While the United Auto Workers take their battle to bring their brand of organization to Volkswagen's plant in Chattanooga, Tenn. before the National Labor Relations Board, VW's labor leaders are regrouping in their fight to establish a works council in the U.S. plant.
Automotive News reports two top officials from VW's global works council, secretary generals Gunnar Kilian and Frank Patta, are in the United States for the next two weeks consulting with labor law experts as to what steps will need to be taken to establish a works council at the automaker's Tennessee plant, an idea popular with a number of the plant's workforce, especially those who voted to keep the UAW out of their floor during the three-day election held two weeks ago.
Meanwhile, UAW supporters believe a U.S. works council would need the legal force of a union contract for a council to work at all. A few options would include talking with a different union, moving forward without a union, or — as both U.S. Senator and former mayor of Chattanooga Bob Corker and American University professor Steve Silvia have suggested — establishing their own union.
Whatever the decision, future expansion into the U.S. market depends on a positive outcome; VW works council chairman Bernd Osterloh told German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung that labor leadership would "hardly be able to vote in favor" of expansion by VW executives so long as Chattanooga remains unorganized.
Finally, the UAW has also vowed to fight for organization of the plant, filing a 58-page brief with the NLRB last weekend citing outside interference as reasoning for holding a new election. Dennis Williams, possible successor to the presidency of the UAW when outgoing president Bob King steps down in June, may have to wait a year before attempting to organize the plant again, but he doesn't mind:
We're not leaving Chattanooga. It took seven years to organize Ford, and I will be around for at least another five.
from The Truth About Cars http://ift.tt/Jh8LjA
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