GM to move Cadillac SRX production from Mexico to Tennessee facility


Associated Press

SPRING HILL, Tenn.

General Motors announced Wednesday that it is moving production of its next-generation Cadillac SRX crossover SUV from Mexico to its plant in Tennessee, leading United Auto Workers leaders to chide Tennessee Republicans for their opposition to the union’s increasing its influence in the state.

The UAW has represented workers at the former Saturn plant since it opened on the outskirts of Nashville in 1990, but state Republicans including Gov. Bill Haslam and U.S. Sen. Bob Corker have fought the union’s efforts to gain representation of workers at Volkswagen’s plant about 100 miles to the east in Chattanooga.

Haslam and Corker have argued that the UAW’s getting a foothold with its first foreign automaker in the South would hurt the region’s ability to attract new investment from automotive manufacturers and suppliers and decrease competitiveness because of higher wages and a confrontational working environment.

UAW President Dennis Williams said in an email to supporters that Wednesday’s announcement of the new model and production of small gasoline engines in Spring Hill flies in the face of what he called “union-busting politicians” who claim collective bargaining hurts productivity.

“While politicians were talking trash, UAW members were working hard to make sure GM brings jobs back from Mexico and continues expanding here at home,” Williams said.

UAW officials at the Spring Hill announcement repeatedly cited an atmosphere of “collaboration” with management and collective-bargaining agreements in gaining the new production at the plant, which was idled as recently as 2011.

“It’s time for that pitting-us-against-them mentality to go away,” said union Vice President Cindy Estrada.

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Haslam were diplomatic about the UAW’s role at the plant Wednesday. Corker did not attend Wednesday’s event after being heartily booed by plant workers during a visit in 2011.

“We have a history of working with companies that are unionized as well as those that aren’t,” Haslam said after the event.

Workers at the Volkswagen plant narrowly rejected the union in an election earlier this year, but the UAW has said it expects VW to recognize the union without another vote once it gets enough workers to sign membership cards.

The General Motors additions will bring more jobs to Spring Hill, but a GM spokesman wouldn’t give specifics on how many would be added to the sprawling former Saturn facility.

All the company would say was that the SRX and a yet-to-be identified second midsize vehicle would “create or retain” about 1,800 jobs, and a $185 million investment in the Spring Hill engine factory would retain 390 jobs.

The complex now employs just over 2,300 workers, including hourly and salaried employees and those who work for parts-supply companies.

Last year GM announced plans to invest $350 million in the Tennessee assembly plant to build two future midsize vehicles. The plant already builds several small gasoline engines plus the Chevrolet Equinox midsize SUV.

GM also announced Wednesday that it would invest just under $50 million at its Bedford, Ind., engine-block casting plant, keeping 45 jobs.

The Cadillac SRX now is built at a GM factory in Ramos Arizpe, Mexico, which also builds the Chevrolet Sonic subcompact car and Chevy Captiva small SUV.