As a condition of loan, UAW cannot strike against General Motors
By Justin Hyde • Free Press Washington Staff • January 8, 2009
WASHINGTON – The UAW and its local unions are barred from striking General Motors Corp. as long as GM has loans from the federal government, according to the agreement GM signed with the Bush administration last month.
The U.S. Treasury set myriad conditions on GM as part of the plan to loan the company $13.4 billion for survival. Those terms had not been fully disclosed until GM filed the documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
As part of the loan, the U.S. Treasury defined several conditions that would trigger a default, including that “any labor union or collective bargaining unit shall engage in a strike or other work stoppage.” If the loans are in default, the Treasury has the power to call them back immediately and force GM into bankruptcy.
The deal requires the UAW to accept by Feb. 17 a plan to lower wages and benefits for workers to match those of employees at foreign-owned U.S. plants by Dec. 31. It also requires the union to take two-thirds of the money its due for a retiree health-care trust fund in company stock rather than cash or company debt.
SEE MORE AT LINK BELOW
http://www.freep.com/article/20090108/BUSINESS01/90108111/As+condition+of+loan++UAW+can+t+strike+against+GM