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Oshawa GM plant to cut 1,000 jobs

WATCH: General Motors confirmed today it’s shedding 1,000 jobs at its Oshawa assembly plant. As Sean O’Shea reports production on the Chevy Camaro ends November 20.

General Motors says it will cut about 1,000 positions from its Oshawa, Ont., manufacturing operations this year as the company plans to spend billions of dollars to boost its U.S. operations.

By December, GM Canada’s main assembly operation is expected to have 2,600 hourly employees – down from 3,600.

GM Canada says it’s working with the Unifor union, formerly known as the Canadian Auto Workers, to offer retirement incentives to eligible workers.

The downsizing is being timed to the end of production of the Chevrolet Camaro sports car, now officially scheduled for Nov. 20.

The company says it remains committed to Canada, and will continue to produce five other vehicles in Oshawa.

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WATCH: NDP MP Peter Julian cited the loss of 1,000 jobs in Oshawa to challenge the Tories about protecting Canadian jobs.

Unifor has been bracing for a significant downturn since GM announced in late 2012 that it would end production of the Camaro.

“We knew the announcement was coming but it still doesn’t make it any better,” said Jerry Dias, national president of Unifor,
adding the union was working to mitigate job losses with a voluntary early retirement program.

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He also raised questions about the federal government’s recent sale of GM shares to Goldman Sachs for $3.3 billion.

“The selling of the shares, both by the province and the feds, certainly took away bargaining power,” Dias said.

“Shareholders have rights, shareholders have power, and they just gave it away, which to me was completely foolish. Before they sold any of their shares, they should have solidified General Motors’ footprint in Canada. But they were all about balancing the budget.”

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A decision on another product for Oshawa won’t be made until after the next labour contract with Unifor, GM says. That contract will be negotiated next year.

WATCH: NDP MP Peggy Nash asked the Minister of International Trade when they would step up to take care of the families affected by job losses in manufacturing.

In addition to the Oshawa manufacturing operation, GM Canada owns the CAMI assembly plant in Ingersoll, Ont., which recently received an $800-million investment commitment from the company.

In Oshawa, where General Motors has its Canadian headquarters and a research operation as well as the vehicle assembly operations, the company will continue to operate two plants. The so-called flex plant will drop to two shifts from three after Camaro production ends, while the other plant will continue to have one shift.

Brad Duguid, Ontario’s minister of economic development, said he’s “disappointed” by GM’s decision to cease production of the Camaro.

“As always, my immediate concerns are with the impacted employees and their families,” he said in a statement.

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“It remains my top priority to work closely with GM, Unifor, and the federal government to secure a future mandate for GM’s Oshawa facility beyond 2016.”

General Motors announced Thursday that it plans to spend $6.5 billion to improve its U.S. factories during the next three years, creating about 650 new jobs. In December, the company said it planned to invest $6 billion to modernize and expand its four factories in Mexico.

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