Ford Reaches Tentative Deal With UAW, Workers Return

Matt Posky
by Matt Posky

Striking Ford employees are heading back to the assembly line today after the United Auto Workers (UAW) union reached a tentative labor deal with the company late on Wednesday. While the agreement has yet to be ratified by union members and all details have yet to be made public, we know it includes a 25 percent wage hike over the life of the four-year contract, improved benefits, and the elimination of some of the tiered wages the union had been fighting against.


Say whatever you want about Ford. But this makes the brand look exceptionally good to the general public. Despite not having the best financial portfolio of the Detroit automakers, the Blue Oval was consistently offering the union the sweetest deals and can now take credit for being the company that finally paid up in hopes of ending the strike.


“For months we’ve said that record profits mean record contracts. And UAW family, our Stand Up Strike has delivered. What started at three plants at midnight on September 15, has become a national movement,” stated UAW President Shawn Fain. “We won things nobody thought possible. Since the strike began, Ford put 50 [percent] more on the table than when we walked out. This agreement sets us on a new path to make things right at Ford, at the Big Three, and across the auto industry. Together, we are turning the tide for the working class in this country.”


Time will tell whether or not the deal works for Ford in the long term. However, the short-term benefits provide the company with an opportunity to claim it cares more about the domestic workforce than its rivals. It also gets to reactivate stalled assembly lines while General Motors and Stellantis continue contract negotiations with the UAW.


Meanwhile, the union gets to do some bragging of its own and made sure to do so in a press release issued Wednesday evening:


The gains in the deal, as outlined by Fain and [UAW Vice President Chuck Browning], are valued at more than four times the gains from the 2019 contract, and provide more in base wage increases than Ford workers have received in the past 22 years. The agreement grants 25 [percent] in base wage increases through April 2028, and will cumulatively raise the top wage by over 30 [percent] to more than $40 an hour, and raise the starting wage by 68 [percent], to over $28 an hour.
The lowest-paid workers at Ford will see a raise of more than 150 [percent] over the life of the agreement, with some workers receiving an immediate 85 [percent] increase immediately upon ratification.
The agreement reinstates major benefits lost during the Great Recession, including Cost-of-Living Allowances and a three-year Wage Progression, as well as killing divisive wage tiers in the union. It improves retirement for current retirees, those workers with pensions, and those who have 401(k) plans. It also includes a historic right to strike over plant closures, a first for the union.


President Fain has frequently been accused of showboating and trying to create a spectacle by his opponents. But the strategy seems to have worked rather well for the union and comes at a time when some members were starting to get antsy about the ramifications of a strike that extended into November. There was a push from within the union to vote on at least one of the deals proposed by the industry going into this week and it appears those members have gotten their wish.


There will also undoubtedly be reports discussing how far away this is from the 40 percent wage increase over four years the union had originally demanded. However, that target was clearly chosen to highlight industry disparities in executive pay. The UAW presumably understood matching the recent pay bumps issued to upper management would have been unsustainable and chose the number as a way to force everyone into talking about the widening disparities in compensation. It also happened to give contract negotiations a lot of overhead.


Compared to previous contract negotiations, the above represents a major victory for the UAW. For all the grandstanding Fain has been accused of, the guy appears to have delivered a major victory for the union.


We’ll see how things play out for Ford. While increased worker pay may encourage automakers to continue offshoring jobs, there’s not a survey in history showing Americans actually support the concept. Gallup polls dating back to 2007 show that roughly 80 percent of the country feels that outsourcing is bad for the U.S. economy and Ford already likes to promote itself as “the most American of all car companies.”


The contract deal represents a golden opportunity for Blue Oval to underline that statement and apply pressure to General Motors and Stellantis. They’ll now have to take on the UAW without a third party shouldering some of the burden.


"We are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement on a new labor contract with the UAW covering our U.S. operations," Ford CEO and President Jim Farley said in a statement.


[Image: UAW]

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Matt Posky
Matt Posky

A staunch consumer advocate tracking industry trends and regulation. Before joining TTAC, Matt spent a decade working for marketing and research firms based in NYC. Clients included several of the world’s largest automakers, global tire brands, and aftermarket part suppliers. Dissatisfied with the corporate world and resentful of having to wear suits everyday, he pivoted to writing about cars. Since then, that man has become an ardent supporter of the right-to-repair movement, been interviewed on the auto industry by national radio broadcasts, driven more rental cars than anyone ever should, participated in amateur rallying events, and received the requisite minimum training as sanctioned by the SCCA. Handy with a wrench, Matt grew up surrounded by Detroit auto workers and managed to get a pizza delivery job before he was legally eligible. He later found himself driving box trucks through Manhattan, guaranteeing future sympathy for actual truckers. He continues to conduct research pertaining to the automotive sector as an independent contractor and has since moved back to his native Michigan, closer to where the cars are born. A contrarian, Matt claims to prefer understeer — stating that front and all-wheel drive vehicles cater best to his driving style.

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  • Analoggrotto Analoggrotto on Oct 27, 2023

    Goddess Mary Barra is going to teach UAW a lesson.

    • See 2 previous
    • Art_Vandelay Art_Vandelay on Oct 28, 2023

      Such Decorum from Jeff!


  • Bullnuke Bullnuke on Oct 29, 2023

    The UAW needed Red Robbo to get that 46%

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He didn't enjoy it, but he didn't hate it either, and it did everything he asked of it without complaint.Eventually he found a way to tolerate his job too, and he built seniority while paying off his debts. There was a certain feeling of comfort and satisfaction of being debt-free, and he even began to build some savings, which was increasingly important for someone now in their forties.Another bit of luck came a few years later when Steve's landlord decided to sell the house Steve was renting, at the bottom of the housing market, and offered it to Steve for what he had in it. Steve's house was small and cramped, and he didn't really like it, but thanks to his savings and good credit he became a homeowner in an up and coming neighborhood.Fourteen years later Steve was still working that temporary job, still living in that cramped little house that he now hated, and still drove the Sunfire because it wouldn't die. For years now he dreamed of making a change, but then the pandemic happened and threw the economy and life in general into chaos. Steve weathered the pandemic, kept his job when millions of people were losing theirs, and sheltered in place in that crummy little house, with Netflix, HBO, and a dozen other streaming services keeping him company, and drove to and from work in the Sunfire because it was four wheels and a seat and that's all he needed for now.Steve's life was secure, but a kind of dullness had set in. He existed, but the fire went out; even when the pandemic ended and life returned to normal Steve's life went on as it had for years; an endless Groundhog Day of work, home, work, home. He never got his real-estate license or finished college and got his bachelor's, never got a better job, never used his passport to do some traveling in Europe. He lost interest in cars. "To think how much money I wasted on hot cars when I was younger", he said to himself. 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For what he needed more than that stable job, that house with an enviably small mortgage payment, and that reliable car was a good kick in the hindquarters. "What the hell am I afraid of? I should be afraid that things will never change!"But the depression was like a drug, a numbness that they call "dysthymia"; where you're neither here or there, alive or dead, happy or sad. It was a persistent overcast, a low ceiling that kept him grounded. The Sunfire sat in his driveway getting buried by the needles from his neighbor's overhanging pine trees which were planted right on the property line. "Those f---ing pine trees! That's another thing I hate about this damn house!" Eventually the Sunfire wouldn't start. "I don't blame you", he said to the car as he trudged past it to drive the Ford to another Groundhog Day at that miserable job.
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  • Rna65689660 Picked up my wife’s 2024 Bronco Sport Bad Lands!
  • Inside Looking Out Android too.
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