Categories: CanadaNewsOntario

What Can Be Done About the Oshawa General Motors Plant Closing

UPDATED: Jan 20 2019 – At first emotional pass it appears that there is little to be done about GM’s announcement they are closing the Oshawa Ontario factory, but there are options and there is work to yet to be done.  Here is the list of thing that should be considered and quickly:

1 – Hope a Different Company Buys the GM Factory To Make Cars on Contract… Maybe Even GM’s

In mid-January 2019 it became apparent that there are companies like Canadian (but global) auto-parts giant Magna International may want to use this factory to assemble lower volume products on contract to companies like GM and Audi.  The idea being that if they can get orders for (say) 20,000 Cadillac CT6’s + 30,000 orders for Chrysler / Fiat Hibrids (yet to be announced) special editions and 15,000 orders for Ford Raptors, they can make a factory that has a maximum capacity of about 150,000 vehicles per year, really work.

2 – Keep Some GM Product in Oshawa:

The best case scenario is that GM can be persuaded to continue producing some product in Oshawa.  While this is unlikely, it is possible.
On the negative side:

  • The plant needs expensive retooling to manufacture new product
  • Doug Ford has said that GM told him this is a done deal and they are not trying to force what would obviously be a rough negotiation

On the positive side:

  • The GM announcement did not say it was shuttering the plant.  It simply said there is no new product allotment after the end of 2019, which holds out some hope that there is room to negotiate.
  • Oshawa is high rated in terms of efficiency and quality metrics which means that the work force has skills.

Given these facts, there is some hope that something can be produced in the Oshawa factory.

3 – Strikes:

Labour disruption to both Oshawa and Ingersoll Ontario facilities would make for some dramatic moments that may may workers feel better, but it will also:

  • make GM workers poorer at a time when they need to save
  • will likely make GM interested in further reducing production levels of the slow selling end of life Impala that is made in the factory today

4: Negotiate that Package:

Negotiating a highly paid package with extended benefits is most likely the best course of action for workers and is most likely what will happen.

5: Relocation and Retraining:

Negotiating retraining and relocation funds for workers will be key as there is little similar work in the region.  As someone that grew up in the region and was in Oshawa just a few months ago I can attest to media reports that there are few other manufacturing jobs in within 20 kilometers and with Chrysler’s financial implosion (again!) the former president of Chrysler Canada thinks that it will likely be closing one of it’s nearby Ontario plants.

6: Worker Mobility:

Negotiate jobs mobility so new hires in the large Ingersoll factory which builds the Chevy Equinox and St Catherine’s engine / transmission plant are offered to Oshawa staff first.  Remember that GM has the following facilities already in Canada:

This clearly will not be an option for most current Oshawa workers and GM will not have 2500 jobs to offer in the next year at those facilities, but negotiating worker mobility would help a few hundred.

7: New Owners:

Looking for a new owner will be a tough sell but there are companies like Tesla that are expanding and like Honda that already exist in Ontario and may want a crack at:

  1. a relatively modern manufacturing facility
  2. highly motivated work force and union
  3. a Federal Government in an election year with no apparent fiscal controls to limit their desire to subsidize such a take over

Again, on the negative side are:

  1. As you can see in the aerial photo to the right, this is not a small facility but parts of it could be decommissioned to make it a more palatable purchase for another car maker.
  2. It costs hundreds of millions of dollars in long term investment to re-tool a facility like Oshawa a that is going to make selling it difficult

8: Organize a Boycott GM Campaign

Many Canadians, including this Canadian, will be upset by the closure of the Oshawa plant and will support a boycott… right up until they go to buy a new car.  The statistics are pretty clear that boycotts almost always have no medium term effect and often result the opposite effect.  Consider THESE famous Boycott protests that resulted in increased sales.

 

Is There Real Hope of Keep GM Manufacturing in Oshawa?

We have great hope that someone like Magna can make a modern-ish plant like Oshawa work as a contract builder.

As someone that grew up in the area and someone that lived through the Nortel closure which employed 2000 people at its peak in nearby Belleville (I grew up  between the two cities), I know this is announcement is nothing short of devastation for both the workers and City of Oshawa.  If I were less than 55 years old working at that plant today, I would not wait for GM or government action; I would just relocate to some other city where I had better prospects and would do as soon as I could.

Cities with one employer are littered through the history books and I don’t think there is enough weight in the positive options above to keep me in place.  It is a very sad reality that in a real emergency, the ones that act quickly are the survivors.

Tags: gmOshawa

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