The United Auto Workers (UAW) union has unveiled the specifics of its 4.5-year tentative contract with General Motors (GM), featuring significant wage increases for thousands of hourly workers and substantial investments in electric vehicles (EVs).
UAW’s triumph and path ahead
In a video statement, UAW President Shawn Fain expressed triumph, stating, “We won this round. This contract will change thousands of lives overnight.” With preliminary approvals in place, the UAW will now focus on securing “yes” votes from its rank-and-file union members at the Detroit Three over the next two weeks.
Economic provisions and wage hikes
The economic provisions of this agreement mirror the patterns set by Ford and Chrysler parent Stellantis. The deal offers a 25% increase in base wages for full-time workers, potentially reaching 33% when factoring in newly negotiated cost-of-living allowances. Temporary workers will have a quicker path to full-time status, with immediate wage increases of approximately 50%.
Eliminating wage disparities
The contract aims to elevate over 7,000 UAW workers in GM component plants, service parts warehouses, and subsystem operations to the higher wage levels paid to assembly plant workers. This move will largely undo GM’s strategy to control labor costs.
Notable wage increases
Under the deal, the starting base wage for full-time members will rise by roughly 70% over the contract’s duration, reaching USD 30.60 per hour. For top earners, the increase will be around 33%, taking their wage to USD 42.95 per hour. The progression to reach the top wage will be reduced from eight years to three years.
Expanding EV production and investment
The GM-UAW agreement includes substantial investments in EVs. GM will allocate USD 4 billion to its Orion, Michigan, plant for future EV production and $2 billion at the Spring Hill, Tennessee plant for two GM EV models, along with a future partner EV. Additionally, the contract outlines the construction of a future electric full-size SUV at Factory Zero in Detroit.
Encouraging organizing efforts
Fain has urged auto workers across the U.S., including those at Toyota, Honda, Volkswagen, Hyundai, and Tesla, to strive for favorable contracts, hinting at upcoming organizing efforts in these companies.