Workers at Troy Toyota launch campaign to join the UAW 

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WORKERS AT THE TOYOTA plant in Troy, Mo., have launched a campaign to join the United Auto Workers. So far, more than 30 percent of the workers have signed union authorization cards.

By SHERI GASSAWAY
Assistant Editor

Troy, MO – Workers at the Toyota plant here have launched a public campaign to join the United Auto Workers (UAW).

It is the first Toyota plant and the fourth non-union plant nationwide where workers have gone public with their campaign to win the union, according to a statement by the UAW. More than 30 percent of the workers have signed union authorization cards.

In a new video, “We Keep Toyota Running,” workers at the plant – which makes the cylinder heads for every Toyota engine made in North America – describe the toll of the work on their bodies.

Dawn Ellis, one of the workers featured in the video, tore her rotator cuff on the job, a common injury at the plant. She had surgery on a Friday, and in a common practice at the plant, was ordered to report to work the following Monday. In a separate injury, Ellis suffered a fractured skull and has struggled with migraine headaches ever since.

The video can be viewed here.

PLANT IS UNSAFE
Jaye Hochuli, a team leader at the plant, says the plant is not safe.

“They had me crawl under a deck to clean out the sand and silica dust and chemicals that come out of the machines,” Hochuli said. “It was a confined space. I should’ve been in a respirator and a hazmat suit. All they gave me was a KN-95 mask. I came home and that dust was in my hair, on my clothes and in my underwear. How can the richest car company in the world not follow basic safety practices? We’re organizing to fix what’s wrong and win the protection we need.”

WORKERS UNDERPAID
Wages at the plant are far below the rate that UAW members make in equivalent Big Three facilities. Even after Toyota increased pay in response to last year’s record UAW contracts – the “UAW Bump” – production workers in Troy make over $4 an hour less than their UAW counterparts.

“Seeing the new contracts with the Big Three, that’s when I realized we needed a union,” said Charles Lashley, a team member in support. “It was incredible that UAW members could bargain for those benefits and that pay. I don’t see why we should be paid differently. Toyota makes more money than all the Big Three. So there’s no reason why we should be so far behind. The company can’t run without us. We should get paid like it. We can by organizing our union.”

‘A BETTER LIFE’
Jessica Clay, a team member in die changes, said she was one of 24 people hired by the company two and a half years ago, and now she’s the last one left of the group.

“The overtime we worked was too much,” Clay said. “Overtime now isn’t the problem. It was, but there’s still no sick time. We still have to use paid time off during shutdowns. I came from Ford – I came from UAW. The union was a better fit for your life. In our union, we have more control. We have a better life.”

‘WIN OUR FAIR SHARE’
Jarred Wehde, a production team member, said the company has a slogan they like to use: “One Toyota.”

“We’ve got the Toyota sign out front, just like they do in Kentucky and Indiana,” he said. “But our pay is nowhere near what theirs is. We know what the company makes. We know they can afford to pay us. By organizing our union, we can win our fair share.”

NON-UNION AUTOWORKERS ORGANIZING
The announcement marks the latest major breakthrough in the national movement of non-union autoworkers organizing to join the UAW in the wake of the historic Stand Up Strike victory at the Big Three auto companies.

Over 10,000 non-union autoworkers have signed union cards in recent months, with public campaigns launched at Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Mercedes in Vance, Alabama, and Hyundai in Montgomery, Alabama, while workers at over two dozen other facilities continue to organize.

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