Jump to content

Indy Plant Layoff

Rate this topic


Keith Browning

Recommended Posts

Quote:
Diesel maker plans 417 layoffs

Automaker Ford's woes have ripple effect on Powerstroke supplier International Truck.
In the 23 years since Joe Dobson came to Indianapolis to work on International Truck's engine line, he could count on one sure thing. Every year, Ford sold more diesel pickup trucks. And every year, Dobson's engine line made more diesels for Ford.


Now that certainty is fading as Ford is struggling. On Oct. 2, about a third of Dobson's co-workers will be laid off when International Truck and Engine, based in Melrose Park, Ill., idles 417 of its 1,100 local employees, the company said Monday. In a sign of the slowing truck market, the workers may not be recalled until January. Even that recall will depend on whether Ford has sufficient orders for its diesel-powered pickup trucks. "The diesel business has just been going great until this year. We haven't really had a layoff like this for 20 years," said Dobson, 60, Lawrence, formerly of Illinois. He works on the assembly line turning out the plant's only product, a 6-liter diesel used only in Ford heavy-duty F-series pickups. International Truck, part of Navistar International of Warrenville, Ill., has been a steady employer in Indianapolis ever since Navistar predecessor International Harvester signed a plant-saving agreement in 1983. That deal converted the factory to diesel engines and promised to supply Ford pickups exclusively.

Since then, Ford has bought more than 1 million of the diesels, marketing them as the Power Stroke brand. The agreement continues through 2012. But just as Ford this month started to promote a larger 6.4-liter Power Stroke to be made in Indianapolis next year, high gas prices eroded the pickup market. Cash-strapped Ford stumbled.

International already had scheduled three weeks of late-summer downtime to accommodate slumping Ford orders. Then, Ford suddenly decided to cut fourth-quarter auto production 21 percent to avoid paying heavy consumer incentives to keep sales rolling.

Now, International intends to lay off what amounts to an entire shift until orders rebound from its only customer, Ford's Kentucky Truck plant at Louisville. It'll be International's largest layoff since 350 were temporarily idled in 2002.

In Indianapolis, plans call for layoffs of 380 workers represented by the United Auto Workers and another 37 nonunion and white-collar workers.
"This is being driven by truck production cuts at Ford," International spokesman Anthony Page said. "When we call people back, it'll be based on demand for the new engine. "International's Eastside foundry, the 550-employee International Casting, will continue operations without layoffs. It supplies International diesel plants in Indianapolis, Melrose Park and Huntsville, Ala.


PLANT AT A GLANCE
    [*]Name: International Truck and Engine Corp. [*]Address: 5565 Brookville Road, Indianapolis. [*]Employees: 1,700. [*]Average hourly wage (salary and hourly combined): $28.83. [*]Produces: Ford Power Stroke 6-liter diesels. [*]Company headquarters: Melrose Park, Ill. [*]Owned by: Navistar International, Warrenville, Ill.


Copyright 2006 IndyStar.com. All rights reserved

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are certianly a lot more diesel pick up trucks on the road now than 15 years ago. When I started here 10 years ago there wasn't really a diesel tech. Now I am one of 3. Maybe there always were this many diesels and they just don't have the same reliability. Posted Image

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...