The last time I cross-posted an article written by General President Hoffa there were questions of whether I should be doing that, if I had permission, and similar queries. I can understand the concerns. Though I have been around Kos for a while, I am not here regularly enough that you would remember me, at least that's what I am guessing.
My name is Richard Negri. I work for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters in the Communications Department handling web initiatives. Once in a while I am asked to take an op-ed and help "syndicate" it as far and wide as possible. One of the stops I make on that route is Daily Kos.
The post below is about GM and Fiat/Chrysler, both of which got big bailout money, now grabbing for another piece ... and it is from workers delivering new cars. The deal is that they are looking for cost cuts from the top three carhauler companies, costs that could potentially put 5,000 workers out of a good middle class job -- not a good situation at all.
Please take a moment to read my boss' piece, which appeared first on Huffington Post earlier today. Comment and tell me your thoughts.
Thanks, and nice meeting you - again,
-Richard
By James P. Hoffa
Elizabeth Warren, the chairman of the Congressional Oversight Panel, knows better than anyone what's happened to the bailout money that middle-class taxpayers so generously gave to Wall Street and the automakers.
Warren believes the middle class became the Thanksgiving turkey for the financial elites. Some carved off the bailout piece, some got another piece, some made a profit from this little piece and some squeezed wages from that little piece.
Automakers who already got part of the bailout are now grabbing at another piece. GM and Fiat-Chrysler want to save $30 per car by demanding cost cuts from the companies that haul their cars to the dealers. If the automakers get the steep cuts they want, they'll force the top three carriers out of business. Allied Systems Holdings Inc. of Atlanta, Cassens Transport Co. of Edwardsville, Ill., and Jack Cooper Transport Co. in Kansas City, Mo., will go under. Five thousand carhaul drivers will lose their jobs.
Carhaul drivers are very skilled in their craft, and they have to be. Driving big rigs loaded with new cars is one of the most difficult, dangerous jobs in the trucking industry. These skilled drivers are able to support their families with fair wages and health care. To help save the auto industry, they have already taken cuts in pay and benefits up to 17.5 percent.
Automakers took the bailout money in exchange for a commitment to protect middle class jobs. This approach is just the opposite - they are failing to meet their end of the bargain and taxpayers should hold them accountable.
If their employers go out of business, the professional carhaul industry will be replaced by a cut-rate brokerage system where independent contractors with inadequate equipment and little training earn poverty wages with no benefits. Chrysler has already moved some of its business to such bottom-feeders. And the mandatory "destination charge" of $800 to $1000 that you pay for a new car? Don't look for the auto makers to pass any savings they get on to you.
Lawmakers who supported the taxpayer bailout of Fiat-Chrysler and GM do not support the automakers' plans to drive their carriers out of business. GM CEO Fritz Henderson and Fiat-Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne have received letters from more than 25 concerned members of Congress representing California, Georgia, Michigan, Massachusetts, Ohio, Vermont and Virginia. That may not be enough to change the CEO's minds.
Many of the carhaul drivers are Teamsters. But this isn't a union issue. This is about the destruction of an entire industry, and what's happening to our middle class. As Elizabeth Warren told the Washington Post, the middle class is what makes us who we are. A strong and vital middle class is a middle class that can offer a helping hand to the poor. The middle class is what gives us political stability. It's why we work, and why we vote, and why we accept the outcome of elections, and why we can be safe when we walk down the streets.
"And every time we hollow that out," she said, "every time we take away a little piece of that, we run the risk that some of what we understood as America, some of what we know as America, begins to die."