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American Axle workers strike against massive wage cut
By our reporting team
27 February 2008
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More than 3,600 workers went on strike against auto parts supplier
American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings (AAM) Tuesday in a
struggle against the pattern of wage-cutting agreements accepted
by the United Auto Workers union throughout the auto industry.
The strike, which began just after midnight as a four-year contract
expired, shut production at American Axle plants in Detroit and
Three Rivers, Michigan, as well as Tonawanda and Cheektowaga,
New York.
The auto parts maker, a major supplier for General Motors,
is seeking to cut wages and benefits by nearly two-thirds. The
company wants to reduce all-in hourly labor costswhich
include wages and health, retiree and other benefitsfrom
around $70 an hour to $27 an hour for production workers and $35
an hour for skilled trades workers, according to the Wall Street
Journal. That would take hourly wages down from $27 an hour
to $14, bringing them on par with wage cuts negotiated by the
UAW with Delphi and for new hires at Detroits Big Three
automakersGM, Ford and Chrysler LLC.

In addition, the company is seeking sharp increases in co-pays
for prescription drugs, the termination of vision coverage, the
replacement of the companys defined benefit pensions with
a 401(k) defined contribution plan, and the elimination of health
insurance for future retirees.
American Axle is also proposing to close four facilities, including
a forging operation in its Detroit plant and two New York-based
plants near a now-idled plant in Buffalo, a move that would cut
over 700 jobs. The UAW said it has made comprehensive proposals
that would reduce AAMs labor costs significantly and grant
it operational flexibility, but that the company has threatened
to shift production to low-wage plants in Mexico if its demands
are not met.
AAM was set up in 1994 after GM spun off five of its axle and
driveline plants to a private investor group led by former GM,
Chrysler and Volkswagen executive Richard Dauch. Three years later
private equity firm Blackstone Group bought a controlling share
in the company and then resold it in a series of stock sales,
which netted $600 million for its wealthy investors. These included
David Stockman, the former budget director in the Reagan administration
who is currently under indictment for fraud and other charges
stemming from the bankruptcy and liquidation of another auto parts
maker, Collins & Aikman.
The companys stocks have jumped more than 20 percent
since the beginning of the year in anticipation that the company
would attain similar wage and benefit concessions as other UAW-represented
suppliers. Welcoming the confrontation, Lehman Brothers analyst
Brian Johnson said in a note for clients, We are not really
concerned by this strike, quite the opposite. We believe that
the large magnitude of the concessions requested by [American
Axle in the] first round of negotiations bodes very well for the
savings the company will get in its final agreement. Johnson
said he expected a negotiated settlement to end the strike within
several days. KeyBanc analyst Brett Hoselton cited American Axles
plant closure proposal as the basis to reiterate his aggressive
buy rating on the stock and share price target of $35almost
48 percent above the current price.
In making their demands, AAM officials have pointed to the
massive givebacks the UAW has agreed to at Dana and other axle
manufacturers, as well as in-house producers at Ford and Chrysler.
All of the changes we have proposed have been accepted by
the UAW in agreements with our competitors in the United States,
Chief Executive Richard Dauch said.
There is every indication that the UAW has already accepted
the majority of the wage- and benefit-cutting demands and is trying
to work out what the union bureaucracy will get in return. In
exchange for historic concessions granted to the Big Three, the
UAW was handed control of a $50 billion retiree health-care trust
fundknown as a Voluntary Employees Beneficiary Association,
or VEBAmaking it the proprietor of one of the largest private
investment funds in the US.
Noting that the UAW has a proven record of working with
companies to improve their competitive position, union president
Ron Gettelfinger said, Our members cannot be expected to
make the extreme sacrifices American Axle is asking for with nothing
in return.
The union called the strike over Unfair Labor Practices,
not the wage-cutting demand, saying the company did not turn over
financial data to the union to enable it to make an informed
decision about whether to accept or reject such sweeping changes,
according to a leaflet distributed to strikers by UAW Local 235
in Detroit.
The UAW has not called out American Axle workers at other facilities
covered under a different agreement that did not expire, allowing
management to continue to stockpile parts in order to sustain
a long strike.
In contrast to the cowardice and treachery of the UAW, rank-and-file
workers at American Axles Detroit plant expressed their
determination to resist the companys demands.
Christie, a worker with 13 years at American Axle, told the
WSWS, They want to cut current workers to $14 an hour and
to cut our benefits. She noted that in the last contract,
which the union agreed to after a strike of less than two days,
the UAW accepted a pay freeze and a two-tier wage scale. American
Axle made money last year. It is only fair for us to receive something.
The executives got big bonuses.
We are making $23 an hour now, she added. I
dont understand how they can ask us to work for $14, and
they want us to have co-pays on our health insurance and vision.
In the last contract they said we needed to take cuts because
of the economy. It would be different if they were going bankrupt,
but they are making a profit.
Another worker said, When [American Axle CEO Dick] Dauch
bought this place he took a risk. We built this place up for him,
now they want to cut our wages in half. This place looked horrible
14 years ago. The quality here is incredible compared to what
it used to be. We built this place up and he got paid.
We have families, cars, homes, a certain standard of
living we are used to and now he wants to take it away. That is
ridiculous. The stockholders and CEOs are greedy. If we dont
fight to retain at least what we have now, it is going to get
worse.
Kevin Stein told the WSWS, Basically they are threatening
us. They say if we dont accept this they will close by 2011.
They are not even offering buyouts. They want to lower pay from
$23 an hour to $14 an hour without a buyout. What are they going
to do with the extra money? It will go into the pockets of the
CEOs and wasteful spending. Dauch pocketed $100 million when he
made this company public; that seems a little extreme.
We havent had a pay increase in eight years. It
is the death of the blue-collar worker, and it is snowballing
now. The blue-collar worker is no longer middle class. If you
dont have a college degree you will be making $14 an hour
whether your work at Wal-Mart, GM or American Axle.
In addition they are taking away our pensions, as though
it is no big deal. They expect you to put money into a 401(k),
when you have just taken a pay cut?
Kevin expressed disgust with what he had seen so far in the
presidential election campaign. Money runs the politics.
Theyve got the money and the politicians. Working people
dont have any money or political clout. There is no one
out there who I would vote for. I would vote for a third party
if I thought they had a chance.
Another worker, Drena, said, Most of the people who were
hired eight years ago were all laid off. About 1,600 to 1,700
took the buyout because they knew that this was coming. Almost
all of them were young people. There has been some talk about
this for over a year. This company has been preparing for a confrontation
for one or two years.
Bruce said, Its hard to say what is going to happen.
We just cant take a pay cut. This company is not even comparable
to Delphi, which was in bankruptcy. This company was not in bankruptcy.
It has been making a profit every year.
Chris, another worker, said, They gave the executives
a $10,000 bonus. We are just asking to stay the same. We already
have a two-tier wage system. This company is making money. Also,
they do not have to pay full pension for a large number of the
workers because they came over to American Axle from General Motors.
GM will pay half of the pension.
Look, said another worker, I have a daughter
who works at Kroger who makes $14.00 and hour and she cant
make it. How am I supposed to live on that wage?
Theresa added, Our costs are going up and they want us
to take a cut in our pay. Why do you think people are losing their
homes? I know a lot of families where both the husband and wife
are working and they still cant pay the mortgage. Cutting
wages will only make it worse.
A young worker with 13 years at the plant said, Were
fighting for our families. You work all your life and now they
want to take your pension away. The take from us and give themselves
big bonuses. Why not cut people from the top?
If you only get paid $14 a hour how are you going to
pay a $1,200 house note, and then the insurance, lights, gas and
telephone bills? How are you going to keep clothes on your back
and food on your table?
Walter Stewart, a veteran worker,
said, Dauch took over this facility in 1994. He tried to
break the GM pattern, lower wages and carry out other takeaways.
But we resisted and held the pattern in 1997, when the contract
was scheduled to expire in 1999. Since they were unable to get
American Axle to break the pattern, GM used the Delphi bankruptcy
to do it.
The deal between Delphi, GM and the UAW changed the face
of the auto industry forever. Theyve been waiting for 10
years to cut our wages. Were the last ones that might throw
a wrench into the Delphi-GM-UAW scheme. If we resist it might
unravel the whole system of givebacks and global restructuring
of the Big Three that the UAW agreed to. That is why GM is watching
this strike very closely. Were the last ones who are in
their way.
The UAW has weakened the labor movement and all workers
in the manufacturing sector. The so-called middle class, that
is the working class, has never been so threatened as in recent
years. The working class is moving towards third world wages and
a way of life, not because we cant produce well enough or
because we are derelict, but because of the greed of corporate
leaders. Since Bush was in office 3 million manufacturing jobs
have been destroyed.
The UAW is too accommodating. [Former UAW President]
Douglas Fraser, who just died, played a key role in compromising
the struggle of UAW workers. He wanted workers to give concessions
and then he accepted a seat on the board of directors of Chryslercrossing
the line of demarcation and making the UAW look more like a corporate
union than a labor organization. Bieber and Yokich followed suit
and now Gettelfinger has given away everything. The two-tier wage
system is a tactic used by the greedy corporate leaders to bust
the union. Gettelfinger works more for the Wall Street investors
than for the members. He looks at the companys profits and
numbers like [GM CEO] Rick Wagoner or Ford or Dauch.
This VEBA deal was worked out with big Wall Street financiers.
I think its the foot in the door to get rid of health-care
benefits for all of us. Then Gettelfinger and Wagoner got together
to get a judge to prevent retirees from challenging the health-care
giveaway the union agreed to.
See Also:
Vote "no"
on UAW betrayal at Ford! Elect rank-and-file committees for contract
fight!
[6 November 2007]
Bitter outcome of
UAW contract betrayal: Chrysler to cut 12,000 more jobs
[2 November 2007]
As contract faces
rejection, UAW conspires with Chrysler to impose agreement
[23 October 2007]
UAW-GM deal means more
plant closings
[2 October 2007]
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