DETROIT – Ford Motor Co.’s active and retired autoworkers, who have long enjoyed some of the most generous benefits in the country, will have to pay more for their health care under a tentative agreement between the automaker and the United Auto Workers, the union said Wednesday.
The agreement could save Ford $850 million annually if it’s ratified by Ford’s active workers, the union said. Ratification votes must be completed by Dec. 22. Local unions can schedule votes anytime before then, the UAW said.
If the agreement is ratified, it will be the second time in two months that UAW-represented workers have agreed to pay more for their health care. General Motors Corp. workers voted for a similar deal in November by a 61 percent margin. The UAW said it also is considering a similar deal for DaimlerChrysler AG.
It’s the first time since 1982 that the UAW has agreed to contract changes outside its usual negotiation period with the Big Three, said Harley Shaiken, a professor and labor expert at the University of California, Berkeley. The UAW’s next contract negotiations with U.S. automakers are set for 2007.
UAW President Ron Gettelfinger said the union has agonized over the changes but believes they’re necessary to help U.S. automakers, who are rapidly losing North American market share to foreign competitors.
“We think it’s the responsible thing to do in the current climate in which we find ourselves competing,” Gettelfinger said. “This has been a long year for us. It’s been an anguishing year on this type of issue.”
Ford said it won’t comment on the agreement until it’s ratified by workers.
Under the tentative agreement with Ford, retired autoworkers would start paying monthly contributions and yearly deductibles up to a maximum of $370 a year for individuals and $752 for a family. They don’t pay such fees now.
Hourly workers won’t be required to pay deductibles or monthly contributions, but they will have to contribute to a trust for future health care expenses. Under the agreement, hourly workers would contribute a 3 percent wage increase scheduled for 2006 as well as portions of future cost-of-living adjustments. Ford would contribute $108 million to the trust by 2011.
The agreement raises the cost of prescription drugs and institutes a $50 emergency room fee for retirees. It exempts retired autoworkers whose Ford pension income is $8,000 a year or less.
The agreement also requires Ford to invest $900 million over five years into plant improvements and advanced technology initiatives, such as building hybrid and fuel cell vehicles.
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