NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (AP) - An official with the United Auto Workers, which suffered a
stinging defeat in its attempt to unionize Volkswagen's assembly plant in
Tennessee earlier this year, said Thursday that it is forming a new local at
the plant.
The union is
confident the German automaker will recognize the union if it signs up a enough
workers at the Chattanooga plant, UAW Secretary-Treasurer Gary Casteel told The
Tennessean newspaper (http://tnne.ws/1qNfSn7) that. If successful, it would
become the first unionized foreign auto plant in the South.
"We
would fully expect that Volkswagen would deal with this local union if it
represents a substantial portion of its employees," Casteel told the
paper. "It's dependent on the employees and what they want to do."
Gov. Bill
Haslam and his staff understand "that there is no agreement between the
company and the UAW," spokesman David Smith wrote in an email to The
Associated Press on Thursday.
"It is
most appropriate for the company to speak for itself on this issue," Smith
said.
A Volkswagen
spokesman declined to comment to The AP.
The union
last year said it had signed up a majority of plant workers, but it ultimately
lost a contentious February vote 712-626.
UAW
organizers blamed the narrow defeat on public statements from GOP politicians
warning that a union win could imperil economic incentives for the plant's
expansion. The union filed - but later abandoned - a challenge of the outcome
with the National Labor Relations Board.
The turmoil
surrounding the labor vote has delayed a Volkswagen decision on whether to
build a new midsized SUV in Chattanooga or in Mexico. The new model is seen as
key to reviving flagging VW sales in North America.
It's unclear
whether Thursday's UAW announcement could affect renewed efforts to negotiate
expansion incentives at the plant. The money would have to be approved by the
Republican-controlled state Legislature, which is heavily anti-union.
Documents
leaked after the union vote revealed that Tennessee had sought to tie a $300
million incentive offer for expanding the plant to what it deemed a
"satisfactory" outcome of the labor situation there.
Volkswagen
wants to introduce a works council at the plant to represent both salaried and
blue-collar workers, but the company's interpretation of U.S. law has been that
it can't do so without the involvement of an independent union.
U.S. Sen.
Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and a former Chattanooga mayor, was particularly vocal
during union vote, predicting the company would announce an expansion within
two weeks of workers rejecting the union. The senator later blamed the UAW
appeal - and the resulting delay in certifying the results of the union
election - for putting a hold on expansion talks at the plant.
The
Chattanooga plant has been seen as the union's best chance to win in the South
because other automakers have not been as welcoming to organized labor as with
Volkswagen. Labor interests make up half of the supervisory board at VW in
Germany, and they have questioned why the Chattanooga plant is the company's
only major factory worldwide without formal worker representation.
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment