Walter Brasch: Finding a Mini=Van Made by Union Workers
Mission Impossible: Finding a Mini-Van Made in
America by Union Workers
By Walter Brasch
Last year, not one of the 491,687 new minivans sold in the United States was made in America by unionized workers.
Some were manufactured overseas by companies owned by non-American manufacturers. The Kia Sedona, with 24,047 sales, was built in South Korea, Russia, and the Philippines. The MAZDA5, with 19,155 sales, was built in China, Japan, and Taiwan.
Some minivans
from Japanese companies were built in the U.S., but by
non-unionized workers. Honda sold 107,068 Odysseys built in
Alabama. Toyota Siennas, built in Indiana, went to 111,429
persons. The Nissan Quest, built in Ohio, had 12,199
sales.
Only three minivans were built by unionized
workers, but they were made in Canada by members of the
Canadian Auto Workers. The Dodge Grand Caravan, with 110,996
sales; Chrysler Town & Country, with 94,320 sales; and the
VW Routan, with 12,473 sales, all share the same basic body;
most differences are cosmetic. GM and Ford no longer produce
minivans.
The United Auto Workers (UAW) suggests that members who wish to buy minivans buy one of the three Chrysler products because much of the parts are manufactured in the United States by UAW members.
All cars,
trucks, and vans from GM, Ford, and Chrysler are produced by
union workers in the U.S. or Canada. The Japanese-owned
Mitsubishi Eclipse, Spyder, and Galant, and the Mazda6 are
produced in the U.S. under UAW contracts; neither company
makes minivans. All vehicles produced in the U.S. have the
first Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) as a 1, 4, or 5;
vehicles produced in Canada have a 2 as the first VIN
number.
Founded in 1935, the UAW quickly established a
reputation for creating the first cost-of-living allowances
(COLAs) and employer-paid health care programs. It helped
pioneer pensions, supplementary unemployment benefits, and
paid vacations.
It has been at the forefront of
social and economic justice issues; Walter Reuther, its
legendary president between 1946 and his death in 1970,
marched side-by-side with Martin Luther King Jr. and Cesar
Chavez, and helped assure that the UAW was one of the first
unions to allow minorities into membership and to integrate
the workforce. Bob King, its current president, a lawyer,
was arrested for civil disobedience, carrying on the
tradition of the social conscience that has identified the
union and its leadership.
The UAW doesn’t mind that
corporations make profits; it does care when some of the
profit is at the expense of the worker, for without a
competent and secure work force, there would be no profit.
When the economy failed under the Bush–Cheney
administration, and the auto manufacturers were struggling,
the UAW recognized it was necessary for the workers to take
pay cuts and make other concessions for the companies to
survive.
But not all corporations have the social conscience that the UAW and the “Big 3” auto manufacturers developed. For decades, American corporations have learned that to “maximize profits,” “improve the bottom line,” and “give strength to shareholder stakes” they could downsize their workforce and ship manufacturing throughout the world. Our companies have outsourced almost every form of tech support, as well as credit card assistance, to vendors whose employees speak varying degrees of English, but tell us their names are George, Barry, or Miriam. Clothing, toys, and just about anything bought by Americans could be made overseas by children working in abject conditions; their parents might make a few cents more, and in certain countries would be thrilled to earn less than half the U.S. minimum wage.
Americans go along with this because they think they are getting their products cheaper. What they don’t want to see is the working conditions of those who are employed by companies that are sub-contractors to the mega-conglomerates of American enterprise. These would be the same companies whose executives earn seven and eight-figure salaries and benefits, while millions are unemployed.
But, Americans don’t care. After all, we’re getting less expensive products, even if what we buy is cheaply made because overseas managers, encouraged by American corporate executives, lower the quality of materials and demand even more work from their employees.
Walk into almost
every department store and Big Box store, and it’s a
struggle to find clothes, house supplies, and entertainment
media made in America. If you do find American-made
products, they are probably produced in “right-to-work”
states that think unionized labor is a Communist-conspiracy
to destroy the free enterprise system of the right to make
obscene profits at the expense of the working class.
We
can wave flags and tell everyone how much more patriotic we
are than them, but we still can’t buy a minivan made in
America by unionized workers—even when the price is lower
than that of the non-unionized competition.
[Sales figures of minivans are from Edmunds.com. Also assisting was Rosemary Brasch. Walter Brasch’s latest book is the critically-acclaimed novel Before the First Snow, which looks at the mass media, social justice, and the labor movement. The book is available from amazon, local bookstores, and http://www.greeleyandstone.com in both hard copy or an ebook.]
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Walter M. Brasch,
Ph.D.
Latest Book: Before the First Snow: Stories
from the Revolution
(www.greeleyandstone.com)
www.walterbrasch.com
www.walterbrasch.blogspot.com
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ENDS