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NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

JCI strike scores gains against GM

Shreveport, La.--JCI, a key subcontractor for GM Shreveport, went out on strike recently. They make the seats for this plant, and the strike put us down about a day’s time. As a result of the strike, workers at JCI got their wages up to around $18 an hour.

That is important because subcontracting for GM is another way of cutting auto workers’ wages. GM has expanded subcontracting from parts production to whole subassemblies like seats or engines.  They would get subassemblies built while paying workers maybe $8-9 an hour, one-third what GM pays workers inside.

I think the sub-assembling is just step one of a two-step process. If GM shut down the Shreveport plant and moved it to Mexico, they would have bad publicity. But if later they moved production from subcontractors to the Mexican border and even lower wages, who would know or care? There is even a new interstate being built linking Brownsville, Texas at the border directly to Shreveport.

President Eisenhower’s defense secretary once said, “What’s good for General Motors is good for the country.” They still think that way at GM.

GM may be getting short-term savings by subcontracting from subassembly plants, but in the long run capitalism creates its own gravediggers. We are mostly older workers in this plant, and can expect that even if they closed it down we could eventually be transferred to another plant. Workers at the subassembly plants, whether owned directly by GM or not, are usually younger--and more revolutionary, because they have so much less to lose.

When they do hire workers here, you have to know somebody. When they are hiring for summer vacation relief, maybe 300 people, workers can turn in names that have an “equal chance” to be drawn.

So what are the odds that the name of the local president’s wife was the first to be drawn--meaning she would be one of the few that GM kept on permanently. And what are the odds that the next year the first name drawn was the local president’s son. What did all of us in the local give up so his wife and kid could get hired in?

--GM Shreveport worker

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