General Motors (GM) Canada is cutting 625 jobs at its assembly plant near London, Ontario, and moving those jobs to Mexico, where labor is cheaper, GM Canada’s union spokesman said on Friday.
Unifor Local 88 spokesman Mike Van Boekel said the layoffs will take effect in July at the CAMI Assembly plant in Ingersoll, which currently employs 2,800 Unifor workers.
Unifor national president Jerry Dias said the decision “reeks of corporate greed” and is a clear sign that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) must be renegotiated. US President Donald Trump has told Mexico and Canada he wants to renegotiate NAFTA, or perhaps even scrap it.
“The CAMI announcement is a shining example of everything wrong with NAFTA, it must be re-negotiated,” Dias said in a statement on Friday. “It is imperative that we have trade rules that help ensure good jobs in Canada.”
GM Canada said it gave Unifor advance notification of how product changeovers would affect workers at three Ontario plants.
The Ingersoll plant builds the Chevrolet Equinox and the GMC Terrain. The company recently announced it was shifting production of the GMC Terrain to Mexico.
GM said the job cuts related to the changeover of production from older model Equinoxes to the next-generation Equinox.
Trump met with the chief executives of the Big Three US automakers earlier this week, urging them to build more US plants and invest less in Mexico.
His protectionist comments have caused concerns about whether Canada’s automotive industry could take a hit, particularly if a border tax is implemented on Canadian goods.
However, several industry insiders have argued that Canada is most likely not the target that Trump has set his sights on.
“Well the facts are, jobs are not going from the United States to Canada,” Dias said earlier this week. “Jobs have been going from Canada to the southern United States and to Mexico.”
There are 141,000 people employed in Canada’s automotive sector, according to the Conference Board of Canada.
That is roughly 60,000 fewer people than were employed in the sector a decade ago, as some roles have been automated and others have been moved to Mexico.
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