Chevy Volt battery workers at LG Chem idle since “there’s nothing to do” *UPDATE
WOOD TV 8 recently reported from the scene (video available below) and talked to LG Chem workers and ex-workers about the card games being played, the movies being watched and the lack of batteries being made. “As much as they want to work, there’s nothing to do,” the report says.
For months now, up to 40 workers “would just sit in there during the day,” one former employee said. “It’s really sad that all these people are sitting there and doing nothing, and it’s basically on taxpayer money.”
When the plant in Holland, MI was officially announced in 2010, LG Chem was clear that there would be a training period. Specifically, the company said it “estimates that over 400 jobs could be created by 2013 and many of the people will be hired and trained in advance of the plant being operational.” Thanks in part to a $151-million grant from the Recovery Act, LG Chem hired 100 of the 200 workers at the plant. Some of them now say they are furloughed for one out of every four weeks and haven’t made a single cell for a production Volt. In WOOD TV 8‘s words, the workers, “say the last of the materials needed to make battery cells, including chemicals, was shipped back to Korea…. Workers say they made test battery cells, starting late last year, perhaps 100,000 or more, and that they did a good job. They say they produced perhaps 4,000 a week. But, they say, that worked ended for the most part last December.”
The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, which oversees the federal stimulus program, told WOOD TV 8 it would look into the situation. WOOD TV 8 was not able to reach anyone in an official plant capacity and emails from AutoblogGreen to GM and LG Chem were not returned by press time.
*UPDATE: A GM spokesman told AutoblogGreen, “we don’t routinely comment on our suppliers’ operations.”
The video meant to be presented here is no longer available. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Volt no jolt: LG Chem employees idle