-
Someone Is Trying To Change The Paid Leave You Voted For… - 1 day ago
-
Get Your Newsline Here! - February 21, 2025
-
Welcome 61 New Members to UAW Local 2250! - February 20, 2025
-
Great Read: How UAW Benefits Shaped An Immigrant Family - February 20, 2025
-
Cool 2250 Members Make The News! - February 19, 2025
-
White Shirt Day: What It Means To You - February 18, 2025
-
This Week’s Missouri AFL-CIO Labor Report - February 16, 2025
-
Could You Use a $5000 Scholarship? Alliance Credit Union Can Help - February 15, 2025
-
Membership Meeting Next Wednesday! - February 15, 2025
-
Can You Believe That News Story? Find Out Here - February 12, 2025
The UAW Helps Alabama Autoworkers
A new “Alabama Way?” YES please!
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey shares her interesting perspective on who gets a “say” in
her state. In a recent opinion piece, “Standing up for jobs as unions target auto
manufacturing” published Jan. 11 she frets about the UAW, whom she describes as an
“out-of-state special interest.”
She is concerned that a worker’s rights organization will infringe on the “Alabama way.”
In her words “these are out-of-state special interests and their interests do not include
Alabama or the men and women earning a career in Alabama’s auto industry.”
Obviously, she is anti-union but if her main objection is folks from out-of-state being a
problem, is it more acceptable if special interests from out-of-country come to Alabama?
Governor Ivey mentions five auto companies that have set up plants in Alabama. In
case the good Governor forgot let’s look at these firms and where they come from:
• Germany – Mercedes-Benz.
• Japan – Toyota.
• Japan – Mazda.
• Japan – Honda.
• South Korea-Hyundai.
PLENTY OF TAXPAYER GIVEAWAYS
It seems Alabama wasn’t opposed to these out-of-country special interests. In fact, the
good citizens, workers, and taxpayers have given these five manufacturers over a billion
dollars in incentives in the form of tax credits, grants, and infrastructure assistance.
The company-specific packages totaled $169,000 per job at Mercedes and $117,000
per job at Hyundai.
The irony of her position is driven home when Gov. Ivey asks, “Do we want out-of-state
special interests telling Alabamians how to do business?”
UAW ALREADY HELPED
She may not want to recognize it, but many Alabama autoworkers are already
benefiting from the UAW.
The Stand-Up strikes of last year resulted in record contracts with record raises for
UAW members that changed the lives of all UAW members at the Big 3.
But what the governor refuses to admit is that even without going on strike, many
Alabama autoworkers are reaping the rewards from these contracts because most of
the non-union automakers responded to these record contracts by offering raises in an
attempt to keep pace: Toyota received raises of 9 percent, Honda 11 percent and
Hyundai ponied up 25 percent!
A NEW ‘ALABAMA WAY’
Let me suggest to the governor a new “Alabama way?”
A way that involves more than just shoveling taxpayer money to corporations. A way
that values the contribution of the men and women actually doing the hard work which
prioritizes higher wages, a better work life and stronger communities in the Heart of
Dixie?
A new Alabama way? Yes please!