Quantcast
Emotional vote for workers – Metro US

Emotional vote for workers

Anxious auto workers and retirees, some in tears, cast ballots in three southern Ontario communities yesterday on the latest labour concession package struck between their union and General Motors of Canada.

The tentative agreement, struck last week after days of tough bargaining talks between the company and Canadian Auto Workers, would slash labour costs by more than $8,000 per worker while protecting wages and pension benefits.

GM workers in the southern Ontario communities of Windsor, Woodstock and St. Catharines voted yesterday on the agreement while workers in Oshawa are to cast ballots today.

The vote comes just one week before a government-imposed deadline for GM to complete a restructuring plan or be forced into bankruptcy protection.

Overall, CAW President Ken Lewenza said the votes are bringing workers a sense of relief.

“When we talk to our retirees and talk about their existing pension funding at 39 per cent, and recognizing that this whole restructuring is going to improve that situation … and for active members, to think that you have a job and an opportunity to raise a family, with reasonably good income, even with the sacrifices,” he said.

The latest agreement, announced Friday, reduces hourly labour costs by between $15 and $16 per worker, on top of a $7-an-hour cut agreed to in March.

The deal also freezes pensions until 2015 and cuts benefit costs by more than $8,000 per worker — including a $3,500 payment to each worker to compensate for vacation time lost in collective bargaining a year ago.

Results of the votes at the four southern Ontario GM plants were not expected to be announced until tonight.