[ Content | View menu ]

GM follows Chrysler in ending workers’ jobs bank

Written on January 30, 2009

NEW YORK — General Motors Corp.’s "jobs bank" program will end Monday, following a similar move at Chrysler that helps satisfy the conditions the government imposed when it lent the automakers $17.4 billion late last year.

The program gives union workers at the Detroit Three most of their pay and benefits even though they’re not working — sometimes for years. It was the target of much ire during the companies’ requests for a federal bailout.

GM spokesman Tony Sapienza said Wednesday that the 1,600 GM workers in the jobs bank will be placed on layoff and will need to file for unemployment. They’ll receive about 72 percent of their salaries, paid by state unemployment benefits and GM subsidies. The workers also will get medical and other benefits from the company.

The length of time workers can receive unemployment benefits amounts to about 48 weeks, Sapienza said. After that, they’ll no longer get paid.

Christine Moroski, a spokeswoman for the United Auto Workers union, declined to comment.

The change won’t affect any of GM’s Wentzville work force because no one from the plant is in the jobs bank program, a union official said Wednesday. The GMC Savana and Chevrolet Express full-size vans are made at the Wentzville plant, which employs nearly 2,000 hourly and salaried workers.

Sapienza said the move will allow cash-strapped GM to use state unemployment benefits to help cover some of the costs of paying the workers.

"We really appreciate the union’s willingness to work with us as we continue to restructure for long-term

viability," Sapienza said.

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger said in early December that the union would suspend the jobs bank after members of Congress criticized the money-seeking automakers for paying workers who are not on the job. Some Republicans sought more concessions from the union, and a bill to provide loans to GM and Chrysler died in the Senate before the Bush administration stepped in to grant aid.

Each automaker’s jobs bank varies, but at GM, laid-off workers could get 85 percent of their base pay, plus benefits, without reporting to work while the company tried to find them jobs elsewhere no fax payday loans. Or workers could get full pay by reporting to a factory or union hall, where they could be called upon to perform community service or tasks around the plant.

Union officials said late last week that Chrysler was eliminating its jobs bank effective Jan. 26. Like at Detroit-based GM, Chrysler’s affected workers will continue to receive supplemental unemployment benefits.

Auburn Hills, Mich.-based Chrysler also was required to eliminate its jobs bank as a condition of its $4 billion in Treasury Department loans. GM was granted $13.4 billion and already has received $9.4 billion of those funds.

The terms of the loans call for GM and Chrysler to eliminate "the payment of any compensation or benefits to U.S. employees of the company or any subsidiary who have been fired, laid-off, furloughed, or idled, other than customary severance pay."

It has been unclear whether this provision also requires the companies to eliminate the supplemental pay they provide while workers collect unemployment benefits.

Both automakers must submit plans by Feb. 17 showing they can become viable. If the Treasury isn’t satisfied with the plans, the government could call in the loans at the end of March.

Ford Motor Co. didn’t take any government money, but company officials and Gettelfinger have said they expect the Dearborn, Mich., automaker to get the same concessions as the other companies so that it is not at a disadvantage.

Ford spokeswoman Marcey Evans said Wednesday that talks continue between the automaker and the union about the future of the jobs bank, which included about 1,400 Ford workers as of November.

Angela Tablac of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report

Source

Filed in: money.

Comments closed