Tag Archives: South Milwaukee Caterpillar

More Caterpillar Layoffs

More bad news for South Milwaukee’s Caterpillar operations …

This time, it’s another 60 layoffs at the local plant.

Learn more in the Business Journal and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and keep these workers and their families in your thoughts and prayers. From the Journal Sentinel …

Caterpillar, which has its mining equipment division based in Oak Creek, shut factories and cut its worldwide workforce by 13,000 people last year, including about 400 jobs in Milwaukee and South Milwaukee.

Previously, the local plants employed more than 800 people.

The Peoria, Ill.-based company said it continues to take actions to reduce costs and better align its workforce with business needs.

“While some cost reduction measures have already been implemented, further measures must be taken in the near term. We know this is difficult for our employees and their families, but we must take steps to position the company for long-term success,” Caterpillar said.

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“Change In Strategy” For Caterpillar?

Crain’s Chicago Business and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel both have stories about the 2014 prospects for mining — and the prospects aren’t good.

Obviously, this bears close watching for South Milwaukee and Caterpillar.

From the Crain’s piece, entitled “How Mining Woes May Force Cat to Change Strategy” …

In 2011, Caterpillar shelled out more than $8 billion for South Milwaukee, Wis.-based mining equipment manufacturer Bucyrus International Inc. It was the biggest acquisition in the company’s history. A year later, the company opened its checkbook once again, spending about $700 million on China’s ERA Mining Machinery Ltd.

Last January, ERA was marred by a financial scandal that cost Cat $580 million. Scandals aside, Mr. Oberhelman’s investment is foundering because macroeconomic trends have hammered demand for ore. Sales in Cat’s resource industries segment, which is principally mining, declined 42 percent from 2012. In the third quarter, mining revenue made up only 22 percent of sales compared with 32 percent the year before. And with commodity prices still flagging and the demand for mining equipment still lackluster, that only means more bad news for Cat in 2014.

“It begs the question: If mining is not a key driver, as investors what do we do?” says Mircea Dobre, a senior analyst at Milwaukee-based Robert W. Baird & Co. “Do we wait four or five years, or is there something else that is going to drive growth?”

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Caterpillar Cuts Continue

This time, the mining giant is closing a plant in Virginia, this following the closure of a plant in Texas and another in Tasmania announced in recent weeks.

And all in, according to the Reuters report, more than 900 jobs have been cut in Cat’s Decatur, Ill., and South Milwaukee mining operations this year alone.

Let’s hope and pray the South Milwaukee plant is spared here.

From the article:

Caterpillar also makes construction equipment, railroad locomotives, and a variety of reciprocating and turbine engines. But mining equipment is its most profitable product category.

Those margins were one of the reasons it made mining equipment a focus of its merger and acquisition activity in recent years, buying Bucyrus, a U.S. maker of giant excavators and shovels, for $7.6 billion in 2010, and ERA Mining, a Chinese mining equipment company, for $654 million in 2012.

But the ink was barely dry on those deals before Caterpillar’s global mining customers, facing investor backlash over unpopular takeovers, budget overruns and falling metal prices, slashed capital spending, slowed development on some projects and shelved others entirely, and postponed or canceled new equipment orders.

That pullback, which caught Caterpillar by surprise, has forced the company to cut its outlook three times so far this year.

Last month, as it released disappointing third-quarter earnings, Caterpillar warned its 2014 sales could be down as much as 5 percent from 2013.

Over the past year, the company has cut more than 13,000 jobs, about 10 percent of the global total, as the slowdown in its mining business forced it to repeatedly post lower-than-expected quarterly results and repeatedly slash its outlook.

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Reports: Caterpillar To Move Welding Work To South Milwaukee

Caterpillar’s Bay View welding operation, called an “overflow plant” for Caterpillar, employs about 60 to 70 workers.

From the Milwaukee Business Journal story

Caterpillar Inc. will discontinue welding operations at its small Milwaukee facility and shift the work to its South Milwaukee factory, the company said in an email Thursday.

Caterpillar said the decision is not expected to result in additional job cuts beyond the previously announced indefinite layoffs of 260 production workers at the South Milwaukee plant due to weakness in the mining sector.

Peoria, Ill.-based equipment manufacturer Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT) has its global mining equipment headquarters in Oak Creek.

Caterpillar’s Milwaukee welding operations are located within the Chase Commerce Center, 3073 S. Chase Ave., in the Bay View neighborhood.

“Due to current business conditions and demand for products made in the Milwaukee area, Caterpillar has informed its employees that it will consolidate welding work now conducted in the Milwaukee facility with similar welding work conducted in South Milwaukee,” Caterpillar said in an emailed statement to The Business Journal. “As we move forward this year, the company will conduct an orderly transition of the work from the Milwaukee location to South Milwaukee.”

Here is Milwaukee Journal Sentinel coverage.

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More On The South Milwaukee Caterpillar Deal

A day after United Steelworkers in South Milwaukee agreed to a new six-year deal with Caterpillar, reaction and details are coming in.

Check out coverage in the Business Journal, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Wall Street Journal.

From the Business Journal …

Cheryl Maranto, Marquette University associate professor of management, was unsurprised it was a close vote, considering United Steelworkers Local 1343 made deeper concessions than the company.

“I think the fact that the company was willing to at least provide a few concessions was an important signal that it wasn’t just, ‘We have the power, we’re going to slam it down your throats,’” Maranto told me. “I still think it was probably a pretty bitter pill for workers to swallow, but I think the company was smart in giving enough to allow the union to save face and to enable them to kind of move on.” … 

Caterpillar called it a “fair, reasonable and comprehensive agreement.”

This marked the first contract negotiation between the local union and Caterpillar since it acquired the former Bucyrus International Inc. for $8.8 billion in 2011. Caterpillar has a reputation for tough negotiations with its unionized factories.

“This would be a bad Bucyrus contract, but it’s one of the better Caterpillar contracts we’ve seen,” Winklbauer told me.

Also, the Business Journal is reporting the contract includes a provision not allowing Caterpillar to use temporary workers in South Milwaukee — “a significant win” for employees.

And the Winston-Salem Journal has a story on the Caterpillar annual meeting in North Carolina, including comments from the CEO.

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Deal Reached: South Milwaukee Steelworkers Approve Caterpillar Contract

United Steelworkers at the South Milwaukee Caterpillar plant have approved a new six-year contract that reportedly freezes wages and pensions but offers a signing bonus.

Check out coverage in the following …

And here is information from Caterpillar’s negotiations website.

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Cat Culture Vs. Bucyrus Culture: Chicago Tribune Explores Big Changes At South Milwaukee Plant

The Chicago Tribune has a terrific piece on how the workplace culture has changed at the South Milwaukee Caterpillar plant since the new owners purchased Bucyrus International.

Check it out here … and see how and why worker morale at the plant has reportedly plummeted.

Take, for example, this small (yet revealing) change.

Small changes made by Caterpillar, the union members say, have made big impressions that the company doesn’t appreciate them. They cite Caterpillar’s management of the annual bowling tournament as an example. Under Bucyrus, the tournament was planned jointly by the union and the company, but last year Caterpillar took over the planning.

The tournament was created in 2006, aimed at getting salaried workers such as engineers, salesmen and managers, to bowl with welders, assemblers, machinists and other production workers, said Barry Lewis, the union’s vice president. The idea was to break down barriers among different kinds of employees.

The first year, 40 teams were created with five people on each team. There were raffles and door prizes, free pizza and drinks, and a fundraiser for a local charity. The tournament’s success was such that the following year every team added a bowler. “We took all the teams and mixed them up. Welders were not allowed to bowl with welders only. Everyone had to meet someone new,” Lewis said.

“We started finding out that we have things in common. They have children, too. They are just like us. They have jobs. It was a more pleasant place to work,” Lewis said.

Machinists felt more comfortable walking up to engineers and making suggestions and engineers became more receptive. “We were able to simplify a lot of things because of the change in attitude,” Lewis said.

This year, as contract negotiations inched closer, only five teams signed up and few production workers participated. Salaried workers and union members bowled on separate teams, Lewis said.

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Caterpillar, Steelworkers Reach Tentative Agreement … Again

The United Steelworkers and Caterpillar have tentatively agreed to a contract for workers at the South Milwaukee plant.

That’s according to various reports and the labor negotiations update website. A union ratification vote is set for June 11.

You will recall that the Steelworkers voted down the last six-year deal earlier this month. We’ll see if things are different this time around.

Check out coverage from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Chicago Tribune, and the Wall Street Journal.

I’ll keep you posted.

 

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More South Milwaukee Cat Negotiations Next Week

So reports the Chicago Tribune

Well, that’s some good news. At least they’re talking.

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Cat, Union Talks To Resume

Various media outlets are reporting that negotiations between Caterpillar and the United Steelworkers will resume Thursday.

Let’s hope there is progress.

Check out coverage in BizTimes.comThe Business Journal, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Wall Street Journal.

And check out Caterpillar’s “2013 Milwaukee Negotiations” website, which includes details on the previous contract offered and other updates.

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Caterpillar CEO Profiled: “We Can Never Make Enough Profit”

Business Week has an interesting profile of Caterpillar CEO Doug Oberhelman, as the labor dispute in South Milwaukee continues.

Among the comments: “We can never make enough profit.” From it:

After walking through the Peoria factory, Oberhelman takes off his safety glasses and sits down to eat his low-carb lunch: turkey wrapped in lettuce. He talks about his upbringing in Illinois and his career at Caterpillar. He lists his hobbies (hunting, “outdoors things”). Then comes the difficult question: Why is Caterpillar fighting its workers over wages? Oberhelman nods briskly, eager to put the issue to rest.

“We have to be competitive if we’re gonna win. And frankly, if we’re not competitive … we’re not gonna be here in the next 30 years. That’s a simple message, but”—he starts to hammer his hand against the table, punctuating his words with raps—“it’s very  … very … tough.” After a pause, he lets his hand lay flat.

“I always try to communicate to our people that we can never make enough money,” Oberhelman continues. “We can never make enough profit.” 

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Now What? Negotiations Between Caterpillar, South Milwaukee Union Reportedly Break Off

Update: The Business Journal, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Wall Street Journal and TMJ 4 also have stories.

From the Chicago Tribune

Contract negotiations between Caterpillar Inc. and United Steelworkers Local 1343 broke down on Wednesday, according to union officials. Ross Winklbauer, a Steelworkers subdistrict director for southeastern Wisconsin, said Caterpillar turned down the union’s proposal addressing its members concerns. No other further meetings are scheduled.

I’ll keep you posted.

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Caterpillar Update: More North American Job Cuts, Comparing South Milwaukee And Joliet

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has an interesting piece comparing the ongoing Caterpillar labor talks in South Milwaukee with the contentious ones last year in Joliet, Ill.

It’s an interesting read that provides an in-depth look at the hard stance Caterpillar takes in union negotiations — a stance the company has obviously adopted here.

From the article

To see how strained labor relations could be at Caterpillar Inc. in South Milwaukee, you need look no further than Joliet, Ill., where the company faced a strike in 2012 that lasted nearly four months and might have set the stage for the current labor dispute here.

Local 851 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers demanded cost-of-living pay increases and lower health care premiums for nearly 800 Caterpillar employees in Joliet, and asked the company to honor seniority rights.

After rejecting two contract offers and going on strike, they received: a wage freeze for workers hired before 2005, the elimination of pensions, doubled health care premiums, and fewer seniority rights.

Fast forward to today, and Caterpillar is in a standoff with Local 1343 of the United Steelworkers International that represents more than 800 employees at the company’s plant in South Milwaukee.

Last Tuesday, union members voted down a proposed contract that called for a six-year wage freeze and lower wages for new hires. It also would have given the company more flexibility in making temporary layoffs, up to 14 weeks per employee per year.

Contract negotiations are scheduled to resume Wednesday.

The resumption of talks comes as Caterpillar prepares to cut more jobs in North America.

First, it’s laying off another 300 people in Decatur, Ill., and it’s closing another facility — this one in Canada. More than 300 people will be without jobs there, according to CBC News.

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South Milwaukee Caterpillar Steelworkers Union President Urges Talks And Other Headlines

Check out these South Shore headlines …

Also, NOW has published a new police blotter.

And Moody’s has announced it has maintained Cudahy’s Aa3 bond rating for Cudahy. Here is the rationale for that decision.  (South Milwaukee has a Aa2 rating, one step below the “best of the best” AAA.)

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South Milwaukee Caterpillar Steelworkers Say “No” To New Contract

Update: Business Journal coverage has a statement from the union. And here is a story from the Chicago Tribune. Also, check out stories from the Wall Street Journal, BizTimes.com and Fox 6.

Here is the news from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. From the story …

The union representing about 800 employees at the Caterpillar Inc. factory in South Milwaukee has voted down a proposed six-year labor contract that would have frozen wages but provided additional protection against permanent job losses.

Members of United Steelworkers Local 1343 rejected the contract that, among other things, would have resulted in lower wages for new hires and increased health insurance costs for some employees.

Despite turning down the proposed contract, union officials said, the membership will return to work and will resume negotiations with Caterpillar for a new contract.

So, what does this all mean? Is a strike looming? A lockout? I hope not. That would be good for no one — including South Milwaukee as a whole.

I’ll keep you posted … and post your comments below.

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