Fisker, UAW aim to reach labor deal

Tue Nov 3, 2009 6:54pm GMT
 
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DETROIT (Reuters) - Fisker Automotive, a California-based start-up car company, expects to complete a deal with the United Auto Workers before year-end for the union to represent workers at an old General Motors Corp plant it is acquiring.

"We're doing some negotiations with the UAW that are going to go through in the coming months," Henrik Fisker, the company's founder and chief executive said.

Speaking at the Reuters Autos Summit in Detroit, Fisker said he expected to close the deal to buy the GM plant by January and would look to complete initial negotiations with the UAW before then.

Fisker is buying a Delaware assembly plant from the bankruptcy estate of General Motors Co GM.UL and has ambitious plans to develop a number of plug-in hybrid vehicles it would build and export from the facility.

Fisker announced last month that it was buying the old GM plant, which once produced the Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky sports cars, for $18 million.

Part of the funding to retool that plant to build plug-in hybrid vehicles would come from $528 million in low-cost loans from the U.S. government under a U.S. Department of Energy program to spur the development of more fuel-efficient cars.

Fisker said he had been encouraged by his meetings with UAW President Ron Gettelfinger and was confident that he could reach a deal with the union that would give the company low enough costs to allow it to export half of the output of the Delaware plant, which is expected to reach 100,000 units annually.

"I think from the talks we have had with the UAW and Ron Gettelfinger and some others in the organization that they're ready to make this a success and they're committed to it.

"We're ready to work with them and for this to be a success," Fisker said.  Continued...

 

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