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American Axle Sends Camaro Work to Mexico

12K views 110 replies 68 participants last post by  BigAls87Z28  
#1 ·
Link: http://biz.yahoo.com/bizj/060920/1348381.html?.v=1

Hope was dashed Wednesday that American Axle & Manufacturing's local axle plant could land work on the GM's new Camaro muscle car.

The company told employees that the work, instead of being assigned to Buffalo, will be done at a Mexican plant.


"I'm disappointed and disgusted," said Kevin Donovan, the United Auto Workers union's Region 9 assistant director.

"The plant worked hard to make American Axle a success which gave them the opportunity to build plants in Mexico. Now the company is taking work that we worked real hard to bring here and is putting it into Mexico," he said.

Plant officials told UAW members at meetings in the morning and afternoon where the decision was announced that American Axle will aggressively pursue other new work for the Delavan Avenue facility.

A company official at Detroit headquarters declined comment.

Donovan estimated that 130 local jobs probably would have been involved in producing components for the Camaro, which is being introduced in the 2008 model year.

The plant has about 650 to 700 hourly workers. Several hundred more are on layoff, some since early this year.

At three Western New York facilities -- Buffalo, Town of Tonawanda and Cheektowaga -- American Axle has 1,700 employees.

The modern update of the popular 1960's-era model Camaro is being assembled at General Motors Corp.'s plant in Oshawa, Ont.

Workers at GM's Powertrain plant in the Town of Tonawanda were still waiting this week to learn if they would be assigned to make the Camaro's engines.
 
#5 ·
I think there's some merit to the idea of merging the U.S. with Mexico and Canada. That way you solve the illegal immigrant issue, and jobs never really "leave". ;)
 
#6 ·
lets takeover canada and mexico, then its all the same. asit is, mexico is part of central AMERICA, and canada north AMERICA. lets move mexico north a bit.

...but yeah, cheap labor to make a profit, nothing new
 
#8 ·
importedtuna said:
I think there's some merit to the idea of merging the U.S. with Mexico and Canada. That way you solve the illegal immigrant issue, and jobs never really "leave". ;)

I often wonder this too. Europe is now essentially one large federation, using a common currency. Would it work for North America? Interesting question.
 
#10 ·
chakis24 said:
lets takeover canada and mexico, then its all the same. asit is, mexico is part of central AMERICA, and canada north AMERICA. lets move mexico north a bit.

...but yeah, cheap labor to make a profit, nothing new
May as well, their citizens are all migrating north or just drop the word New from the state of New Mexico and let them settle there ;)
 
#12 ·
ScottS said:
Could someone remind me again as to why am I supposed to be blindly loyal to American manufacturers? "Chevy Camaro, A Mexican-Canadian Revolution."
I'm having the same thoughts/doubts. If the next UAW contract amounts to the same thing Toyota/Honda workers are getting, I'll be a 'free agent' as far as where my next vehicle comes from. If all the US-based corporations ignore worker's interest, then it'll make no difference who makes the stuff. We need some national policy that promotes and protects jobs here. Not likely with the current crew in DC.
 
#14 ·
Ya gotta love the UAW....if they don't get what they want, the job leaves the country...then everybody wins.:confused:
 
#17 ·
EldoFan said:
do I need any more reason to look at a Mustang or Challenger now??
I've seriously considered the Mustang. The Challenger? Eh....not so much.
 
#19 ·
steverino said:
Must have been some big bucks $$ cost differential considering the distance you have to ship the axles from Mexico vs. nearby upstate NY
I'm wondering about this for a couple of reasons...

I spend about half my time in Florida, and I spend a LOT Of time for work in the Buffalo area (plus I grew up there and have a lot of freinds and family there)...so yes, the distance to ship parts from Buffalo to Oshawa is very short...there must be some huge cost savings move the work to Mexico. But even more so....I have some 'friends of freinds' that work at GM plants and American Axle plants in the Buffalo area...and many of them were on the "job bank' quite a bit in the past couple of years.

If those people are getting pay and benefits on the GM job bank, wouldn't it make financial sense to actually utilize them rather than pay them for more 'trivia' work? That is, of course, unless GM thinks the job bank will be muich reduced or eliminated by the time the Camaro will be built.
 
#21 ·
do I need any more reason to look at a Mustang or Challenger now??



Ahemm...

You do know that the Charger will more that not, be built in Canada right? Where the ooohhhh soooooo "American" 300, Charger and Magnum are built, and the the ooooohhhh sooo "American" HEMI is made in...tada.....Mexico!

and the Mustang is built alongside Mazdas!

It's a global world, and I would like to thank both NAFTA and the UAW, both of them are at fault here, NAFTA for making it so easy to export jobs and the UAW for constantly giving them a reason too.
 
#25 ·
Aren't the LS1 and LS2 made in the States?
 
#26 ·
bfred said:
Made in Mexico, USA, China, Mars - it doesn't matter to me. But, if the rear end on the new Camero doesn't turn out to be much stronger than the last one, I'll shop for a different hot-rod.
First, it had better matter to you with the state of the current economy.

Second, I'm running 400rwhp on the motor with a stock rearend. If that isn't enough, add a 150 shot of nitrous (on top of the 400rwhp), drag radials and 3.73 gears ALL THROUGH A STOCK REAREND. I'd say the "last one" was pretty damn good.