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GM orders Jack Cooper trucking to stop shipping its vehicles
Late Thursday afternoon, drivers for car hauler Jack Cooper started unloading brand-new Corvettes that they had just put on their trucks at General Motors' Bowling Green Assembly plant in Kentucky where GM builds the Corvettes as plant workers watched in astonishment.
"I stood there and saw them unload 50 cars from the trucks," a plant employee told the Free Press, asking to not be named because the person did not have permission to speak to the news media. "They have never done that before.”
The order to unload the trucks did not come from Jack Cooper or the Teamsters. It came from General Motors.
A person close to the situation said late Thursday that GM is still under contract with Jack Cooper,
but ordered a temporary stop of all of its vehicle shipments across the country by Jack Cooper out of "an abundance of caution."
This person asked to not be identified because they are not authorized to share the information publicly.
The reason for the caution is that GM is in "intense" negotiations with Jack Cooper over a new contract.
The automaker could not risk talks going sideways while thousands of its new vehicles were in transit across the country on Jack Cooper trucks.
Jack Cooper sought the contract renegotiation after Ford Motor Co. canceled its contract with the car hauler last month, forcing Jack Cooper to seek more money from other customers to stay solvent.
Jack Cooper, renegotiating with all its customers
GM spokesman Kevin Kelly told the Free Press on Thursday, "Jack Cooper Transport has been a preferred supplier to GM for decades.
We are negotiating in good faith with their management team and private equity lender, Cerberus Capital Management.
We hope to reach a fair resolution that permits GM to run our business responsibly and serve our customers while allowing (Jack Cooper) to continue operating as an ongoing business and employer.”
Reported Jan. 8, Ford ended its 40-year contract with Jack Cooper, a move that angered the Teamsters union which indicated it would fight for the union jobs at the company.
Given that Ford was Jack Cooper's second-largest client behind GM, losing the contract created what its CEO stated at the time would be an "existential crisis" for the company.
A spokeswoman for the Teamsters, the union that represents many of the drivers for Jack Cooper, did not immediately respond to a request for a comment on GM's stop-shipment action.
Jack Cooper spokeswoman Jennifer Holdsworth said Thursday that the company is in negotiations for new contracts with all of its remaining customers and lenders to establish "a path forward."
"Jack Cooper has not received any notice from GM that" any contract had been canceled, Holdsworth said Thursday. "We are relying on their previous statement that they are honoring their contract with Jack Cooper."
Job losses and a demand for an explanation
Since Ford canceled its contract with Jack Cooper, the car hauler has closed some facilities and cut jobs.
Last month, the company laid off about 400 workers at its facility near Kansas City, Missouri. In Michigan, Jack Cooper permanently closed its operations in Wayne, and 89 employees associated with that facility were let go early this month.
Of those, 75 are union jobs. Jack Cooper also has a facility in Dearborn with eight employees, five of whom are union-represented.
No Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notice has been filed regarding that facility yet, but the company told the Free Press that job cuts are expected there, too.
Those job losses prompted two U.S. senators earlier this week to write a letter to Ford CEO Jim Farley demanding that he explain why the automaker abruptly canceled a decadeslong contract with its car hauling company and saying they want Ford to confirm it will fulfill legal obligations included in the original contract. Ford did not provide a comment in reaction to the senators' request.
Those familiar with what happened previously said that Jack Cooper's leaders were blindsided when Ford ended the contract.
The contract was not set to expire, but it did have a clause that allowed Ford to end it sooner if the Dearborn-based carmaker wanted to do so.
Sources familiar with the move said no one at Ford provided a reason to Jack Cooper for the termination.
Republican Sens. Roger Marshall of Kansas and Josh Hawley of Missouri have asked that Ford CEO Farley respond by Feb. 11 with
"your explanation for suddenly terminating such a longstanding partnership."
Late Thursday afternoon, drivers for car hauler Jack Cooper started unloading brand-new Corvettes that they had just put on their trucks at General Motors' Bowling Green Assembly plant in Kentucky where GM builds the Corvettes as plant workers watched in astonishment.
"I stood there and saw them unload 50 cars from the trucks," a plant employee told the Free Press, asking to not be named because the person did not have permission to speak to the news media. "They have never done that before.”
The order to unload the trucks did not come from Jack Cooper or the Teamsters. It came from General Motors.
A person close to the situation said late Thursday that GM is still under contract with Jack Cooper,
but ordered a temporary stop of all of its vehicle shipments across the country by Jack Cooper out of "an abundance of caution."
This person asked to not be identified because they are not authorized to share the information publicly.
The reason for the caution is that GM is in "intense" negotiations with Jack Cooper over a new contract.
The automaker could not risk talks going sideways while thousands of its new vehicles were in transit across the country on Jack Cooper trucks.
Jack Cooper sought the contract renegotiation after Ford Motor Co. canceled its contract with the car hauler last month, forcing Jack Cooper to seek more money from other customers to stay solvent.
Jack Cooper, renegotiating with all its customers
GM spokesman Kevin Kelly told the Free Press on Thursday, "Jack Cooper Transport has been a preferred supplier to GM for decades.
We are negotiating in good faith with their management team and private equity lender, Cerberus Capital Management.
We hope to reach a fair resolution that permits GM to run our business responsibly and serve our customers while allowing (Jack Cooper) to continue operating as an ongoing business and employer.”
Reported Jan. 8, Ford ended its 40-year contract with Jack Cooper, a move that angered the Teamsters union which indicated it would fight for the union jobs at the company.
Given that Ford was Jack Cooper's second-largest client behind GM, losing the contract created what its CEO stated at the time would be an "existential crisis" for the company.
A spokeswoman for the Teamsters, the union that represents many of the drivers for Jack Cooper, did not immediately respond to a request for a comment on GM's stop-shipment action.
Jack Cooper spokeswoman Jennifer Holdsworth said Thursday that the company is in negotiations for new contracts with all of its remaining customers and lenders to establish "a path forward."
"Jack Cooper has not received any notice from GM that" any contract had been canceled, Holdsworth said Thursday. "We are relying on their previous statement that they are honoring their contract with Jack Cooper."
Job losses and a demand for an explanation
Since Ford canceled its contract with Jack Cooper, the car hauler has closed some facilities and cut jobs.
Last month, the company laid off about 400 workers at its facility near Kansas City, Missouri. In Michigan, Jack Cooper permanently closed its operations in Wayne, and 89 employees associated with that facility were let go early this month.
Of those, 75 are union jobs. Jack Cooper also has a facility in Dearborn with eight employees, five of whom are union-represented.
No Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notice has been filed regarding that facility yet, but the company told the Free Press that job cuts are expected there, too.
Those job losses prompted two U.S. senators earlier this week to write a letter to Ford CEO Jim Farley demanding that he explain why the automaker abruptly canceled a decadeslong contract with its car hauling company and saying they want Ford to confirm it will fulfill legal obligations included in the original contract. Ford did not provide a comment in reaction to the senators' request.
Those familiar with what happened previously said that Jack Cooper's leaders were blindsided when Ford ended the contract.
The contract was not set to expire, but it did have a clause that allowed Ford to end it sooner if the Dearborn-based carmaker wanted to do so.
Sources familiar with the move said no one at Ford provided a reason to Jack Cooper for the termination.
Republican Sens. Roger Marshall of Kansas and Josh Hawley of Missouri have asked that Ford CEO Farley respond by Feb. 11 with
"your explanation for suddenly terminating such a longstanding partnership."