Total of 11 plants to be hit by layoffs



A Twinsburg stamping plant will lose 110 jobs.
DETROIT (AP) -- The fallout from Chrysler's big downsizing announcement will hit eight factories in addition to the three initially identified by the company.
The eight plants, in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, make components that go into slower-selling midsized sport-utility vehicles, pickup trucks and other large vehicles on which Chrysler plans to cut production through 2009.
The Chrysler Group, which had an operating loss of 1.475 billion in 2006 and expects to show losses through 2007, announced Wednesday that it would eliminate 13,000 positions, including 11,000 production jobs and 2,000 white-collar posts, as it seeks to cut costs and return to profitability in 2008.
Of the production job cuts, 9,000 are in the U.S. and 2,000 are in Canada.
Chrysler, part of Germany-based DaimlerChrysler AG, said Wednesday it plans to close the Newark, Del., assembly plant during the next two years and cut shifts at plants in Warren, Mich., and St. Louis. The company also announced that a parts distribution center that employs 100 workers in Streetsboro, Ohio, also will close this year.
Michigan will be hard-hit
On Thursday, company officials said much of the impact would be in southeastern Michigan, where 5,300 people will lose their jobs by 2009.
In Michigan, the hourly job cuts include 1,000 positions when the shift is eliminated at the Warren truck plant, plus 250 jobs at a Detroit axle plant. About 200 more jobs would be lost at the Mack Avenue Engine Plant I in Detroit, 100 more at an engine factory in suburban Trenton, 65 more at a stamping plant in Sterling Heights and another 100 at a stamping plant in Warren.
An additional 1,000 Michigan jobs will go as Chrysler explores selling support businesses that don't fit its core car-building mission, and 1,000 will be lost due to productivity improvements, said company spokesman David Elshoff. Where those job cuts will occur has not been determined yet, he said.
In addition, about 1,600 of the 2,000 white-collar layoffs will come at the company's Auburn Hills headquarters, Elshoff said.
Elsewhere
In Ohio, about 200 jobs will be eliminated at the Toledo machining plant and 110 at a stamping plant in Twinsburg, near Cleveland.
One Indiana plant, Indiana Transmission Plant I in Kokomo, would lose 100 jobs this year, said Chrysler spokesman Mike .
The layoffs at the eight plants are part of the 11,000 production jobs that Chrysler announced it would cut Wednesday. All the cuts will take place during the next three years, and will be accomplished with buyouts and early retirement packages that are under negotiation with the Canadian and U.S. auto workers' unions.