UAW Targets Job Security
Saying that its workers responded to every challenge GM
presented, from the corporate restructuring, GM's attrition plan,
the Delphi bankruptcy, and the 2005 health care agreement, UAW
president Ron Gettelfinger commented, "We're shocked and
disappointed that General Motors has failed to recognize and
appreciate what our membership has contributed during the past four
years."
Workers were striking for job security, economic issues, benefits
for active workers, and to win investment in future products, said
Gettelfinger.
The union gave GM a nine-day contract extension to avoid a strike,
he continued. That is the longest extension in the history of
the UAW, he pointed out.
The strike has nothing to do with the Voluntary Employee Benefit
Association (VEBA) for retirees, Gettelfinger pointed out.
VEBA is a permissible but not mandatory subject of
bargaining.
In a speech before the Detroit Economic Club earlier in the month,
Gettelfinger had quoted one of the UAW's early presidents, Walter
Philip Reuther, on rising health care costs. Comparing the
issues Reuther was addressing in 1968 to present concerns,
Gettelfinger noted progress has been slow. In 2007, he said,
the US health care bill is expected to reach $2.2 trillion, the
highest in the world. Yet, he said, 47 million American have
no health care and millions more are under-insured. On infant
mortality, the US ranks 27th in the world. Regarding life
expectancy for women, the US ranks 30th in the world. And on
life expectancy for men, it is 27th.
"Our union has, since it was proposed by President Truman,
supported a single payer, universal, comprehensive national health
care program that covers every person because we believe health
care should be a right and not a privilege for those who can afford
it," Gettelfinger noted in the speech. "Obviously, not
everyone agrees with this approach, but surely we can agree that
while we have the best health care professionals anywhere in the
world, our current system of health care delivery is too costly and
inefficient," he continued.
Given those earlier statements and Gettelfinger's comments in
announcing the work stoppage, it appears to be clear benefits are a
distinctly drawn "line in the sand" for the UAW in these
negotiations.
The tentative agreement between UAW workers and GM attempted to
address concerns over healthcare by establishing a healthcare trust
that would be administered by the union. The UAW had also
been able to elicit certain guarantees on job security from
GM. The tentative agreement must now be ratified by union
members.
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