Friday, December 13, 2013

Toyota Plants In Canada On The Path To Organizing

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The UAW's troubles with organizing Volkswagen's Chattanooga plants are well known throughout the auto world, but Unifor, the Canada union that was once known as the Canadian Auto Workers union, now claims that it has enough union cards to hold a vote on representation.

Speaking to the Windsor Star, Unifor president Jerry Dias claims that 3,200 of Toyota's 6,500 employees at plants in Cambridge and Woodstock have signed the cards, but Unifor will delay a vote until it is confident it can win a "comfortable majority".

According to Dias, money isn't the primary issue for the desire to organize, and workers are confident that the backlash from unionizing will be minimal

"We've had other organizing drives in the past, but this one is by far the most successful..the  workers are getting older. The issues aren't so much wages. It's line speed and the company unilaterally imposing changes to shifts and pension plans that have infuriated people…they used to be afraid that the plant would close. They see that's not true. Toyota built more than 500,000 cars in Canada last year. They're not going anywhere."

Dias reported that 85 percent of Toyota plants worldwide are unionized, and that Unifor is expecting minimal interference from the company. Having just returned from meetings with Japanese union leaders in Tokyo, Dias said that Japanese unions will ask Toyota officials not to have Canadian management interfere with the organizing drive.

This isn't the first time the CAW/Unifor has tried to organize Toyota plants, or other transplants for that matter. The former CAW made a lot of noise about organizing Honda's Alliston, Ontario plant, and has been at it since the 1990′s but nothing has panned out to this day.

While Dias asserts that the majority of Toyota plants are unionized, one key detail not mentioned is the differing nature of unions in North America and a place like Japan. Japanese labor unions are far less adversarial in their relationship with the company than an entity like the CAW/Unifor. The harmonious relationship is essential to the Japanese outlook on labor and business. During our research into the Honda-CAW matter, one former Honda employee with labor relations expertise told TTAC that organizing

"…runs counter to the Japanese concept of loyalty. The whole idea is that if you're loyal to the company, they'll look out for you and your best interests….Honda also doesn't want an outside force interfering in the way their plants are run….[Organizing] interferes with the management structure of the plant itself – which is unacceptable to them."

 



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com

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