stewart said much of the negotiations to date have been focused on building the framework of the new cba. he added the contract is being negotiated with nextstar energy, not directly with stellantis.
“because it’s a joint venture, stellantis already has a concept of what the collective agreement would entail,” stewart said.
“the discussion has been around what articles may be involved in the collective agreement. the nuts and bolts (for example, requests for wages/benefits) will be decided with the members.
“however, it doesn’t mean the same details of a collective agreement (as at windsor assembly).”
stewart said these negotiations are breaking new ground in canada due to the unique aspects of the battery industry. the union has been studying labour agreements at other battery plants and looking at the facility like another tier 1 supplier.
“this is a brand-new industry, the first of its kind in canada,” stewart said.
“as we’re going through the process, we’re also looking at what’s happening in the states and around the world to try and determine what makes sense to us.
“as far as we’re concerned, this will be no different than a tier 1 supplier. it’s a very skilled workplace, a high-tech skilled workforce.