Idle Hands
Cost Tops $1.4 Billion a Year As Layoffs Fill 'Jobs Bank'; A
Dismal Facility in
Mr. Mellon Takes a Long Nap
By JEFFREY MCCRACKEN
The room is
a windowless old storage shed for engine parts. It is filled with long tables,
Mr. Mellon says, and has space for about 400 employees. They must arrive at
It is
called the rubber room, Mr. Mellon says, because "a few days in there makes you go crazy."The Jobs
Bank at GM and other
While GM often blames "legacy costs" such as retiree health care and pensions for its troubles, its Job Bank shows that the company has inflicted some wounds on itself. Documents show that GM itself helped originate the Jobs Bank idea in 1984 and agreed to expand it in 1990, seeing it as a stopgap until times got better and workers could go back to the .factories.
The bank was designed for a different ,time, a time when we were growing says Pete Pestillo, a former Ford executive who oversaw union talks The Jobs Bank has failed to stop the outflow of Jobs .at Detroit's unionized auto makers. . Since 1990, GM's union payroll including former subsidiary Delphi Corp has fallen to about 137,000 from 358000. Many have retired, died or found other Jobs. The rest are in the Jobs Bank
Mr. Mellon~
a 55-year-old father' of two, was born m
Since then, except for a period in 2001 when he worked on a military-truck project, GM has paid him his full salary for not working. That is currently $31 an hour, or about $64,500 a year, plus health care and other benefits.
About 7,500
GM workers are now in the Jobs Bank, more than double the figure a year ago.
The bank added 2,100 workers last month when the company closed a
truck-assembly plant in
One way
employees in the Jobs Bank can fulfill their requirements is' to attend eight-
or 12-week classes offered by GM. In these classes, Mr. Mellon has studied
crossword puzzles, watched Civil War movies and learned about "manmade
marvels like the
More
recently, he attended an institute in
With that he arrived at the rubber room. It is on the site of the famous Flint Sitdown Strike of 1936, a 44-day walkout that helped get the United Auto Workers union recognized at GM. The rubber room and neighboring buildings that house a technology center are off limits to outsiders.
Every day
for a week Mr. Mellon got up at about
One day he asked a supervisor if he could bring in a cot. The supervisor said no, so he pushed together four padded chairs and slept across them for several hours. He had stayed up late the night before, anticipating this nap.
The waiting "makes you want to bang your head against the wall," Mr. Mellon says. "I couldn't take it. I need to be doing something. And there is a supervisor who walks around staring at everyone. It's worse than high-school detention. "
Mr. Mellon thinks a "line-worker mentality" keeps people going back to the rubber room. "A lot of guys sit in that room and just collect their paycheck because they don't know what else to do," he says. "They've spent 20 years tightening a nut as it came down the line. They are faced with this harsh reality, and they are just happy the paycheck still comes so they can put their kid through college."
Mr. Mellon soon found a way to escape the room, through volunteering. That is what many of his fellow workers do. Dean Braid, 50, worked at GM as an engine and transmission tester for 21 years. Today, GM pays him $30 an hour as he helps a high-school friend, Doug Kahn, who is confined to a wheelchair. Mr. Braid is installing ramps in his friend's family farmhouse and has repaired the engine of the 1984 Ford van Mr. Kahn uses.
"Dean being here has been like a little miracle for me," says Mr. Kahn, who was injured 38 years ago in a swimming accident and now lives by himself. "It has made my life better. Just having him come by forces me to get up and get out of bed."
GM
employees constitute slightly more than half of the 14,700 auto workers in the Jobs
Bank. In second place with 3,600 Jobs Bank workers is auto-parts maker
Mr. Pestillo, the former Ford executive, and others see the Jobs Bank as a corrosive influence with significant indirect costs because it encourages auto makers to build. more vehicles than consumers want. Companies figure it is better to build cars with little or no profit margin than to pay people not to work, he says. They also may keep rote work in-house even though it would be cheaper to outsource..
The system gives older union workers little incentive to move to other plants, find jobs at other companies or retire.
There is no limit on. how long a worker can stay in the Jobs Bank. They don't have to look for work at their company. Contracts allow workers to turn down any job offer at a site farther than 50 miles from their home plant.
The Jobs
Bank has its origins in the tough times
Battling
the new competition, GM developed a plan to spend $24 billion improving factory
automation and copying
That was
the backdrop when the UAW contract at GM came up for
renewal in 1984. Papers in the Walter Reuther Library
at
Once the idea was on the table, GM agreed to expand it as the UAW ratcheted up pressure for a deal. A strike at a few locals was gradually spreading to engulf more than half the company. GM's first proposals, noted .in documents from early September 1984, described a three year program for employees with 10 years of experience costing no more than $500 million in total. The union sent back a demand that the program cover workers with six years on the job, run for six years and cost as much as $1 billion. GM agreed, and later said even one-year workers could join. reaching a Deal
The two
sides reached a deal to end the strike on
"Ford made a similar deal shortly afterward. A former Ford executive in labor relations, John Slosar, recalls: "We just .focused on matching each other back then, now 'Hey, this will disadvantage us to the Asian auto makers.' "
Letters between GM Vice President Alfred S. Warren and the union show GM was confident it could afford the Jobs Bank and fight off its Japanese rivals because it had new versions of the Pontiac Grand Am and Buick Riviera in the works as well as plans to introduce the Saturn line of cars.
Most of these products fell short of their targets, however, while the Jobs Bank got bigger and more expensive. When the six-year pact expired in 1990, GM and other auto makers expanded it to include not only those workers affected by technology improvements but also those affected by slow sales. GM boosted funding to $1. 7 billion for three years.
Mr. Slosar, the former Ford executive who is now an executive recruiter, says auto makers in his era simply weren't willing to stomach a strike. "The mindset was how can we buy time and hope the playing fields get leveled with the Japanese," he says. "But they: never have."
Workers whose plants shut down don't immediately go into the Jobs Bank. They first receive unemployment benefits supplemented by the company. When the cumulative length of shutdowns, during a contract, reaches' 48 weeks, they switch to the bank.
The car
companies sometimes recommend volunteer projects for people in the bank to work
on, although workers are welcome to submit their own projects for company
approval. Workers at the Jobs Bank site in
Others in
the Jobs Bank go to school. Electronic technician Tom Adams is working toward a
doctprate in history at
Mr. Adams'
grandfather, Frank Adamec, came from what is now the
Mr. Adams,
a short, intense man who says he has run 37 marathons, has also raised money
for a food bank he run: during his Jobs Bank time. Once he was: assigned to set
up cable television at the
He says the
Jobs Bank "has been wonderful for me. It's doing what it is supposed to
do, which is make it so I won't be a burden on society. "
But based on his studies, he has a low opinion of GM: "They took
the
These who
can't find an outside activity-or don't want to-end up in rubber rooms and the
like. Despite the cable TV, these rooms are usually less than luxurious. Ford
buys uncomfortable chairs for its facilities. One GM official says the company
has turned down the air conditioning in the summer at bank sites. Outside of
Tom
Gonzales, a Ford employee of 13 years, sat in an Edison, N.J., room for two months in late 2004 before. Ford found him a
job in
Seeking Reductions
GM Chief Executive Rick Wagoner said recently the Jobs Bank "obviously' is an area of competitive disadvantage for us." Union officials realize the bank is tough to explain to the public but see an impact on communities if it is curtailed.
Art Luna is
president of UAW Local 602 in
"The bank may exist after 2007, but not like it is now, which is too bad for the communities. It does a lot for schools, agencies, the parks," says Mr. Luna, a third-generation GM employee. "Unfortunately, we do have people that just sit in the bank and read or do puzzles," he adds. "They feel like, 'Hey, they owe me this.' That's too bad. I'm not going to lie."
In
"Now I can go out and do good church work and till get paid. I couldn’t twiddle my thumbs any more in the rubber room," Mr. Mellon says. "I want to do . some work."