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The Detroit Free Press has learned more details on when GM and the UAW will start the first phase of the $50,000 retirement buyout program. Here is when to expect GM's $50,000 buyout program for ...
The UAW says about 7,800 GM hourly workers are eligible for retirement at the moment. ... A GM hourly employee at a parts plant told the Free Press only two people in the plant will get to take ...
For retirees, GM has agreed to make five payments of $500 to current retirees and surviving spouses, the first such payments in over 15 years. Like the other two, the GM deal includes a right to ...
The 2007 General Motors Strike was a labor union strike that lasted three days from September 23 to September 25, 2007, organized by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union. The UAW were engaged in talks with General Motors (GM) to negotiate a new labor contract but were unable to come to an agreement before the deadline. Consequently, 73,000 ...
In a memo obtained by the Detroit Free Press, GM's salaried workforce to get base wage increases, added contributions to 401(k) plans and other perks.
In order to improve profits, the Detroit automakers made deals with unions to reduce wages while making pension and health care commitments. GM, for instance, at one time picked up the entire cost of funding health insurance premiums of its employees, their survivors and GM retirees, as the US did not have a universal health care system. [14]
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General Motors was represented by the New York specialist law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges. The United States Treasury was represented by the United States Attorneys Office for the Southern District of New York and Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP. An ad hoc group of the bondholders of General Motors Corporation was also represented in court. [47]