Ocnus.Net
Axle of Evil
By JOHN PATRICK LEARY, In These Times 13/5/08
May 14, 2008 - 12:37:00 PM
UAW members protest American Axle &
Manufacturing's annual shareholders' meeting at the company's headquarters in
Hamtramck, Mich., on For more than two months, 3,600 United Auto Workers (UAW)
members have walked picket lines in Detroit, Three Rivers, Mich., and upstate
New York. The strike at American Axle & Manufacturing (AAM), a major
supplier of truck and sport-utility axles for General Motors (GM), is shaping
up as a line-in-the-sand campaign for the embattled union.
The strike began Feb. 26, when AAM demanded
steep wage concessions, from $27 per hour to $14 per hour. In order to stay in
business, AAM says, it must secure “competitive” labor costs. “AAM is simply
asking for the same changes the UAW has already agreed to with our U.S.
competitors,” reads the company website, referring to recent UAW deals with
companies like Delphi — GM’s bankrupt auto-parts division — which slashed wages
and benefits two years ago. AAM has said it may move production to its
Guanajuato, Mexico, plant if its demands are not met.
However, Rob Segura, a machinist at AAM’s
Detroit plant, points out that the company is in much better financial shape
than the rest of the auto industry. The company turned a $37 million profit
last year, while its main competitor, the Dana Corporation, only recently
emerged from bankruptcy protection. Segura says that given the size of the
proposed wage cuts, “You’re asking the average worker to vote on losing your
home.” Workers also point to Axle Chief Executive Officer Dick Dauch’s salary,
which totaled $10.2 million in 2007.
AAM spokeswoman Renee Rogers says that
Axle had a 1 percent profit margin in 2007. She adds that Dauch has no reason
to apologize for his salary: “He’s the founder of the company, he invested his
own money, and now he’s able to reap the rewards of that.”
Dauch has headed AAM since 1994, when GM
sold its former axle division. In 2005, AAM opened its world headquarters next
to its main plant after receiving a special 12-year tax abatement from Detroit,
which exempts AAM from most state and local taxes on the property, and $4.4
million in additional state tax credits. (The exemptions resulted from AAM’s
threats to build its headquarters in Buffalo.)
Dianne Feeley, a retired AAM employee and
co-editor of a rank-and-file American Axle newsletter, Shifting Gears, says the
C.E.O. is a shrewd negotiator. “Dauch is a great poker player,” she says.
AAM headquarters — a structure of white
stone and mirrored glass, known to workers as “the Glass House” — rises high
above Detroit’s Chrysler Freeway. There, late-model American sedans and SUVs
ferry salaried employees through a picket line of a dozen workers, such as
repairman Mike Pockey.
“They’re in there, breathing fresh air
like a freaking casino,” Pockey says, gesturing to the glass building, “while
we’re breathing this filthy air” inside the factory.
The union says five workers have died in
industrial accidents at the plant since 1994. Rogers would not address that
charge, but says, “safety is a top priority for American Axle.”
Assembly-line work, strikers say, is a
wearisome job. “You wear your body down for eight hours straight, every day,”
says one striker, who, like many other picketers, wished to remain anonymous.
“Sure it’s easy for five minutes, but do it eight hours.”
Another worker, Rob, who declined to give
his last name, says of the proposed $14 hourly wage, “I can honestly tell you
that no one would go back for that. The plant life is such that you don’t know
what it’s like unless you work there.”
Workers say they have received little
information from the UAW International, which oversees negotiations and strike
pay. “If you watch the news,” Rob says, “you know about as much as we do.” (The
International did not respond to
In These Times’ repeated requests for
comment.)
UAW leadership abruptly postponed an April
16 rally in Detroit because of “some progress” in negotiations, according to a
terse fax distributed to Detroit’s two striking locals. Yet three days later,
union President Ron Gettelfinger announced that Axle was not negotiating.
Bill Alford Jr., president of UAW Local
235, characterizes the strike as a major battle. “We’re at war defending the
middle class and its wage,” he says. “If we lose here, then every other
middle-class worker will be next.”
Source: Ocnus.net 2008