UAW response to bailout

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charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: Strk
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
[
No it doesn't because it's mainly just smoke blowing itself. No one in this thread has pinned "all of the problems on the workers". The thread was about the UAW thugs expecting EVERYONE ELSE to change but they won't. There is a huge difference between those two thoughts/statements and you and DM don't seem to grasp that fact.
LOL..thugs. I still think they should compromise more but i don't consider them thugs. Must be Limbaugh speak.

It's a matter of opinion, I see them as thugs because they distort the labor market and now won't give an inch when the companies they work for are on the brink. Fits my definition of a thug but YMMV.

They won't move an inch? They cut pay and benefits, restrictions have been added to the jobs bank (which will be phased out), removed several job-class restrictions, gotten rid of union pay requirements for non-union workers and plenty of other things.

And most of those changes dont kick in until 2010 when their new contract starts. It seems to me, it might just be a good idea to move those changes forward to help save the company.
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
76
www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: Strk
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
[
No it doesn't because it's mainly just smoke blowing itself. No one in this thread has pinned "all of the problems on the workers". The thread was about the UAW thugs expecting EVERYONE ELSE to change but they won't. There is a huge difference between those two thoughts/statements and you and DM don't seem to grasp that fact.
LOL..thugs. I still think they should compromise more but i don't consider them thugs. Must be Limbaugh speak.

It's a matter of opinion, I see them as thugs because they distort the labor market and now won't give an inch when the companies they work for are on the brink. Fits my definition of a thug but YMMV.

They won't move an inch? They cut pay and benefits, restrictions have been added to the jobs bank (which will be phased out), removed several job-class restrictions, gotten rid of union pay requirements for non-union workers and plenty of other things.

In the past and some have not even gone into effect yet. So again, they have not given an inch during this bailout/begging/stealing process.
 

JS80

Lifer
Oct 24, 2005
26,271
7
81
Originally posted by: Strk
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
[
No it doesn't because it's mainly just smoke blowing itself. No one in this thread has pinned "all of the problems on the workers". The thread was about the UAW thugs expecting EVERYONE ELSE to change but they won't. There is a huge difference between those two thoughts/statements and you and DM don't seem to grasp that fact.
LOL..thugs. I still think they should compromise more but i don't consider them thugs. Must be Limbaugh speak.

It's a matter of opinion, I see them as thugs because they distort the labor market and now won't give an inch when the companies they work for are on the brink. Fits my definition of a thug but YMMV.

They won't move an inch? They cut pay and benefits, restrictions have been added to the jobs bank (which will be phased out), removed several job-class restrictions, gotten rid of union pay requirements for non-union workers and plenty of other things.

Then why have the union at all? Oh wait could it possibly be so they can extort by threatening to strike if/when they are ever profitable again repeating history?

Look at the japanese counterpart plants in the South. They have a very good wage and are efficient. UAW is useless.
 

Slew Foot

Lifer
Sep 22, 2005
12,379
96
86
Originally posted by: L00PY
Here's a CBS story with some actual figures.

1) "(T)he average United Auto Workers member makes $29.78 per hour at GM, while Toyota pays its workers (most of whom are non-union) about $30 per hour."
2) "The Japanese automaker has fewer retirees in the U.S., and its health care benefits and pensions are less generous than those negotiated between Detroit and the UAW."
3) "(H)ealth costs and pensions for auto workers in Japan - worth billions - are subsidized by the Japanese government."
4) "((A)ccording to the UAW) labor costs account for about 10 percent of the cost of producing a vehicle; the remaining 90 percent includes research and development, parts, advertising, marketing and management overhead."
5) "In 2007 GM's CEO Rick Wagoner earned about $15.7 million. . . Ford?s CEO Alan Mulally's total compensation in 2007 was $21.7 million."
6) "Toyota paid its entire 37-member leadership team approximately $22 million."

The average salary paid to UAW members is steadily going down after the current concessions that have new employees making significantly less. Of course the Japanese are looking to lower wages from the average automaking job to that of the average manufacturing job in the state.

Comparing apples to apples is difficult because of the assorted government subsidies involved. Many foreign companies have received state and local incentives to open up shop. The Japanese government subsidies the pension for their older workforce that's mainly in Japan while their younger American workforce have yet to hit retirement.

Japan may be subsidizing its retirees, but as a country it has a ridiculous deficit, an aging population, and a shrinking worker base. Japan's about to be in a world of crap.
 

Puffnstuff

Lifer
Mar 9, 2005
16,255
4,928
136
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
Also when they go on layoff and onto unemployment gm pays the difference to bring them up to 72% of their regular wage.
Are you on unemployment?

Why yes I am unfortunately but my employer doesn't pay any buffer to make up the difference between what the state pays and my regular pay. Good news is that I received a call yesterday that the mill will be fired back up on Jan 2nd.

My point of starting this thread is that even though everyone came to the table with their hands out once they got the money the first thing they started doing is complaining about the terms. I'm a union worker and I've worked around guys that have come from uaw enviroments. All I can say is if the ones I worked with are indicative of the greater union body then I can see why the big 3 struggle to put out vehicles in a timely manner.

Where I work we're JIT and don't warehouse anything we make. Everything is loaded realtime as it's produced and shipped out. We have an exceptionally lean workforce, too lean in fact which makes for solid shift of work. We don't have relief hands to give us a break so if there's a gap in the line we get one and if not we keep on working. While I don't advocate working people like pack mules while they're at work I do believe in a honest days work for an honest days pay.
 

Squisher

Lifer
Aug 17, 2000
21,204
66
91
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
Also when they go on layoff and onto unemployment gm pays the difference to bring them up to 72% of their regular wage.
Are you on unemployment?

Why yes I am unfortunately but my employer doesn't pay any buffer to make up the difference between what the state pays and my regular pay. Good news is that I received a call yesterday that the mill will be fired back up on Jan 2nd.

My point of starting this thread is that even though everyone came to the table with their hands out once they got the money the first thing they started doing is complaining about the terms. I'm a union worker and I've worked around guys that have come from uaw enviroments. All I can say is if the ones I worked with are indicative of the greater union body then I can see why the big 3 struggle to put out vehicles in a timely manner.

Where I work we're JIT and don't warehouse anything we make. Everything is loaded realtime as it's produced and shipped out. We have an exceptionally lean workforce, too lean in fact which makes for solid shift of work. We don't have relief hands to give us a break so if there's a gap in the line we get one and if not we keep on working. While I don't advocate working people like pack mules while they're at work I do believe in a honest days work for an honest days pay.

The thing you are complaining about (sub-pay or jobs bank) is already something that Gettelfinger said he would give up back in the bailout talks.

It is funny that this whole thread is based upon something unspecified that the UAW doesn't like about what Bush wrote into this bailout. WHAT IS IT??? We don't even know.

Last time the stumbling block was "parity" and the UAW didn't want to sign something so undefined. I know I don't like signing blank checks and handing them out with the stipulation that people charge me a "reasonable amount."
 

Drift3r

Guest
Jun 3, 2003
3,572
0
0
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: Strk
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
[
No it doesn't because it's mainly just smoke blowing itself. No one in this thread has pinned "all of the problems on the workers". The thread was about the UAW thugs expecting EVERYONE ELSE to change but they won't. There is a huge difference between those two thoughts/statements and you and DM don't seem to grasp that fact.
LOL..thugs. I still think they should compromise more but i don't consider them thugs. Must be Limbaugh speak.

It's a matter of opinion, I see them as thugs because they distort the labor market and now won't give an inch when the companies they work for are on the brink. Fits my definition of a thug but YMMV.

They won't move an inch? They cut pay and benefits, restrictions have been added to the jobs bank (which will be phased out), removed several job-class restrictions, gotten rid of union pay requirements for non-union workers and plenty of other things.

Then why have the union at all? Oh wait could it possibly be so they can extort by threatening to strike if/when they are ever profitable again repeating history?

Look at the japanese counterpart plants in the South. They have a very good wage and are efficient. UAW is useless.

If it weren't for the UAW those plants wouldn't be as competitive in their offerings.

Also the problem with the big 3 is not a problem that revolves around unions. The Japanese have car plants in the US and Japan that are unionized. The problem with the big 3 is a problem of arrogant and thick headed management who have made horrible decisions period.
 

Drift3r

Guest
Jun 3, 2003
3,572
0
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: boomerang
So the net result would then be what? A better life for all? A return to the land of milk and honey?

What rewards would the average American gain in such a situation? What benefits would we reap from breaking the union?

I hear this a lot and I'm curious how we'd benefit from it.
I wouldn't be subsidizing unskilled laborers to make a lot of product that no one wants to buy. It's unsustainable, to say the least. If they need to build something to keep food on the table, then they should be building railroads or something that people might actually want and use. Instead, they're producing essentially worthless perishable goods. And I'm paying for it.

Unskilled labor? Then the big 3 could move all those jobs south of the border if those jobs are so damn easy to do that anyone can do them. All the jobs that could have been automated have been in the car industry and frankly most jobs at car plants are those that require the human touch of some sort to be done correctly. As far as subsidizing goes the Japanese automakers are all subsidized to the hilt by their own government and by local US state governments that want their plants in their states.
 

chucky2

Lifer
Dec 9, 1999
10,018
37
91
The UAW is already assuming the pension and healthcare costs, and their new workers will be hired in at $14/hr. $14/hr is less than $30k/yr folks. These aren't people flipping burgers, they're working their @ss off everyday, in tough conditions, and have to be perfect everytime.

I think, with the exception of the job bank, the UAW has given plenty up already. If we want the Big 3 to reach "parity" with its Japenese US plants, then lets have the Big 3 Management reach "parity" with the Japanese Management.

Me thinks the push for "parity" would disappear PDQ....

Chuck
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: chucky2
The UAW is already assuming the pension and healthcare costs, and their new workers will be hired in at $14/hr. $14/hr is less than $30k/yr folks. These aren't people flipping burgers, they're working their @ss off everyday, in tough conditions, and have to be perfect everytime.

I think, with the exception of the job bank, the UAW has given plenty up already. If we want the Big 3 to reach "parity" with its Japenese US plants, then lets have the Big 3 Management reach "parity" with the Japanese Management.

Me thinks the push for "parity" would disappear PDQ....

Chuck

ANd those new hire wages do not start until 2010, but the financial problem exists now.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: Drift3r
Unskilled labor? Then the big 3 could move all those jobs south of the border if those jobs are so damn easy to do that anyone can do them. All the jobs that could have been automated have been in the car industry and frankly most jobs at car plants are those that require the human touch of some sort to be done correctly. As far as subsidizing goes the Japanese automakers are all subsidized to the hilt by their own government and by local US state governments that want their plants in their states.
Most of their jobs are south of the border. Everyone I know that worked for one of them lost their job in the last 10 years due to plant closings, and all of them were laid off at least two years ago. This includes contractors.

As to whether this is "skilled" labor, I'm not going to argue with you. Simply because something can't be automated doesn't make it a skilled position. Similarly, some of the processes that I automate could not be done by any person, no matter how skilled. Some of the people I know who have lost their jobs were engineers, but these also had no problems finding new jobs.

But the bottom line is this: you can make as many cars as you want. If people don't buy enough of them, then you have no business making that many. Period. You cannot supply a single reason for me to give Ford a loan to produce a car that will never be bought. This is the core issue here that no one wants to address.
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: Drift3r
Unskilled labor? Then the big 3 could move all those jobs south of the border if those jobs are so damn easy to do that anyone can do them. All the jobs that could have been automated have been in the car industry and frankly most jobs at car plants are those that require the human touch of some sort to be done correctly. As far as subsidizing goes the Japanese automakers are all subsidized to the hilt by their own government and by local US state governments that want their plants in their states.
Most of their jobs are south of the border. Everyone I know that worked for one of them lost their job in the last 10 years due to plant closings, and all of them were laid off at least two years ago. This includes contractors.

As to whether this is "skilled" labor, I'm not going to argue with you. Simply because something can't be automated doesn't make it a skilled position. Similarly, some of the processes that I automate could not be done by any person, no matter how skilled. Some of the people I know who have lost their jobs were engineers, but these also had no problems finding new jobs.

But the bottom line is this: you can make as many cars as you want. If people don't buy enough of them, then you have no business making that many. Period. You cannot supply a single reason for me to give Ford a loan to produce a car that will never be bought. This is the core issue here that no one wants to address.

However ford is not the one asking for a loan at this point.
 

boomerang

Lifer
Jun 19, 2000
18,883
641
126
Originally posted by: Squisher
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
Also when they go on layoff and onto unemployment gm pays the difference to bring them up to 72% of their regular wage.
Are you on unemployment?

Why yes I am unfortunately but my employer doesn't pay any buffer to make up the difference between what the state pays and my regular pay. Good news is that I received a call yesterday that the mill will be fired back up on Jan 2nd.

My point of starting this thread is that even though everyone came to the table with their hands out once they got the money the first thing they started doing is complaining about the terms. I'm a union worker and I've worked around guys that have come from uaw enviroments. All I can say is if the ones I worked with are indicative of the greater union body then I can see why the big 3 struggle to put out vehicles in a timely manner.

Where I work we're JIT and don't warehouse anything we make. Everything is loaded realtime as it's produced and shipped out. We have an exceptionally lean workforce, too lean in fact which makes for solid shift of work. We don't have relief hands to give us a break so if there's a gap in the line we get one and if not we keep on working. While I don't advocate working people like pack mules while they're at work I do believe in a honest days work for an honest days pay.

The thing you are complaining about (sub-pay or jobs bank) is already something that Gettelfinger said he would give up back in the bailout talks.

It is funny that this whole thread is based upon something unspecified that the UAW doesn't like about what Bush wrote into this bailout. WHAT IS IT??? We don't even know.

Last time the stumbling block was "parity" and the UAW didn't want to sign something so undefined. I know I don't like signing blank checks and handing them out with the stipulation that people charge me a "reasonable amount."
I applaud your post. You have nailed it. At this point we do not know what the sticking point is. This entire thread is based on conjecture.

Most anti-UAW threads are based on false assumptions. This one is based on an article with vague references that have not been defined.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: Drift3r
Unskilled labor? Then the big 3 could move all those jobs south of the border if those jobs are so damn easy to do that anyone can do them. All the jobs that could have been automated have been in the car industry and frankly most jobs at car plants are those that require the human touch of some sort to be done correctly. As far as subsidizing goes the Japanese automakers are all subsidized to the hilt by their own government and by local US state governments that want their plants in their states.
Most of their jobs are south of the border. Everyone I know that worked for one of them lost their job in the last 10 years due to plant closings, and all of them were laid off at least two years ago. This includes contractors.

As to whether this is "skilled" labor, I'm not going to argue with you. Simply because something can't be automated doesn't make it a skilled position. Similarly, some of the processes that I automate could not be done by any person, no matter how skilled. Some of the people I know who have lost their jobs were engineers, but these also had no problems finding new jobs.

But the bottom line is this: you can make as many cars as you want. If people don't buy enough of them, then you have no business making that many. Period. You cannot supply a single reason for me to give Ford a loan to produce a car that will never be bought. This is the core issue here that no one wants to address.

Those in the car-selling industry would argue that there's plenty of demand, however this demand is being crushed by the inability for customers to obtain loans for their vehicles.

General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC would face an easier path to recovery if the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Bank can find a way to free up consumer credit, the head of the nation's largest chain of auto dealerships said on Friday.

Although the Treasury has spent $335 billion in hopes of making credit more readily available for businesses and consumers, it has made little headway and the continued tight credit is choking off auto sales, Michael J. Jackson, chairman and chief executive of AutoNation Inc., said in a telephone interview.

In the current situation where loans are hard to get, "it's like trying to run an airline without jet fuel," he said. "In the auto business, consumer credit is the jet fuel."

http://online.wsj.com/article/...tml?mod=googlenews_wsj
 

Paddington

Senior member
Jun 26, 2006
538
0
0
Hey look, I support the bailout of the automakers, but I think the union is dead wrong. If they don't get their act together, in March 2009 it's going to be game over because this country's patience is limited.

Just earlier this year, American Axle demanded concessions from the union. The union then went on strike against American Axle. The strike went on so long dozens of GM and Chrysler factories closed. American Axle then said, "look, you fuck over GM, and extort some money from them, then we can both be happy." So the union went on strike against the few GM plants that were open, not dependent on AA parts (they specifically picked the Malibu and Lambda plants because those were GM's better sellers) and extorted a $200 million buyout package for their American Axle workers. Oh yeah, this was all while the situation was getting quite grim for the auto industry... But I digress.

I live in the greater Detroit region. From what I can tell, no Big 3 autoworker has been truly "laid off" in decades, unless you count collecting 95% of your pay for not working being "laid off". Not many industries can claim that. Furthermore, many of the factory workers that have left GM, Ford, Chrysler since 2005 have been "bought out" of their contracts to the tune of some $100,000-$300,000, with many of them continuing to collect benefits as well. In essence, their productivity was so worthless it was cheaper to give mini CEO-esque golden parachutes to leave the company.

Despite what Gettelfinger says about the union having made concessions in 2007, the real problem is that the concessions apply only to future hires, and even then, future hires working in support jobs (lawn mowing, janitorial work, etc.) One of the major sticking points in 2007 was that GM, Ford, Chrysler said that the guy that whacks the weeds in front of the building shouldn't be paid on the same scale that the "skilled" assembly line worker should be paid. The union fought this tooth and nail, but ultimately had to agree to the two tier deal. Let me make this very clear, no current unionized factory worker has made any real concessions... And that has to change.
 

her209

No Lifer
Oct 11, 2000
56,336
11
0
Why aren't the "office" people required to be paid at the same $ as their Japanese counterparts?
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: charrison
However ford is not the one asking for a loan at this point.
:confused: Do I really need to type out *Insert name of auto company here* rather than Ford for the point to be made? Dear lord.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Those in the car-selling industry would argue that there's plenty of demand, however this demand is being crushed by the inability for customers to obtain loans for their vehicles.
I demand a Ferrari, but no one will loan me the money. Therefore, I do not contribute to the actual demand for Ferraris. What's the difference here? If people can't buy the car for any reason, the demand simply isn't there. Any argument against this reasoning is specious at best.
 

daishi5

Golden Member
Feb 17, 2005
1,196
0
76
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
[
No it doesn't because it's mainly just smoke blowing itself. No one in this thread has pinned "all of the problems on the workers". The thread was about the UAW thugs expecting EVERYONE ELSE to change but they won't. There is a huge difference between those two thoughts/statements and you and DM don't seem to grasp that fact.
LOL..thugs. I still think they should compromise more but i don't consider them thugs. Must be Limbaugh speak.

My families personal experience has tainted my view of unions, but I live in Peoria, Illinois. Caterpillar Headquarters is here, along with several factories, and they are all UAW shops. When I was a teenager and they were having one of their strikes, they assaulted my mother as she tried to leave work, broke her windshield, slashed her tires and beat large dents into her door. You may not consider them thugs, and maybe the UAW workers at the big 3 are different, but from my personal experience I consider them to be actual thugs.

And then there is the bigger problem with the UAW, they are not trying to be a union at a company, they are trying to be the union at all companies. At least here they used to have billboards up calling themselves the Union for All Workers. They unionized the production line operators at the chemical plant my father works for. They are trying to become a labor monopoly, and any type of monopoly is bad.

Now, I am not completely anti-union. I believe every manufacturer should have a union, especially the large ones, because a large company is able to use its position in the market to take advantage of its workers. But these large unions that control the workforce for multiple companies are pretty much the exact same thing in reverse.
 

Paddington

Senior member
Jun 26, 2006
538
0
0
Originally posted by: her209
Why aren't the "office" people required to be paid at the same $ as their Japanese counterparts?

The white collar workers at the Big 3 really take the brunt of the beatings. Whenever they have to tighten their belts, the first ones to lose their jobs, have pay cuts, benefit cuts, etc. are always the salaried work force. They do this because the salaried workers aren't unionized, whereas if they try to cut a single union worker's pay they can look forward to a strike at all their plants. A generation ago, the top engineering, design, science, and finance students were eager to take good paying jobs at the Big 3 in Detroit. Now these jobs pay quite poorly and have terrible security. I can't stress enough how bad the situation is for the average engineer, artist, scientist, or even finance guy at the Big 3, because they've been taking pay cuts for years. Not being able to attract good talent obviously hurts their prospects for turning their business around in the future.
 

umbrella39

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
13,816
1,126
126
Originally posted by: cubby1223
The UAW has a direct power in our federal government through the Democratic Pary. How else can this be analyzed as?

"bipartisan legislation" - what a crock. :roll:

You suck at analysis. :cookie:
 

Falloutboy

Diamond Member
Jan 2, 2003
5,916
0
76
and while many of you noted that GM and Toyota employees make about the same atm (which is ruffly true of normal permanent employees), what you don't note that a large portion of Toyota's workforce are temps working for less than 15 and hour with no benefits. also Toyota is free to find labor saving ways to produce a car. GM on the other hand can't eliminate someones job with automation unless they create a new job to replace the lost one.
 

woodie1

Diamond Member
Mar 7, 2000
5,947
0
0
Originally posted by: daishi5

...snip...

My families personal experience has tainted my view of unions, but I live in Peoria, Illinois. Caterpillar Headquarters is here, along with several factories, and they are all UAW shops. When I was a teenager and they were having one of their strikes, they assaulted my mother as she tried to leave work, broke her windshield, slashed her tires and beat large dents into her door. You may not consider them thugs, and maybe the UAW workers at the big 3 are different, but from my personal experience I consider them to be actual thugs.

Brings back memories of the time I lived around St. Louis. The big 3 had several plants in the area then and any time there was a strike you had better stay away from any entrance with a picket line. Calling them thugs gives thugs a bad name.
 

her209

No Lifer
Oct 11, 2000
56,336
11
0
Originally posted by: Paddington
Originally posted by: her209
Why aren't the "office" people required to be paid at the same $ as their Japanese counterparts?
The white collar workers at the Big 3 really take the brunt of the beatings. Whenever they have to tighten their belts, the first ones to lose their jobs, have pay cuts, benefit cuts, etc. are always the salaried work force. They do this because the salaried workers aren't unionized, whereas if they try to cut a single union worker's pay they can look forward to a strike at all their plants. A generation ago, the top engineering, design, science, and finance students were eager to take good paying jobs at the Big 3 in Detroit. Now these jobs pay quite poorly and have terrible security. I can't stress enough how bad the situation is for the average engineer, artist, scientist, or even finance guy at the Big 3, because they've been taking pay cuts for years. Not being able to attract good talent obviously hurts their prospects for turning their business around in the future.
GM Lays Off White-Collar Workers For First Time In Twenty Years
 

chucky2

Lifer
Dec 9, 1999
10,018
37
91
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: chucky2
The UAW is already assuming the pension and healthcare costs, and their new workers will be hired in at $14/hr. $14/hr is less than $30k/yr folks. These aren't people flipping burgers, they're working their @ss off everyday, in tough conditions, and have to be perfect everytime.

I think, with the exception of the job bank, the UAW has given plenty up already. If we want the Big 3 to reach "parity" with its Japenese US plants, then lets have the Big 3 Management reach "parity" with the Japanese Management.

Me thinks the push for "parity" would disappear PDQ....

Chuck

And those new hire wages do not start until 2010, but the financial problem exists now.

So what do you want to do? Cut the salaries of the current UAW folks? OK, you can do that.

Now the cost of the cars won't decrease by any amount, so sales won't increase.

And the 40% of us that pay taxes in the country will become, what, 39% 38% 37% Less? I mean, once you cut their salaries back, they ain't going to be going on spending sprees.

Considering they already gave up COLA this last last contract, which means they've been taking pay cuts as inflation occurs, I think they're fine where they're at.

You agree of course that Big 3 Management should lead by example, Correct? You do have a link where Big 3 Management has stated they are at parity with their Japenese Management counterparts, Right?

Thought so...F the little man for a nickle, so you can give the Millions to the Leadership. Brilliant.....

Chuck