Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Government United States

Trump Wants California To Let Automaker Tesla Reopen Assembly Plant (reuters.com) 206

U.S President Trump on Tuesday tweeted that Tesla should be allowed to reopen its electric vehicle assembly plant in California, joining CEO Elon Musk's bid to defy county officials who have ordered it to remain closed. "California should let Tesla & @elonmusk open the plant, NOW. It can be done Fast & Safely!" Trump wrote on Twitter. Musk tweeted "Thank you!" in response. Reuters reports: At Tesla's factory in Fremont, California, employee parking lots that were deserted on Friday were packed with cars on Tuesday. Trucks could be seen driving in and out of the factory grounds. About a dozen workers, some masked, some not, were seen standing by a red food truck on the factory grounds. At the factory's outbound logistics parking lot, where only a dozen Tesla cars stood on Friday, hundreds of Tesla vehicles were seen on Tuesday.

A county health official on Friday said the county had asked all manufacturers, including Tesla, to delay operations by at least another week to monitor infection and hospitalization rates. Scott Haggerty, the Alameda County supervisor for the district where Tesla's factory is located, told the New York Times on Saturday that the county had been working to permit Tesla to resume operations on May 18 - the same day other U.S. automakers have been permitted to resume production in other states.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Trump Wants California To Let Automaker Tesla Reopen Assembly Plant

Comments Filter:
  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 12, 2020 @08:41PM (#60054236) Journal

    About a dozen workers, some masked, some not,

    If they don't have enough masks for their workers, they're not ready to re-open.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by thadtheman ( 4911885 )
      How do you know they don't have masks and that they simply chose not to wear them?
      • How do you know they have enough masks? And which is a safer assumption if no data is provided?

        • If no data is provided the safest assumption is not to make any assumption and just say you don't know.
        • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday May 12, 2020 @09:26PM (#60054326) Homepage

          So your assumption is that some of the people by a food truck, that's outside the factory, without a mask means that there's an insufficient supply of masks in the building?

          Have you ever tried to eat food through a mask? Hint: it doesn't work as well as you might be picturing.

          Tesla does not make food truck health regulations - the city, county, and state do. Food trucks are allowed to operate. Outdoor activity in general is allowed to operate.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            If they plan to have thousands of people in an enclosed space they should have thought about how they intend to feed them safely, not just relied on a nearby food truck.

            They should have educated their staff too. When you go to the food truck you have your mask on so you don't infect all the food and other people waiting there. You take your stuff somewhere safe and eat it.

            This is exactly the kind of thing they needed to sort out before re-opening.

            • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

              by fenrif ( 991024 )

              So they should force their employees to eat indoors? Last I checked you are free to chose where you eat when in work. At least in my place of employment. Where do you work where you are mandated to eat the company provided lunches?

              Are you assuming that they are relying on a food truck because a few people were using it? That seems very disingenuous. It seems much more likely that some of Musk's employees simply decided to go to the food truck instead of eating inside. Why do you have a problem with this?

              Why

        • Masks are sold to employees from vending machines inside the Fremont Tesla factory. I'm not making that up.

          • Next to the Plasmids vending machines?

          • Masks are sold to employees from vending machines inside the Fremont Tesla factory. I'm not making that up.

            Maybe you're not making it up, but someone sure did. Here is where that lie originates:

            "But one assembly worker who reported to work early Thursday said there were no signs of slowing down. His temperature was not taken, he was given a thin white paper mask, and then he went to work a few feet away from co-workers. ....
            Sturdier respirator masks were available in vending machines, the employee said, but only for shift leads or supervisors who could get them by swiping their Tesla badges."

            https://www.protoco [protocol.com]

      • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2020 @01:42AM (#60055018)

        How do you know they don't have masks and that they simply chose not to wear them?

        Because those would be escorted off the premises and given paperwork stating that they have been fired with cause. At least if Elon was taking his workers safety into consideration. All he is doing is demonstrating he a) is only paying lipservice to the problem and b) wants people back to work regardless.

        He can sit in jail, or take flight to south africa or wherever he has in mind.

      • by Swistak ( 899225 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2020 @02:26AM (#60055084) Homepage
        Because by law they cannot "choose" not to wear them.
        • by theCoder ( 23772 )

          People choose to break the law all the time.

          But I wasn't aware that the California legislature had passed a bill, that the governor then signed, that required people in California to wear masks all the time. I don't live in CA, so it's possible I missed that. Maybe you can point to some information on this law?

          I'm not even sure that such a law would even be constitutional, as it could violate a person's first amendment rights to free expression.

          Perhaps you meant that some people are choosing to ignore a s

    • >"If they don't have enough masks for their workers, they're not ready to re-open."

      You have no idea how many masks they have and you have no idea what social distance is being kept. Masks are mostly meaningless when far away from others, especially outside and away from others. Or are you one of those people who will wear a mask, driving your car, alone, perhaps to virtue signal?

    • An observation that someone doesn't wear a mask does not mean that person was not provided a mask by their employer.

    • If they don't have enough masks

      How does a visible count of people wearing masks provide any information on the supply chain behind them? Have you ever considered that there are stupid people around?

  • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Tuesday May 12, 2020 @08:46PM (#60054244)
    On the one hand, restarting the economy, but on the other hand, California EVs.
    • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Tuesday May 12, 2020 @09:09PM (#60054288) Homepage Journal

      You know, I'm starting to think that Musk might be playing three-dimensional chess, and that this recent tantrum is an attempt to suck up to President Trump, in preparation for when Elon asks for the EV credit to be extended. :-)

      • What a gamble, though. What if he dies of COVFEFE-19? Republicans hate green anything, and Democrats will remember he didn't follow lawful public health orders issued by his County during the pandemic.

        Isn't this a strange time to hitch your wagon to Trump, in an election year where things are looking bad for him?

      • by vix86 ( 592763 )

        I know you are being funny but the federal EV credit ship has done sailed. The used up their unit limit back at the end of 2019. There are still solar credits though which will be expiring in the near future most likely, but that will impact every company, not just Tesla.

    • That's funny.

      On a more serious note, Trump was a Democrat not too long ago, and for most of his life.

      He not really a fan of either politiball team, except that of course I'm sure he appreciates the Republicans putting him in the oval office. He'll mostly sign the bills they send him just because he's currently playing for that team. He's a free agent though, not a fan.

  • by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Tuesday May 12, 2020 @11:23PM (#60054660)
    How many workers have already recovered from Covid-19? Are there enough of both groups to open safely? If not, how often will all the workers, that are not recovered or asymptomatic, going to be tested? These are important considerations. Nothing should be done blindly in a pandemic. But, some things can be done, when done wisely and not emotionally.
    • About a week ago, NYC had about 20% of the population that tested for antibodies (i.e. already had the disease). This was a random sample of people at grocery stores, if I remember correctly (maybe not a good random sampling of the population, but that is hard to do - but probably reasonably representative of the working-age population). This is about the worst-hit area in the country, so anywhere else will be less, probably substantially less. My bet is that 5% in Alameda county has had the disease (yes, I

  • Executive order by twitter.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2020 @06:49AM (#60055500)

    I was all for Telsa's reopening. They had a carefully prepared plan on mitigation as well as preventing spread. But now that Trump supports I'm not sure how I feel anymore.

    After all the best thing for humanity seems to simply do the exact opposite of what Trump says or does, and I think there's higher scientific support for simply being anti-Trump than the detailed throught through work Tesla has done.

    • by rldp ( 6381096 )

      Imagine thinking like this?

      PS: Trump says not to commit suicide and to have hope.

  • So is Tesla just trying to deliver cars before order cancellations reach some critical level, or has the pandemic / economic meltdown somehow not depressed sales or even caused an uptick?
    • Automakers sometimes keep building because there is an accounting rule that says you can book profits against 90% of the value of anything that is ready to ship. If it's not ready to ship, you can't book any profits against it. Thus, it pays to keep the factory operating for the short-term gain.

      Also, Tesla's order backlog is huge. If it can ship a whole pile of cars to its waiting audience, then it pays to keep building.

      On the other hand, if Elon Musk's tweets create a bitter taste over the brand, then

  • So I can see why he would be upset and why he would complain and push for a change, but his tactic to respond has left a bad taste in my mouth.

    What is said to the world: Tesla is being unfairly treated by the county and we are going to do some civil disobedience and every worker that shows up are volunteers, they don't have to come in, so when you see them come in, it's because they believe in Tesla.

    What was said to workers: We are illegally reopening. You don't *have* to come if you don't want to, but if y

You can tune a piano, but you can't tuna fish. You can tune a filesystem, but you can't tuna fish. -- from the tunefs(8) man page

Working...