NEW YORK (CNNMoney) - A hotly contested effort by the
United Auto Workers union to represent a foreign automaker's U.S. plant just
got nastier.
The National Labor Relations Board has filed an unfair
labor practice complaint against Nissan ahead of a closely watched vote to
organize a union that's scheduled at its Canton, Mississippi, assembly plant,
later this week.
The union says management's efforts to defeat the UAW are
some of the "nastiest anti-union campaigns in the modern history of the
American labor movement."
Management says those charges are baseless.
The union says management has threatened workers with a
loss of wages and benefits if the union wins the vote. It also alleges that the
company has threatened to close the Canton plant, interrogated employees about
union support and promised better benefits and working conditions if employees
oppose a union.
"After seeing threats and intimidation escalate this
month, it's now clear that Nissan has no intention of letting employees vote in
a free and fair election," said Gary Casteel, secretary-treasurer of the
union.
The vote is the latest attempt by the United Auto Workers
union to expand its base. It's held a number of votes at U.S. plants owned by
foreign automakers, mostly in southern states, to no avail. Voting at the
Nissan plant, where more than 6,400 workers build the Titan and Frontier
pickups and the Murano SUV, is set for Thursday and Friday.
In a statement, Nissan said it believes the UAW is
looking for a reason to cancel the election, and that it only filed to hold the
vote in order to stir up discontent within the plant.
"The history of strikes, layoffs, and plant closures
at UAW-represented plants, along with the many false claims and promises made
by the UAW during this campaign, are among the many reasons we do not believe
that UAW representation is in the best interest of the employees," it
said.
The NLRB complaint also consolidated a number of past
complaints, some dating back years. It was filed by M. Kathleen McKinney, the
NLRB's regional director based in New Orleans, who has served since the Bush
administration. While the Trump administration has named a new acting chairman
of the national labor board, it has not replaced all of the regional directors.
The UAW represents nearly 150,000 employees at the
traditional Big Three U.S. automakers -- General Motors, Ford Motor and Fiat
Chrysler, and has done so for decades. Those automakers have been hiring, but
the UAW's membership has been shrinking due to a combination of automation and
reduced market share by U.S. automakers.
The so-called transplant factories, owned by foreign
automakers such as Nissan, Honda, Toyota, BMW and Volkswagen, currently have
more than 100,000 U.S. factory workers between them.
Source: We
Are Central PA
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