The UAW announced today, November 14, that Ford hourly workers have ratified the tentative
labor contract with Ford Motor Co. by a margin of nearly 4-to-1.
The contract covers about 54,000 active workers at Ford and more than 94,000
retirees and 28,000 surviving spouses, the UAW said. It will expire September
14, 2011.
This was by far the most overwhelming approval among the Detroit 3 contracts.
GM workers approved their contract by about a 2-to-1 margin. Chrysler workers
narrowly approved their pact with only 56 percent in favor, with very little
support from assembly plant workers.
At Ford, 81 percent of UAW production workers voted in favor of the pact, and
71 percent of skilled-trades workers voted yes. Overall, 79 percent of UAW Ford
members voted in favor of the contract, the UAW said.
The union reached a tentative agreement with Ford on November 3 without a
strike. GM workers waged a two-day walkout, and Chrysler workers struck for
about six hours.
The Ford contract contains two key provisions that will help Ford’s balance
sheet.
Ford will be able to hire new hourly employees at a lower second-tier wage
starting at $14.20 per hour, and up to 20 percent of the total hourly work force
can consist of such second-tier workers.
And Ford, like GM and Chrysler, agreed to establish a voluntary employee
beneficiary association, or VEBA, to handle retiree health care coverage after
2010.
In return, Ford made guarantees to keep certain plants open, including six
plants that were in danger of closing.
This story was filed by Philip Nussel of Automotive News, a sister publication of Workforce Management.