Unions, workers uneasy at possible GM, Chrysler deal

Tue Oct 14, 2008 9:22pm EDT
 
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By Nick Carey

DETROIT (Reuters) - Labor unions in the United States and Canada on Tuesday expressed concern about the prospect of job losses from any merger between General Motors Corp and Chrysler LLC, adding that union leaders had not been consulted by the automakers.

The Canadian Auto Workers union has asked both GM and Chrysler, which is controlled by private equity group Cerberus Capital Management LP, to clarify whether they are considering a merger.

"I don't see any positives in it on the surface," CAW President Ken Lewenza told Reuters. "You've got to believe this would be massive consolidation and massive job losses."

United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger said the union had not had any "official discussions" with any of the parties involved in a potential merger, which he said remained "speculation."

But he said the UAW wanted to protect jobs.

"I would personally not want to see anything that would result in a consolidation that would mean the elimination of additional jobs," UAW President Ron Gettelfinger told Detroit local radio station WWJ.

Cerberus approached GM in recent weeks about a merger with Chrysler, the No. 3 U.S. automaker. Cerberus has also shopped Chrysler around to other potential bidders without immediate success, sources said over the weekend.

The talks with GM hit a snag over the value of Chrysler and any resolution is still seen as weeks away, according people close to the talks.

Analysts have questioned the benefits of a merger for GM, saying the cost-cutting from combining operations could be slow to emerge and complicated by GM's existing problems of too many brands and excess capacity.

But a merger between GM and Chrysler would almost certainly prompt job cuts, plant shutdowns and the elimination of models and dealerships, analysts said.

Concern over the talks was also evident among workers at three auto plants in the Detroit suburb of Warren -- one belonging to GM and two to Chrysler.

"I barely have any work as it is," said Steven Jackson, a worker at the GM engine plant here. "So yes, I'm worried about job security."

At one of the Chrysler plants here the company's Dodge Ram and Dodge Dakota pickup trucks are assembled. Workers' concerns at this plant said they feared their trucks would be eliminated post-merger in favor of those made by GM.

"GM's got a truck just like Chrysler has," said William Wills, a contractor at Chrysler's Warren truck plant, which makes Dodge Ram and Dodge Dakota pickup trucks. "If there's a merger then one of those trucks has gotta go. That's what everyone in this plant is concerned about."

Between them, GM and Chrysler employ about 205,000 workers in North America and produce 12 million cars annually.  Continued...

 
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