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Tesla Hit With Labor Complaint On Behalf of Fired Factory Workers (theverge.com) 76

On behalf of the hundreds of Tesla workers that were fired last week from the company's assembly plant, the United Auto Workers filed a complaint today to the National Relations Board. The UAW posted a copy of the complaint on its website, which alleges that pro-union workers were unfairly targeted. The Verge reports: The UAW says the complaint was made on Wednesday to the Oakland offices of the National Relations Board. The union claims the recent culling of several hundred Tesla employees included many who were involved in a pro-union movement at the Fremont assembly plant, and included those who wore pro-union shirts and stickers. The Fremont factory site has roots in the UAW. It was once a former joint manufacturing facility owned by GM and Toyota, until it closed in 2010. Despite ongoing efforts, under Tesla's ownership, the factory is not unionized. A pro-union rally was held Tuesday in front of the plant, which was documented in a Facebook post by the pro-union group A Fair Future at Tesla.
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Tesla Hit With Labor Complaint On Behalf of Fired Factory Workers

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  • by Eloking ( 877834 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @05:53PM (#55440819)

    Many of the fired worker because of bad performance were also pro-union? I'm so surprised!

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Tesla has owned the Fremont factory since 2010. It's now late 2017. Funny that in all this time UAW never saw fit to hold a vote on unionization in this supposedly horrible, unfair work environment, and has instead chosen to wage a PR campaign instead.

      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        If corporate overlords treated their workers fairly, unions never would have existed in the first place. Workers who depend on their next paycheck for their standard of living aren't going to start out from Day 1 looking to put those checks in jeopardy by going against the company. Unless they have a reason to.

        This isn't rocket science.

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @06:34PM (#55441021)

      Also, just for the record, being in a union doesn't prevent a company from laying off workers by the thousands. My uncle worked for Boeing as a union machinist a few decades ago, and I recall stories about how Boeing would lay off large numbers of workers, which many suspected was mostly about boosting short term stock prices or price-earning ratios (which, completely co-incidentally, could make executives a lot in bonuses). Only they actually needed those workers to meet production demands, so a few months later, most of them would be quietly hired back.

      I'm not sure if that's what's happening at Tesla, but it's hard to say when you're just looking in from the outside. The UAW isn't exactly a disinterested party without an agenda either. Unions are as much a business as anything else.

      It will be interesting to see if Tesla can demonstrate that these were indeed poorly-performing employees via documentation, reviews, complaints, etc.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I work at Tesla. Posting anon for obvious reasons.

        I got a raise and a stock award the same week these people were laid off. Nobody I know or work with except for one overpaid and under-effective senior manager were laid off.

        I find it to be plausible that the employees that were invited to explore other opportunities were actually ineffective poor performers.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I recall stories about how Boeing would lay off large numbers of workers, which many suspected was mostly about boosting short term stock prices

        Another proof that the stock market is broken. A successful company hires people. A company in trouble fires people.

        • A successful company cuts waste and shows the same or better production with reduced costs.
      • True of all unions for the most part. The difference is the rules they must follow should they do that. Usually most significant in terms of severance based on length of employment and that sort of thing. So in the above case, each time they were "laid off" they would get a payout, and if they were hired back, could actually come out on top of the situation.

        I found out recently (though fortunately not personally) that indeed, if an organization with unionized labor wants to lay you off, they can and will, o

    • Many of the fired worker because of bad performance were also pro-union? I'm so surprised!

      Poor performance? That has to be proven. I would like to see both sides show their evidence before I make my conclusion (or assumption). Pro union? That could be a reason of discrimination from the company, but it could be a double-edged sword for the ex-employee to use against the company though.

      • by torkus ( 1133985 )

        Actually no.

        An at-will state allows for termination for no reason at all. You just can't terminate "BECAUSE UNION" specifically but you can surely terminate because, because. It's upon the individual to prove discrimination at that point.

        Furthermore, it's pretty damn easy to give someone a poor performance review and terminate them on the spot unless you have specific policies in place for remediation. Since generally at least some aspects of reviews are subjective, there's little stopping an employer fr

  • Tesla should already have the documentation available to demonstrate that these employees were under performing. Some performance reviews and PIP should clear things up.

    Unless Tesla is full of shit

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      i am pretty sure tesla is allowed to fire whomever they want to, the issue here seems to be that tesla is trying to hedge the firings as being performance based and not financially based.

      oh noes we are totally not having any financial issues trust us we will deliver millions of cars any day now, pre buy more cars now please, not because we need your money to float the scam a bit longer.

  • I'm still looking for a $50,000 a year job in IT in Silicon Valley though. Any ideas?
  • by Wrath0fb0b ( 302444 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @07:49PM (#55441325)

    If Tesla fired a bunch of workers for being pro-union, the union would file a complaint.

    If Tesla fired a bunch of workers that were low performers, the union would file a complaint.

    If Tesla fired a bunch of workers that were low performers but the reviews were {1%, 10%, 50%, 90%, 99%} biased against unionizers, the union would file a complaint.

    There is literally no information to go on here besides our own biases. Of course, actually digging through hundreds of personnel files with dozens of performance reviews, correlating it with what the company thought, seeing if there are emails of improper motives, that would take a while and be fought. Best to stick to your gut instinct about evil companies or slacker workers or . . .

    • It is an odd thing for Ayn Rand disciples with the empathy for workers of the fictional Gordon Gecko to be so stoked to tell us "Nothing to see here, move along" about Tesla. Usually those in the free-market-uber-alles faction are just not that impressed by electric cars. A person has to wonder if a Slashdot faction commenting on this story has an "agenda."

      It is also an odd thing that Honda and other multi-national automakers have been able to set up non-union shops here in the U.S. without engaging in

      • Re:Slashdot factions (Score:5, Interesting)

        by steveha ( 103154 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @10:42PM (#55442021) Homepage

        A person has to wonder if a Slashdot faction commenting on this story has an "agenda."

        My only agenda is to hope that Tesla succeeds, because I like the advances they have made in the state of the art. (For example, Tesla "SuperCharger" is a better charging technology than anything else available.) I don't want to see them hurting their employees, but I don't really think they need to hurt their employees to succeed.

        Everyone agrees that Tesla's production process had problems and needed to improve. Tesla claims they have improved.

        Here's an article about that:

        https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidmarquet/2017/06/04/elon-musk-safety-autopilot/#5d8a4b9a7a88 [forbes.com]

        According to Tesla's official blog post [tesla.com], they went from having a worse-than-average safety record in their factory, to having a better-than-average record. I haven't heard anything about it getting worse again, and I'm pretty sure that would be widely reported news if it happened.

        Also, one of their improvements was adding a third shift, so that work would happen 24 hours a day. This greatly reduced overtime, and was welcomed by the line workers. From the blog post: "Last year, we added a third shift to reduce the overtime burden on each team member and to improve safety. We did this because our employees asked for it, and because it was the right thing to do."

        Parts were stacked high in contradiction of Lean Manufacturing dogma, and in contrast with the Maryville, Ohio Honda plant he had observed, the Tesla shop floor activity was frenetic. The Honda plant, by contrast, had its assembly line running so smoothly that the workers did not appear to be breaking a sweat.

        Honda has been making cars since 1963 (and motorcycles before then). They have had just a bit more time to fine-tune their operations.

        Tesla has spent big money on overhauling their production process. They are planning to crank out a very large number of Model 3 cars per year, and they can't do that with a labor-intensive process. Tesla says that the Model 3 has been designed to be easy to manufacture, using lessons learned while manufacturing their other cars.

        Recently Tesla shared a video of the robots making Model 3 cars: http://bgr.com/2017/10/09/tesla-model-3-elon-musk-video-production-line/ [bgr.com]

        There are over a half-million Model 3 cars on pre-order. If Tesla can sort out their production line and get those cars delivered in a timely fashion, they will be heroes. If not, they will be in huge trouble and possibly will go bankrupt.

        The Tesla Model S is an incredible automobile, they tell me

        It really is.

        and maybe the problem with it is that it is incredible that Tesla is able to sell an automobile of that sophistication for the price they charge without it all being smoke-and-mirrors of burning out its workers and fleecing its investors to contribute the labor and money to in effect give away what are effectively hand-built quarter million-dollar cars?

        From what I have read, a Model S costs Tesla about $30K to make, so no, they are not giving away effectively hand-built cars, they are making a solid profit on each car sold.

        The stories of 70-hour work weeks of relentless pressure are just sour grapes from slackers who deserved to be cut loose?

        Tesla says that since they added the third shift (sometime in 2016) that the average number of hours worked per week is 42. Do you have newer data that contradicts this?

        here are just some "bottlenecks" to be worked out? While their "body" line tooling is still being put together in some undisclosed location in Southeast Michigan?

        I had no idea what you were talking about here. Google found this for me:

    • ...who has nothing but distain [goodreads.com] for his fellow workers. Huh, never seen that in an anti-union story before.

  • Tesla and SolarCity hit with lawsuit concerning their non-existent SolarRoof product.

  • I heard the employees who got fired were "shocked". Sorry couldn't resist(er)

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

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