Foundry Magazine
Foundry Channels
  METALS & ALLOYS   MELTING   REFRACTORIES   SAND & BINDERS   POURING & FILTERING   COREMAKING   MOLDING   SIMULATION   AUTOMATION   PROCESS CONTROL   SHAKEOUT, CLEANING,
  & FINISHING
  HEAT TREATING   TESTING, MEASURING,
  & QUALITY CONTROL
  ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH,
  & SAFETY
USEFUL LINKS SUBSCRIPTIONS CONTACT US
 
Fort Wayne Workers Ready to Negotiate
By FMT Staff | Published February 25, 2004
Reprints  |   Printer Friendly
  |   Email a Friend

Foundry agrees to restore concessions in future
Union workers at one Fort Wayne Foundry Corp. plant have reversed their earlier vote against renegotiating their labor contract. Members of Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastics & Allied Workers International Union at one of the foundry's plants in Fort Wayne, IN, originally rejected the company's January proposal to reopen the contract, seeking wage and benefits concessions.

Fort Wayne Foundry manufactures engine manifolds for General Motors Corp. It operates three foundries and a machining plant in Fort Wayne and Columbia City, IN. Workers at the other two plants initially approved the company's proposal; at the other two plants, workers (some affiliated with the United Autoworkers union) rejected it.

The company is asking the workers for a 10% wage cut and a new, estimated monthly contribution of $100 toward the workers' health-insurance premiums. Currently, the workers pay no premiums.

Fort Wayne Foundry is trying to implement a new business plan it says will restore its profitability and ensure job security.

The GMP workers' change of heart came after the company agreed to address job-security issues and return the wage/benefit concessions at a date to be negotiated, according to the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette.

The business plan also reveals that Fort Wayne Foundry has been awarded a multimillion-dollar contract to produce aluminum engine components for GM. Work on that assignment would begin next January and reach full production in late 2006. It would increase Fort Wayne Foundry's annual sales by about 40%, the Journal-Gazette reports.

Reprints  |   Printer Friendly   |   Email a Friend
Metal Producing Review
Rating :
Your Email Address (optional) :
Comments (optional - 100 characters maximum) :
Note: the email address
is for internal use only.
It is not posted or shared.
Foundry Share Through Social Bookmarking