens of thousands of jobs. I watched people on
the news losing their jobs. They come up to them with a security
guard to escort them out of the building. Im talking about
guys with 15-to-20 years who have given their lives to the success
of the company. And the company hasnt given any security
to these workers. It isnt any team if you ask
me. The only team is the guys higher up, the so-called coaches,
along with the union. They always push that team stuff.
If any supervisor puts out a letter to the employees its
always addressed to the team. What team?
The older workers say lets keep what we got. Who
cares if they bring in a two-tier wage system? The union pushes
this every-man-for-himself stuff. There is no means of resisting
through the union. The union officials dont want their style
of life disrupted at all. We never see Ron Gettelfinger, the president
of the UAW. He doesnt come to the plant floor. All we see
of him is in the newspaper. These are people who are holding our
security in their hands. But all they do is go along with the
program. Gettelfinger sits on the board of directors in Germany
as a labor representative. He knows what the company
is doing. There is no resistance at all anymore. If any serious
issues are raised at a union meeting, the local president will
shut down the meeting.
The UAW is going along with the program. The UAW leaders
are too afraid if the employees walk out on strike that they will
not get their paychecks. And those are bloated paychecks from
the top leadership down to the shop stewards in the plants. Our
steward gets paid for a 10-to-12 hour dayhe couldnt
care less about the employees.
The UAW is collaborating with the auto bosses efforts to drive
out an entire generation of older workers who accumulated relatively
higher wages and a measure of job security and retirement protections
and replace them with a much smaller and more highly exploited
workforce of low-wage and temporary workers.
Commenting on what the future holds for autoworkers Robert
said, They are going to get rid of everyone making $27 an
hour. They dont want to have 10-to-12 job classifications
any more. They want two or three classifications at a low rate
of pay. They want the average worker who can take a part off the
line and put it in a rack to also run over to the line to start
it back up if it stops. Now you need a skilled tradesman to do
that. Thats what they are pushing with the Modern Operating
Agreements and what they call our Smart Training on
how to work together as a team. They are going to get rid of all
of us and bring in low-pay and temporary workers. Delphi wants
to hire people for a year or two at a time. That enables a company
not to pay the benefits. Having 30 years at a company is going
to be a thing of the past.
They are shutting down plants all over the world. I saw
a cartoon showing two businessmen standing together. The one guy
looks at the other and says, What did you just tell that
worker? The other guy responds, I told him to stop
talking and work faster. How much are you paying him?,
the other guy asks. Im paying him five dollars a day,
he says.
Well how much are you making from what he is producing?
the other guy asks. Im making $25 a day. The
other guy says, So in other words hes paying you $20
a day to tell him to work faster. Thats the reality
of the capitalist system.
Fifty percent of the kids in college are going to be
ending up working at a restaurant as highly-educated waiters who
are going to be struggling every month to pay their bills. They
dont even know what is going to hit them once they graduate,
because no one is telling them the truth. How long will it take
before people realize there has to be a change? Look at what is
happening today. Many people cant put food on their tables.
Most are living on the edge. People read about the war and they
know the politicians, including the Democrats, are not telling
the truth.
See Also:
Banking giant Citigroup to cut 17,000
jobs
[13 April 2007]
New Ford CEO received $39.1 million in
2006
[7 April 2007]
US: Circuit City fires 3,400
better-paid store workers
[30 March 2007]
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