ERIE, Pa. (AP) - GE Transportation plans to end most
locomotive production at its century-old plant in northwestern Pennsylvania,
eliminating about 575 jobs.
GE Transportation workers who are members of the U.E.
Local 506 executive committee, enter the union offices in Lawrence Park
Township, Erie County, Pa., Thursday, July 27, 2017. Plant officials announced
Thursday, that after more than 100 years of production at the Erie-area plant,
locomotive production, except for prototypes, would cease by the end of 2018.
All locomotive production is being transferred to GE Transportation´s Fort
Worth, Texas plant.
The work is being transferred by the end of 2018 to Fort
Worth, Texas.
"This move is necessary to drive efficiency, better
compete in the increasingly competitive global rail market, and preserve U.S.
jobs," GE said in a statement.
The Lawrence Park Township plant, just outside Erie,
currently employs more than 2,500 workers, and locomotive prototypes will still
be produced at the site, which is GE Transportation's largest plant.
Richard Simpson, a GE Transportation executive, told GoErie.com
the company has to put work at its most competitive location, which doesn't
include Erie.
"While we have made progress in Erie, it still isn't
as competitive," Simpson said.
Earlier this year, GE announced it was cutting 250
positions at its Fort Worth plant, where workers aren't unionized.
About 225 employees at the Fort Worth plant would be
recalled, and as many as 200 other jobs would be created at GE suppliers around
the country, Simpson said.
Scott Slawson, the president of the Local 506 of the
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, calls the cuts
"union busting" and says the company simply wants to pay the lowest
wages possible.
Texas is a right-to-work state, and Slawson contends the
Fort Worth workers earn a low wage and "have zero loyalty to GE."
He said the union has 10 days to decide if they will go
into "decision bargaining" with the company, but he doesn't hold out
much hope for any substantive changes.
"Erie has been dealt a lot of blows over the
years," he said. "I don't know how many times a community can be
kicked."
Source: Philly.com
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