While the United Auto Workers union expanded its strike at Ford Friday, executives at Ford said the two sides are getting relatively close to a deal on wages and benefits that would be affordable for the company and good for the 57,000 UAW members there.
“We are making significant progress on the pay and benefit side,” said Bryce Currie, vice president of manufacturing in the Americas and of labor affairs at Ford. “I’m not going to share some of the specifics, but we’re close.”
CEO Jim Farley and Currie both said they believe the sticking point on a deal is the union’s demand about the pay at a plant under that will build EV batteries. Both said those battery plants will need to be competitive with lower-wage battery plants being built by competitors.
Ford had previously said that meeting the union’s demands, including 40 percentage points in wage increases over the life of the contract and a four-day, 32-hour work week without a drop in pay from the current 40-hour week, would cause massive losses and bankruptcy. But they said that is no longer the case give the progress at the bargaining table.
“The deal that we’re close to is actually a deal that’s affordable to us, that allows us to continue investing where we need to invest,” said Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford Blue, the unit of Ford that makes traditional gas-powered vehicles for consumers. “And it’s a very good deal for the workers.”
But UAW President Shawn Fain attacked Farley and other Ford executives for characterizing the two sides as close on financial issues in the deal.
“We gave Ford a comprehensive proposal on Monday and still haven’t heard back,” said Fain. “We are far apart on core economic proposals like retirement security and post-retirement healthcare, as well as job security in this EV transition,”
The split on “retirement security” isn’t disputed by Ford, as its executives say they are not agreeing to a union demand to resume traditional pension plans for those hired since 2007.
Ford CFO John Lawler called those defined benefit plans that pay a guaranteed monthly benefit until a retiree dies, “a plan of the past.”