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Saturday, March 15, 2014

The Jeep Plant Romney Said Was Moving To China Is Hiring 1,000 Workers In Ohio

Jeep Cherokee vehicles on an automated line at the Chrysler Toledo Assembly Plant in Toledo, Ohio, U.S., on Feb. 28
Jeep Cherokee vehicles on an automated line at the Chrysler Toledo Assembly Plant in Toledo, Ohio, U.S., on Feb. 28
Remember the closing days of the 2012 presidential campaign when Mitt Romney ran that explosive ad suggesting Chrysler was going to stop building Jeeps in Ohio and move production to China? The one that got “Four Pinocchios” from the fact-checker at the Washington Post? The one Romney himself echoed in a speech he delivered near the Jeep plant in Ohio: “I saw a story today that one of the great manufacturers in this state, Jeep, now owned by the Italians, is thinking of moving all production to China.” Right afterward, Meat Loaf performed.
Anyway, that Jeep plant? It didn’t move to China. And it’s actually doing quite well. No, scratch that: It’s going gangbusters. Demand for Jeeps is so high that Chrysler workers are clocking 60 hours a week and still can’t keep up. So according to theToledo Blade, the company is planning on hiring up to 1,000 part-time workers—American workers, in Ohio—so they can crank out enough Jeeps to meet the demand. These workers are even going to get health insurance. Here’s the Blade:
“Chrysler Group LLC plans to hire up to 1,000 part-time employees for the Toledo Assembly complex to keep production rolling while giving regular employees the chance for a break.
“‘Our people have been working a tremendous amount of hours,’ Plant Manager Chuck Padden said. ‘To get them more time off is important to us, to make sure they’re refreshed, and can work safely.’
“With record demand for the Jeep Wrangler and the launch of the new Jeep Cherokee last year, employees are regularly working 60 hours a week. And while employees generally like the extra pay that results from working overtime, such lengthy stretches can wear on workers, he said.”
In case you’re wondering, hiring temp workers isn’t a maneuver to deny regular workers their hours. “You’ve gotta remember, these people [the regular workers] are working 10 hours a day, six days a week,” a UAW boss who helped negotiate the deal told the Blade. “It’s very important to have the day off you want with your family.” The Blade further reports that Chrysler has already hired 380 of these temp employees and converted 50 of them to full-time jobs.
This is all great news for the workers and their families, for Ohio, and for Jeep. If you happen to be waiting for a new Jeep Wrangler, I guess it’s great news for you, too, since the new workers will allow the plant to start running its Wrangler assembly line on Saturdays.
Call me petty, but what I think is greatest about this story is the line tucked down at the end—the one mentioning that 15 percent of the Cherokees built at the Ohio plant are “destined for international markets.”
Green_190
Green is senior national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek in Washington.


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