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Vindicator Business Mexican workers
at Delphi air concerns over pay issues By Don Sshilling WARREN - A couple of Mexican workers making about $1.50 an hour intend to question a senior Delphi Automotive Systems executive here Wednesday. At the company annual meeting, the women want chairman J.T. Battenberg to say if he supports the pay and working conditions at the Delphi plant where they work or if local management is hiding the truth from senior officials. At a press conference Monday in Warren, the women listed these concerns: Average pay of $61 for a 48-hour work-week. The average cost of groceries there for a family of four is $120 a week, they said.
“ It’s time for us to be respected by the company”, said Lourdes Tenorio, a union official in a Delphi Delco Electronics plant in Reynosa, Mexico. The International Union of Electrical Workers local 717, which represents workers at Delphi Packard Electric Systems, was host Monday to Tenorio , another worker and an official with the Border Committee of Women. Today, the women were to meet with officials at Delco’s headquarters in Kokomo, Ind. The workers hold Delphi stock, so they intend to speak at Delphi’s annual meeting Wednesday at Kent State University Trumbull campus. Michigan-based Delphi rotates its annual meeting among its divisions. Packard, which makes wiring harnesses, is based locally and has about 7,000 hourly and salaried workers in the area. Tenorio works at a plant that makes air conditioners and brakes for a variety of auto makers. Delphi, which has 67,000 workers in Mexico, is that country’s largest private employer, said Ricardo Hernandez of the American Friends Service Committee, which is aiding the women. Tenorio said there
have been strikes
at Mexican
plants and they have
improved
conditions. She
said many workers
at her plant
want to strike
but she wants to
give the company a chance
to respond to their
concerns. Local 717 formed a committee three years ago to work more closely with the Mexican workers, said Tony Budak, committee chairman. The union has assisted the Mexicans by sharing health and safety measures and tips on negotiating, he said. Local 717
officials think cooperation
between unions
in both countries
is the best way
to prevent the
two groups
from being pitted
against
each
other, which
forces down wages, he
said.
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