Originally Posted by BeAChooser
There is no mention of any concessions on the part of unions in terms of health plan co-pays, deductibles, etc for active workers and I suspect Obama administration officials would have been eager to mention them if that had in fact occurred. Please point out where I missed mention of them.
Just what I know from people that actually work in the industry. There's a catch however, most of the people I know work for the CAW not the UAW.
LOL! The CANADIAN Auto Workers? Gee ... and I thought we were talking about US unions.

OK. Now you say CAW members gave up a lot in the restructuring of GM and Chrysler? Well then, I find this statement from Wikipedia interesting (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Auto_Workers ):
Industry analyst Anthony Faria ... snip ... noted that UAW president Ron Gettelfinger agreed to have the UAW's "all-in" wage, benefit and pension costs drop from a high of $75.86 per hour in 2007 to an average of about $51 per hour starting in 2010. By comparison, the CAW's cost per hour was $77 in 2007 and will rise to over $80 per hour by the end of the new contract. Faria said that Gettelfinger went into negotiations "with the right intention...Save jobs. The CAW strategy was to squeeze every dime out of them."
And according to that wikipedia article:
Current union president Ken Lewenza has argued that labour is not responsible for the bankruptcy crisis facing the Big Three automakers, saying that his members would not make concessions part of any taxpayer-funded bailout.
And this ...
The CAW negotiated a cost-cutting deal with General Motors Canada on March 8, 2009. The deal would extend the current contract for an additional year to September 2012, and preserves the current average assembly-worker base pay of about $34 an hour. It would eliminate a $1,700 annual "special bonus," and reduce special paid absences or "SPA days" from two weeks to one week a year, while maintaining vacation entitlements which range up to six weeks a year for high-seniority workers. The deal also introduce payments by members toward their health benefits - $30 monthly per family for workers and $15 a month for pensioners. Lewenza said it also would trim by 35 per cent company contributions to union-provided programs such as child care and wellness programs. Lewenza called the package a "major sacrifice." However, observers noted that the deal did not go far enough
Gee ... now they have to pay $30 a month per family ($15 a month if they are pensioners). What a hardship.
What you consider "the Cadillac of health plans" should be the norm in a civilized society such as the US.
LOL! Then why are folks on your side of the aisle in this debate complaining about the average cost of health care in the US? Afterall, these cadillac plans don't come cheap. They are vastly more expensive than the average cost that your side of this debate is constantly claiming is already too high? I think I detect some cognitive dissonance.
You give your body (this isn't the PGA tour, people get hurt in these factories) to a company for 30 years, you deserve to get healed as best as is possible when you suffer injury.
LOL! I don't even see you guys on this list:
http://www.thesharkguys.com/2009/09/02/top-10-most-dangerous-jobs/ . The fact is that plenty of people have dangerous jobs.
Look, I don't have a problem with unions negotiating whatever health and retirement plans they think they can get from a private company. What I object to is that when unions get too greedy and that company goes under as a result (as GM did), they then expect the taxpayer (people like me) to bail them out to the tune of tens of billions of dollars while allowing them to retain their cadillac benefits. What I object to is the pretense that unions are anything more than an arm of the democrat party now. Take the UAW for instance. The UAW is one of the 20 top political contributors the last decade. And during that time, the UAW essentially gave ZERO to the republican party. What the UAW did was BUY Obama and the democrats. Just as the democrat leadership bought their own members in order to pass their healthcare monstrosity. (BTW, I'm being generous in using the word "buy" because in both cases "bribe" is more applicable.)
TAX PAYER TAX PAYER TAX PAYER, everyone's a tax payer.
Actually no. Most people in the US pay NO Federal or State income tax. And it's getting worse all the time. It's Beggars and Choosers and the Beggars are winning. Now, not only are they starting to outnumber the Choosers (so they they can vote what ever goodies they want into law and put into office whichever politician promises them the most goodies), they think they are entitled to it. It is a recipe for disaster. Mark my words.
What are you some sort of Socialist?
LOL! I'm not the one supporting Obama and his policies.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
The fact is active workers did not lose anything (just as the Washington Post said). And as pointed out earlier, the democrat Congress has obligingly insulated both active and retired UAW workers from the extra tax the rest of us will pay for such cadillac plans (if the health care bill passes). And as pointed out earlier, the democrat Congress has included language to lessen or negate even of the meager concessions that the unions actually did make vis a vis retirement health plans and pensions. Either Obama is the biggest patsy ever or he (and his party) expected to get something for such overwhelming largess (billions and billions of dollars of it).
Let's just say this is true. What it amounts to is health benefits in lieu of wages.
FALSE. Didn't you read what the Washington Post stated? Read what that Wikipedia article stated about CAW. Neither the UAW or CAW gave up wages to get health benefits. Their wages did not go down (and neither did their health benefits) as part of the bailout agreement. Why do you keep claiming things that are simply not true? This is like the fourth or fifth time in this discussion alone. It's getting a little annoying.
Government isn't the most efficient means of distribution and administration (at least that's what I think you think).
LOL! Are you claiming that's not true? Would you like me to prove you wrong a sixth time?
So you have the largest industry directly contributing to the second largest industry (correct me if I'm wrong, I think that's the way it works out now, tourism is another very large industry but I still think they fall short of the automotive and health care)
Notice folks, that Obama is trying to nationalize both the auto industry and health care (or at least turn them over to the unions). Now unless 3bodyproblem wants to argue that government and unions are more efficient than private industry, what do you think is going to happen? Do you really think Obama's and the UAW/CAW's policies will save you any money or make either the auto or health care industry produce a better product? If so I have a bridge to sell you.
