Saturday, April 12, 2014

Breaking: Corvette Workers Will Vote on Strike Authorization Today

                                      
( OK, This article is a few days old, at this point the two side may have come to an agreement. With that being said, Time and time again, Unions have demonstrated that they do more harm than good. Unions had their place in history. That my friends has come and gone. Unions create more harm than good. It's time that Unions go the way of the Edsel, they shoud just become a part of history,  not a part of workers day to day lives. This is my opinion, and in no was reflects the people that wrote this article.

Bob Yeager )

Members of the United Auto Workers local 2164 will vote today whether to authorize a strike at General Motors’ Bowling Green assembly facility, home of Corvette production. Bowling Green Daily News reports that union president Eldon Renaud isn’t specifically calling out the issues involved in the dispute, alluding to safety and quality control concerns and the elimination of some related positions among the approximately 800-strong workforce.
 
Per Renaud, “There are big issues here. I’m kind of surprised that nobody questioned plant manager (Dave Tatman’s) leaving. He retired effectively with no notice. Some of the issues we have now stem from the time he was here and from the personnel director.” Tatman’s final day was March 1, with replacement Jeff Lamarche, who was named to the post in mid-February, taking charge immediately afterward.
“Our people are being mistreated, and there is inequity in discipline and problems with quality and safety that aren’t being addressed by management,” said Renaud. The strike vote will be conducted between noon and 6:30 PM today, April 8, with the results tabulated this evening. A strike would undoubtedly add significantly to the long delays currently facing would-be 2014 Corvette buyers, with some already facing months-long waits for the popular Z51 model. An extended stoppage could potentially affect the 2015 model year as well, including the new Z06 performance variant.

“Hopefully we can get the problems corrected without a strike,” Renaud continued. “The strike vote doesn’t necessarily mean we will strike, but it does give us the authorization…”

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