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Unifor rep at Oakville Ford plant says no to template of GM deal

A union local at Ford Motor Co.'s Oakville, Ont., assembly plant says it is not willing to accept the same deal that its national union, Unifor, recently negotiated with GM Canada.
A new Ford Edge is seen on the production line at Ford's assembly plant in Oakville, Ont., in this Feb. 2015 photo. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

A union local at Ford Motor Co.'s Oakville, Ont., assembly plant says it is not willing to accept the same deal its national parent, Unifor, recently negotiated with GM Canada.

"We as a local bargaining committee have sent a very clear message to Ford Motor Company and the national union that the framework agreement between GM and the membership will not suit the needs of the membership in Oakville," Local 707 president Dave Thomas said in a message on the group's website.

"Investment in Canada was the [No. 1] priority when we opened up bargaining but we all agreed that it would not be at the expense of the rest of the membership," he said.

Thomas said the local bargaining committee "will not sacrifice the needs of the membership in Oakville and settle on an agreement that doesn't address our issues."

On Sept. 25, GM workers represented by Unifor at Ontario plants in Oshawa and St. Catharines voted 64.7 per cent in favour of a new deal that includes a two per cent wage increase this year and another two per cent increase in September, 2019. The collective agreement also includes a $6,000 signing bonus and lump-sum bonuses of $2,000 in each of the next three years for most employees.

The deal also includes improvements to benefits, hiring practices and a commitment by GM to invest $554 million in its Canadian operations. The deal will also see new hires brought in under a defined contribution pension plan, instead of the current hybrid plan.

Thomas told Reuters that the Oakville union local wants a deal that would get new hires to the top of the pay grid faster than under the new deal with GM, which maintained the 10-year salary grow-in. 

Unifor typically picks an initial target company from the Detroit Three automakers to negotiate a deal that serves as the pattern for talks with the other two companies. GM was the target company this year.

Unifor is now in talks with Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, meaning talks with Ford's Canadian operations are yet to come. The union represents about 5,000 workers at the Ford Oakville assembly plant, along with about 1,400 workers at the company's two Windsor, Ont.-area engine plants.

Unifor Local 200, which covers workers at the Windsor engine plants, has said it wants Ford to bring a new product to the area.

with files from The Canadian Presss