Ford: Buyouts, Early Retirement Offered To All 41,000 Of Its U.S. Hourly Workers

Ford Buyouts

TOM KRISHER   12/21/09 05:29 PM ET   AP

DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. has offered buyout or retirement incentive packages to all of its 41,000 U.S. hourly workers as it tries to further reduce its factory work force.

Ford, the healthiest of Detroit's three automakers and the only one to avoid government aid and bankruptcy protection, still has more workers than it needs to produce cars and trucks at current sales levels, said company spokesman Mark Truby.

He would not say how many workers Ford expects to take the packages, which include cash payments and other incentives such as vouchers to buy cars and short-term health insurance coverage.

"We're just going to try to right-size our manned capacity and align it with demand," Truby said.

Ford currently has 634 blue-collar workers on layoff in the U.S.

Under the terms of a new contract with the United Auto Workers union, the employees get most of their pay for a year depending on seniority, and a portion of their wages for another year before they are removed from the company payroll.

In the past, laid-off workers went into the "jobs bank" and were paid indefinitely even if their factory had been shut down. But the union agreed to scrap the jobs bank earlier this year when all three Detroit automakers ran into financial troubles.

The buyout package, offered to workers with at least a year of service, includes $50,000 cash and the choice of a $25,000 voucher to buy a vehicle or $20,000 more in cash. The deal also includes basic health care coverage for six months, Ford said. Retirement-eligible workers can take the buyout but must wait up to 18 months before retiring.

The retirement package includes $40,000 for skilled trades workers and $20,000 for nonskilled employees. To be eligible, workers have to have either 30 or more years of service, be age 55 or older with 10 or more years of work, or they can be 65 with at least one year of service, the company said.

Earlier this year, only 1,000 workers took similar packages, the company said in July.

Ford started 2009 with 89,000 employees in North America but reduced that number to 80,200 as of Sept. 30 through attrition, buyouts and layoffs.

Truby said the additional offer has nothing to do with the UAW membership rejecting a second round of contract concessions earlier this year. Workers at General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC approved the concessions, so Ford is operating at a small cost disadvantage.

Ford sales were down 19 percent through November when compared with the same time last year. But the company has fared better than the U.S. auto market as a whole, which is down 24 percent for the year. GM and Chrysler sales are both off more than 30 percent.

In 2006, Ford had 75,000 unionized workers in the U.S., but since then it has closed 12 factories and reduced its work force with buyout and early retirement offers as part of a massive restructuring plan. The company plans to close four more factories by the end of 2011.

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DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. has offered buyout or retirement incentive packages to all of its 41,000 U.S. hourly workers as it tries to further reduce its factory work force. Ford, the healthiest ...
DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. has offered buyout or retirement incentive packages to all of its 41,000 U.S. hourly workers as it tries to further reduce its factory work force. Ford, the healthiest ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
03:44 PM on 12/23/2009
Seems like a lot of folks want to blame the lowest rung on the ladder for the ills of this economy. Sub prime loans, you shouldn't have taken one, car industry in the tank, blame the unions. So the guys makeing all the money, and stearing the boat ain't done nothing wrong. Interesting............
01:11 PM on 12/23/2009
We need a job stimulus instead of the usual empty talk. there is no economic recovery until healthcare is passed and people have jobs.

good articles: http://iamned111.blogspot.com/
03:11 AM on 12/23/2009
I don't get this constant union bashing.

Other countries have working profitable economies WITH STRONG LABOR UNIONS. What is wrong when workers benefit from rising productivity ? What is wrong when there is an institution which looks after it that profits are not only taken by the owner of a company ? Development means to step forward and not to step back. Just take a look at other functioning economies WITH UNIONS. It is not rocket science.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
03:38 PM on 12/23/2009
If we start letting workers benifit from rising productivity we will be on the slippery slope to socialism. Then we won't be able to pay executives 1000 times more than the worker bees. Who would want to live like that? Next thing you know the country will start tossing around affordable health care, then you'll be sorry. I would rather be a running dog of the imperialist swine, myself.
06:13 PM on 12/22/2009
My advice:

Watch this documentary about factory occupations from Argentina:
THE TAKE
http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=8149373547373833649

"The Take is a Canadian documentary film released in 2004 by the wife and husband team of Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis. It tells the story of workers in Buenos Aires, Argentina who reclaim control of a closed Forja auto plant where they once worked and turn it into a worker cooperative, or as could be argued, a working model of anarcho-syndicalism."
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RickInMichigan
Gravity rules!
04:55 PM on 12/22/2009
I am an employee of Ford where the next generation Focus is being built along with an electric version of this car. Our company is doing quite well in these troubled economic times. Sorry to inform those of you who think companies with 'unions" can only fail. I guess that the big financial firms must have been unionized too since they, as an industry, nearly collapsed. Must have been the unionized tellers at the banks causing the problems......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blackhole2008
Me Lib
08:37 PM on 12/23/2009
I'm glad they are just not tossing people by surprise. at least they offer the opportunity for employees to prepare and select their layoff conditions. I hope they don't close plants here and re-open in China.
04:39 PM on 12/22/2009
IF this country "HAD" a good health care plan, than the big three would still have billions.

Paying guaranteed heath care is KILLING the big three due to insane yearly insurance hikes! That and poor management and cheap car parts and designs! All that saved money on cutting corners and outsourcing is going to management salaries and things like corporate jets. Just great!

The rethugs don't want to mention this cold, hard fact. Health care reform would also help stop outsourcing and save some of these jobs.

Selling England by the pound...Make that selling the US by corporate arrogance and greed!
02:07 PM on 12/22/2009
International Harvester, year 1984, acquired by J.I. Case, owned by an energy company, Tenneco. The farm equipment division was sold to J.I. Case and the truck division was re-organized by the bankruptcy court in Chicago(the Daley machine). At the present, the company, renamed Case Intermational was purchased by New Holland of England, and merged with an Italian company. Who knows now? No more UAW jobs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
01:53 PM on 12/22/2009
we had a country once .then wall street sold it..
12:57 PM on 12/22/2009
obviously Ford isn't anticipating any type of recovery thru 2011, funny how that differs from the financial "experts" and their 'green shoots'.
12:13 PM on 12/22/2009
I read this book on the plane last week, "Ford and the American Dream" by Clifton Lambreth. It is written in a style similar to "The Shack" which was a best seller a couple years ago. This book is a quick read and is spot on with what is happening to Ford. The author is a former Ford executive and tells it like it is, from the corrupt and self-indulging management to the friction between the union and corporate. It is published by Daniel Bradley, Inc and distributed by Executive Books. It is a must read, and the message extends all across the American corporate spectrum.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PragmaticStatistic
11:40 AM on 12/22/2009
Does anyone see another bailout coming?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leo Mauler
04:23 PM on 12/22/2009
I'm not sure the word "another bailout" is accurate with Ford. Ford was, after all, the company which went to Congress and asked not for hard cash, but for the option of getting government loans in the future. The other ones went with hats out, begging for actual money right now.
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FoonTheElder
Always choosing between the lesser of two evils
10:33 AM on 12/22/2009
Only 41,000 hourly workers left at Ford. The right wingers have accomplished just what they wanted, the elimination of unionized industrial workers at any cost.
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10:48 AM on 12/22/2009
would those workers be better off if Ford went under and they got nothing?
10:50 AM on 12/22/2009
If the union had shown more flexibility on helping the company get through this economic storm the company wouldn't be paying the workers to go away.
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11:18 AM on 12/22/2009
Yep. the unions designed and ordered the gas hogs be built, quality not an issue, it is a MANAGEMENT Function, not worker and moved offshore.. But let's ask why we cannot export USA made cars, the are in truth rather popular in EU. Asia, Why are they being blocked when we have "Free trade".. Unions are NOT the issue.. as when they are gone, we revert to 1900's of low pay and corps calling the shots... Note NON Unions plants pay around 15/hour and no benefits.. try to live off that and there are 2010 work hours per years. do the numbers.

So let's be a bit more specific as to how "unions busted companies".
10:04 AM on 12/22/2009
Nice victory for the Dem's.
09:49 AM on 12/22/2009
The Democrat Party has finally destroyed the US auto industry. It took about 70 years but as the can now say "Mission Accomplished".

Wake up USA. This is their plan for the USA. Up next, the health care industry and the oil industry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
liberalNmoderation
10:29 AM on 12/22/2009
You blame this on the Dems?
How about placing the blame squarely where it belongs.
on the American auto industry.
They refused to make cars the consumers wanted.
And now they're paying that price.
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liberalNmoderation
10:32 AM on 12/22/2009
That said...Ford ain't goin bye-bye...they'll survive this no problem.
10:51 AM on 12/22/2009
Ford cars have always been good. The problem is GM and Chrysler caved in on totally uneconomic contracts and then Ford was forced to follow or be shut down on strike.
11:26 AM on 12/22/2009
cheap shot..oversimplifacation... the public helped by wanting SUVs
I'm glad you're only one conservative ...maybe the rest are waking up.
09:39 AM on 12/22/2009
So another company going because of the Unions. Congratulations Unions, by demanding higher wages for workers who don't even have any work, you have crippled the industry. The only Car maker in the US that might have a chance to survive is fighting for its life.

The people don't want to buy cars now, especially after the cash for clunckers. But, the union will force FORD to pay its employees the high wages even though they don't do any work.

Farewell FORD. farewell.
11:28 AM on 12/22/2009
try reading about the history of labor/management relations sometime.