3800 GM to slash jobs

CoolGTX

let sleeping dogs lie
Nov 17, 2008
3,241
0
Hotel 4 Dogs
Real Name
J/O
General Motors Corp. plans to close plants and eliminate 25,000 manufacturing jobs in the United States by 2008 in an attempt to restore profitability at the world's largest automaker, its chairman said Tuesday as he fended off calls for his resignation.

Chairman and Chief Executive Rick Wagoner told shareholders at GM's 97th annual meeting in Delaware that the capacity and job cuts should generate annual savings of roughly $2.5 billion. About one out of six jobs in the United States will be eliminated.

Wagoner revealed the cutbacks as he laid out a strategy to invigorate GM's North American operations, its biggest and most troubled, amid lackluster sales of its highly profitable trucks and sport utility vehicles, which have been hurt by high fuel prices.

GM posted a $1.1 billion loss in the first quarter and its U.S. market share has fallen to 25.4 percent from 27 percent a year ago, as customers increasingly are choosing models from Toyota Motor Corp., Nissan Motor Co. and other Asian automakers.

The cuts would be on top of earlier reductions that pared GM's U.S. workforce from 177,000 hourly and salaried employees at the end of 2000 to 150,000 at the end of last year, according to figures provided by GM.

"Let me say up front that our absolute top priority is to get our largest business unit back to profitability as soon as possible," said Wagoner, who added that with $20 billion in cash and short-term investments, GM is in no danger of going out of business anytime soon.

"But if we don't fundamentally get at these structural issues -- whether it's gee-whiz, exciting products, or the right distribution, or a solid cost structure in every element of business -- the risk of continually being weakened over time is real," he said.

Wagoner wouldn't say which plants are in danger of being closed, but David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich., said the most likely targets are several older plants. Those include facilities in Janesville, Wis.; Doraville, Ga.; Oklahoma City and Pontiac, Mich., he said. The Janesville plant was built in 1919 and the Doraville plant was built in 1947. The other two plants were built in the 1970s.

Cole said GM probably won't close plants that have recently undergone costly renovations, such as the plant in Lordstown, Ohio, that recently got $1 billion worth of upgrades.

Disgruntled shareholders, who saw the value of their shares fall to a 10-year low in April, gave Wagoner an earful on Tuesday.

"This company is sick," said James Dollinger, a Buick salesman from Flint, Mich., who angrily told Wagoner he should resign.

Fellow shareholder John Lauve compared the GM leadership to officers aboard the Titanic as it headed for an iceberg. "The Titanic sank because the directors ignored the warnings," said Lauve, who criticized everything from gas gauges in GM vehicles to the company's health-care cards. "We need to excel at the basics."

Fending off such criticism, Wagoner outlined four priorities: increasing spending on new cars and trucks; clarifying the role of each of GM's eight brands; intensifying efforts to reduce costs and improve quality; and continuing to search for ways to reduce skyrocketing health-care expenses.

He noted that health-care expenses add $1,500 to the cost of each GM vehicle. This puts GM at a "significant disadvantage versus foreign-based competitors," Wagoner said, echoing comments made by the Standard and Poor's and Fitch ratings services after both reduced the company's bond rating to "junk" status last month.

Wagoner described as intense the status of ongoing negotiations with the United Auto Workers and other unions on ways to significantly reduce GM's health-care costs. GM's health-care tab for its 1.1 million current and former workers and their families is more than $5 billion a year and rising.

"We have not reached an agreement at this time, and to be honest, I'm not 100 percent that we will," said Wagoner, the CEO since 2000 and chairman since 2003.

To date, the UAW has indicated it won't reopen its contract, which expires in 2007, and agree to pick up a larger share of soaring health-care costs. Messages left Tuesday with the UAW were not returned.

Wagoner said another part of the company's strategy is to make GM's eight brands more distinct from each other. Chevrolet and Cadillac will continue to have full vehicle lineups, he said, but the company's other six brands -- GMC, Pontiac, Buick, Saturn, Saab and Hummer -- will be more tightly focused on niche markets.

"In some cases, such as Pontiac and Buick, it will mean fewer but stronger entries in the future," Wagoner said.

Wagoner said the company also plans to put less emphasis on incentives and focus more effort on selling GM vehicles in top markets like New York, Miami and Los Angeles.

General Motors shares rose 42 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $30.84 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. That is close to the $31 a share offer made by billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian's for 28 million GM shares that was scheduled to expire on Tuesday.

Wagoner said it was vital for the company to cut costs by improving efficiency at its manufacturing plants. He said plant closings and idlings in recent months will reduce assembly capacity in North America from 6 million vehicles in 2002 to 5 million by the end of this year.

According to the Harbour Report, an annual productivity survey released last week, GM's 30 North American plants operated at an average of 85 percent of their capacity in 2004, compared to an average of 107 percent for Toyota's six North American plants.

GM already shut a factory in Linden, N.J., in April and a factory in Baltimore in May, affecting about 2,000 employees.
 
S

sr71_rgl

Guest
That just freaking sucks...not that I know anyone directly affected but what's this say about our "recovering economy"? So many industries are indirectly affected by the auto industry. Something this big confirms to me we're going in the wrong direction :angry:
 

Mike K

TCG Elite Member
Apr 11, 2008
13,214
2,586
GM is going to be just fine. In the world of business it's decisions like this, being made this far ahead, that save companies. It's still possible to be a multi-billion dollar company, that's healthier than it is now, with 25,000 less paychecks being written. Sometimes the best growth move is knowing when to cut back...

Now you want trouble, Ford is in trouble. They just released the 500 to dismal sales (underpowered too, who's "optional" engine only has 203hp anymore?!), released the Freestyle to dismal sales, and their new models aren't looking any less bland. For the company that started the whole performance sedan craze (SHO) they really have dropped the ball in recent years having completely abandoned what it seems anybody wanted. It's the F150/ 250/ 350 and Mustang keeping their ass out of the sling...

To get on an even more unrelated rant, announcments like this need to be taken and compared with the greater state of the economy. This announcement doesn't mean GM is dying and it's investors know this. Likewise, I hate that so many people are trying to keep United Airlines afloat. We have a bunch of airlines right now that are spread thin with low profits and high debt. What we need is a couple of these airlines to go belly up. The industry would be better for it.

That's my rant.
 

Aircal

TCG Elite Member
TCG Premium
Nov 10, 2008
7,131
7,861
Countryside
Real Name
Tom callahan
Actually it says GM will cut, it dosn't say layoff. This is their normal retirement rate they just arn't filling the jobs after people retire. This may turn into a major showdown with the unions. GM employees pay 7% of their health care costs, as compared to 36% for the rest of us. Also if GM closes any plants anyone who dosn't get a new job keeps almost 100% of their income. I think GM got screwed in those negotiations!!!
 

Royalgtp

TCG Elite Member
Dec 24, 2008
3,700
0
Most unions eventually kill the goose that lays the golden egg...


Hell look at McCormick(sp) Place? have you seen some of the normal pay hours of the union member their?!!!!!!


Overtime and weekend pay is sick......were talking hundreds of dollars an hour for a fork lift operator and decorator?

I bleive I saw McCormick charging 400 an hour for a fork lift operator on weekends......


You can already see a lot of conventions goint to vegas and Florida.....Tha and the City keeps racing taxes on conventions....
 

sweetness

Addict
Nov 12, 2008
777
0
Unions had their time, but now most have become the organism that they were designed to protect the worker from.


They know they can squeeze the shiot out of a company and have little reprecussions in the future.


Look at United. the mechanics and attendants union refuses to renegotiate with the company dispite the fact that the compny is in deep shit. they know that if the company goes under the workers will find new jobs and that the union will continue being paid. they have NO vested interest in the health of the company. They do more harm to the worker and the employer these days than any good that comes out of them.


BC
 
Old Thread: Hello . There have been no replies in this thread for 90 days.
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant. Consider starting a new thread to get fresh replies.

Thread Info