Recruiting & Onboarding
1,350 temp workers at GM to get full-time jobs

After a 40-day strike in 2019 that had halted GM’s US production and raised the losses to $1 Bn, this decision is a result of extensive negotiations between the United Auto Workers union and GM.
More than 1350 currently temporary workers at General Motors at about 14 facilities in the US would be getting full-time status by March, according to the company.
The full-time workers are set to start at $21 to $24 per hour as per their seniority level in addition to receiving health care benefits at a low cost, dental and vision benefits, company 401(k) contributions and annual profit-sharing cheques. At a certain point they would be reaching the top wage of a full-time production worker that is $32.32 per hour.
The other sites and manufacturing plants apart from Detroit are located in Michigan, Indiana, New York, Tennessee, Missouri, Kansas, and Kentucky.
This is a result of negotiations between the United Auto Workers union and GM. After a 40-day strike in 2019 that had halted GM’s US production and raised the losses to $1 Bn, the agreement was struck between the union and the company that temporary workers can become permanent workers after two-three years, however, their starting pay would be lower than what the already existing full-time workers make.
Key takeaway:
As the automotive industry goes through major upheavals on a global scale in terms of the decreasing demand from the consumers in addition to the pressures put by new technologies, has resulted in a change the types of jobs that are available in this sector. Traditionally production-oriented and mechanical jobs are being replaced with automation and the learning curve is of building new skills is still playing catch up.
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