Detroit automakers keep masks on to keep the factories running
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[October 27, 2020]
By Joseph White
DETROIT (Reuters) - When the coronavirus pandemic slammed the United
States in March, the Detroit Three automakers shut their plants and
brought their North American vehicle production to an unprecedented cold
stop.
Now, four months after a slow and sometimes bumpy restart in May, many
General Motors Co <GM.N>, Ford Motor Co <F.N> and Fiat Chrysler
Automobiles NV <FCHA.MI> factories are working at close to full speed,
chasing a stronger-than-expected recovery in sales.
So far, none of the Detroit Three has had a major COVID-19 outbreak
since restarting production, even as the coronavirus is surging in
Midwestern and Southern communities outside factory walls.
"We have people testing positive, but it's not affecting operations,"
said Ford global manufacturing chief Gary Johnson.
Keeping the pandemic at bay has pushed the automakers and 156,000 U.S.
factory employees represented by the United Auto Workers into unfamiliar
work routines and extraordinary levels of cooperation among rivals that
will have to be sustained for months to come.
For automakers, the automakers' COVID response has been as much about
instilling new habits as relying on new technology. Workers log their
symptoms, or lack of them, into smartphone apps and walk past
temperature scanners to get to their work stations.
But company and union executives said masks, along with physical
distancing, are the key to keeping assembly lines rolling.
"The mask is the foundation" of protecting workers on the job, said
Gerald Johnson, GM's head of global manufacturing.
COMPLAINTS ABOUT MASKS
Auto workers are accustomed to wearing protective gear such as
shatterproof glasses and gloves.
Masks that cover the mouth and nose, however, were not standard
equipment on auto assembly lines, and were a tough sell at first.
"The biggest complaint is wearing a mask," United Auto Workers president
Rory Gamble told Reuters. "A lot of our members perform physical tasks.
Wearing the mask inhibits breathing."
Beyond that, Gamble said, masks and distancing make it harder for
workers to have conversations on the job or socialize during breaks.
"That’s pretty much out the window, and it makes for a longer day," he
said.
Masks make it harder for co-workers to read each other's expressions -
often crucial in the noisy environment of a car plant. At GM factories,
employees wear badges that show their face framed by the message: "I'm
smiling behind my mask."
The politicized controversy over mask-wearing means company and union
officials have to put their messages about the importance of keeping
masks on a constant repeat cycle.
"There was a lot of mixed messaging coming out of Washington that gave
us some heartburn," Gamble said. The automakers and the union agreed to
follow guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the
World Health Organization. All three companies also adapted measures
taken at their plants in China, which were hit first as the pandemic
spread.
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
A General Motors assembly worker loads engine block castings on to
the assembly line at the GM Romulus Powertrain plant in Romulus,
Michigan, U.S. August 21, 2019. Picture taken August 21, 2019.
Rebecca Cook
At GM's Factory Zero in Detroit, UAW skilled trades worker Scott Harwick said
the mask wearing debate outside the plant isn't an issue inside. Sometimes a
co-worker will let a mask slip during a long hot shift, he said. "You don't have
to say anything, you just tap on your mask."
COOPERATION AMONG AUTOMAKERS
Coronavirus safety has now become one of the rare areas in which the automakers
do not compete. Instead, the CEOs of the Detroit Three and the UAW formed an
extraordinary task force that meets biweekly to share information and coordinate
safety policies.
The discussions can be as detailed as whether safety glasses or face shields
offer better protection, said Scott Garberding, global head of manufacturing for
Fiat Chrysler.
The restart has hit obstacles, executives and UAW leaders said.
Some workers have filed complaints with the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration that COVID safety procedures are not being followed, according to
OSHA records.
Ford and Fiat Chrysler said the complaints have been resolved. GM said four of
six complaints lodged with OSHA have been closed, and it has not been cited or
inspected by OSHA related to its COVID protocols.
“We are confident in our multi-layered approach to COVID-19 safety, which has
proven effective in preventing workplace transmission of COVID-19 in our
facilities,” GM spokesman Dan Flores said in a statement.
The Detroit automakers test workers who exhibit symptoms associated with
coronavirus infection, but have not adopted widespread testing for their 156,000
factory workers.
All three companies have encountered workers who tested positive for COVID-19
exposure, and early on there were brief shutdowns to clean plants.
Absenteeism rates are still higher than normal at some plants, driven both by
concerns about infection and problems getting child care. UAW leaders have
granted the companies more flexibility to use temporary workers. The automakers
have begun helping workers obtain or pay for child care.
Ford's Kentucky Truck Plant and Louisville Assembly Plant are using about 2,000
temporary workers, said Todd Dunn, president of UAW Local 862, which represents
about 16,000 hourly workers at the plants.
"There are issues every night," he said. "But the line's still running."
(Reporting By Joseph White, Ben Klayman and Chris Kirkham. Written by Joseph
White; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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