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"NOYB" wrote in message news:qQBbb.58380
No kidding. Management should have shut it down years ago in favor of opening a more profitable non-union plant. I guess it took 68 years of "negotiations" with UAW to finally win concessions for closing the place. Please provide... No. *You* prove I'm wrong. Okay: From the Washington Post: The 68-year-old plant produces the Chevrolet Astro and GMC Safari full-sized vans. Sales of both vehicles have declined so sharply in recent years that the plant had cut back from two shifts to one, the official said. Separately, Ford Motor Co. agreed in its tentative contract to keep open a St. Louis assembly plant that it had proposed closing and to shut down a plant in Loraine, Ohio, and move those workers to a factory nearby. The news about the GM and Ford plants was reported by Reuters. The GM shutdown will further erode a key source of jobs for the Baltimore area, economists said. "It's an awful blow to Maryland's industrial base," said Richard Clinch, director of economic research at the University of Baltimore. "For places like Baltimore, with a large base of middle- to low-skilled workers, this is a huge blow." The big, boxy Astro and Safari, the same basic vehicle built for separate GM brands, lost their competitiveness as the market swung heavily to minivans. The GM models ran up against popular foreign rivals such as the Toyota Sienna, Nissan Qwest and Honda Odyssey. The article further states: In recent years, GM has been shifting toward flexible production at newer plants instead of manufacturing one type of vehicle at its aging factories. The strategy, aimed at boosting productivity, allows the company to adjust swiftly to changing demand and make smaller numbers of different types of vehicles. "When they come up with a new vehicle, they don't make an investment in a used factory, because of the embedded work practices, the environment. It's very difficult bringing an old factory up to speed," said Rob Lachenauer, a vice president at the Boston Consulting Group |