General Motors and the Ontario government are discussing a third car line for the automaker’s truck plant in Oshawa, economic development and trade minister Sandra Pupatello has said.
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“We do want to talk about what’s next for General Motors, so we’re determined as best we can to try to get detail, a little meat on the bones of some of the conversation,” she told the Associated Press (AP).
“We’re trying to nail down timing, because if in fact we have an opportunity for a new car product, there is still going to be a couple of years where we have a gap between the estimated date of closure of the truck plant and a launch of a new vehicle.”
Once the preliminary discussions are complete, the next conversation would be with “people who are responsible for North American manufacturing where some of the decision-making actually takes place,” she told AP.
AP noted that GM recently announced it would close the 2,600-worker Oshawa truck plant in 2009, citing rising fuel costs and lower demand and, ever since that announcement, workers have been blocking access to GM’s Canadian headquarters to protest the closure. The Canadian Auto Workers union has been calling on the Detroit automaker to reverse the decision, but the company said last week that wasn’t going to happen.
On Tuesday, GM applied for a court order to end the blockade and also announced it was seeking $1.5 million in compensation from the CAW local union and some of its members, AP added.
CAW Local 222 president Chris Buckley reportedly said he doesn’t understand GM’s compensation demand, since the plant in question has remained in operation throughout the protest. The company alleges head-office staff has been kept from work as a result of the blockade.
“I’d like to know where they get their numbers from because we’ve kept the two best assembly plants in the world operating,” Buckley told the Associated Press.
If the company successfully convinces the court to order an end to the blockade, the workers will take their protest elsewhere, said Local 222 chairman Keith Osborne told the news agency.
“Just because they move us off the blockade does not mean the issue is done with and the union has thrown its hands up and given up,” he said.
GM spokesman Stew Low told AP the company tried the “collaborative method with the CAW” and would continue to “go down that path,” but had no choice but to seek legal intervention.
“We’ve been told repeatedly by the union since they put it up that the blockade would come down, but that hasn’t happened,” Low said.
“So we’re really put in the position where we don’t have any further recourse but to seek legal remedy. It’s not our preferred course of action, but, at this point, it’s the only course of action that we see to be able to get our employees back into our building and continue working.”
The Associated Press aid Low wouldn’t comment on details of the legal application or the company’s bid for compensation but CAW president Buzz Hargrove has said he expects union members will obey any court order to remove the blockade, and both Buckley and Osborne have said the protest will remain peaceful.
