UAW reaches tentative agreement with
Ultium Cells
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[June 11, 2024]
By Nora Eckert
(Reuters) -The United Auto Workers union said on Monday it reached a
tentative contract agreement with Ultium Cells in Lordstown, Ohio, where
workers build electric vehicle batteries for General Motors.
Ultium Cells is a joint venture between GM and LG Energy Solution.
Hourly workers at the Ohio plant near Cleveland, which GM previously
shuttered, voted in favor of joining the union in December 2022. |
Shawn Fain, President of the United Auto Workers (UAW) speaks as U.S.
President Joe Biden (not pictured) joins striking members of the United
Auto Workers (UAW) on the picket line outside the GM's Willow Run
Distribution Center, in Belleville, Wayne County, Michigan, U.S.,
September 26, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo |
UAW
President Shawn Fain said the deal would raise the starting wage
to $26.91 an hour, which had been $16.50 last year and was
raised to $20 by the company in August.
Workers will see wages rise to $35 an hour after one year on the
job by the end of the deal, the union said. The deal includes a
30% wage increase over three years for many workers, and a
$3,000 ratification bonus.
As automakers pivot to producing electric vehicles (EVs), their
battery plants have become a battleground for the union. UAW
officials have voiced concerns about members' job security as
the industry begins rolling out more battery-powered models, and
Fain has made organizing these plants a priority.
After a six-week strike last fall, the automotive union forged
new labor deals with the Detroit automakers: GM, Ford Motor and
Jeep-maker Stellantis.
The deals with the Detroit Three included a 25% wage increase
over the four-and-a-half year contract as well as the return of
cost-of-living adjustments.
Crafting the agreement with GM brought Ultium workers under the
union's master agreement, its officials have said.
The 1,600 UAW members at the plant must still approve the
contract.
The UAW has recently encountered significant hurdles in its
organizing efforts outside of Detroit. After a historic win at a
Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, the automotive union was defeated
at a Mercedes plant in Alabama during a May vote.
(Reporting by Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna
Chandra Eluri and Bill Berkrot)
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