The Oshawa's General Motors car assembly plant in Oshawa, Ont., Monday Nov 26 , 2018. General Motors will close its production plant in Oshawa, Ont., along with four facilities in the U.S. as part of a global reorganization that will see the company focus on electric and autonomous vehicle programs. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Eduardo Lima
Republished November 26, 2018 - 12:19 PM
Original Publication Date November 26, 2018 - 8:16 AM
OSHAWA, Ont. - Shell-shocked GM workers streamed into the rain and chill wind after their union sent them home on Monday amid word that their plant would be closing by the end of 2019, dealing a blow to a city and region once synonymous with the automaker.
As workers and their families digested the pending loss of more than 2,500 jobs, discussion at a nearby mall turned on the uncertain reality.
Joanna Stojkovic, clutching her seven-month-old daughter, put down the phone after her GM worker husband passed on the news.
"Our livelihood is gone. We're all in limbo right now," Stojkovic said. "It's a devastating blow for all of Durham Region. GM has been around for a long time."
Word of the pending closure began swirling Sunday night, blindsiding workers and civic officials alike. Oshawa's mayor said he had no inkling of what will be the latest blow to the city 50 kilometres east of Toronto.
Stojkovic said she blamed both GM and the union, Unifor, for the dearth of information. GM, she said, was acting completely disorganized and the communication all round had been poor.
"It's bad," Stojkovic said. "It's going to bring the economy down."
Once dubbed the Automotive Capital of Canada, Oshawa has diversified in recent years to become an education and health sciences hub. Still, as headquarters to GM Canada, its automotive roots run deep — stretching back more than a century — and its plants over the years have been a mainstay of the regional economy, attracting workers from a wide area.
Mayor John Henry, who was born in Oshawa to an auto worker father, said word of the pending closure, especially just before Christmas, is going to hurt.
"That's 2,500 families in town who are in some form of chaos right now," Henry said outside his City Hall office, where a gift-bearing Santa Claus stood next to a lit Christmas tree. "It is personal. There isn't a family in Oshawa that hasn't been touched by somebody who works in General Motors."
Until the recession hit in 2008, GM employed 28,000 people in the city, creating another seven spin-off jobs for each of those. Still, Henry called the closure decision baffling, given the corporation invested more than $500 million in the plant to build pickup trucks only recently.
"I'm challenged to understand why it's happening at this time," the mayor said.
Henry said he hoped GM would still find a way to build something new — such as autonomous vehicles — in a city used to change and adaptation. Oshawa, he said, has one of the largest community health-care networks in Canada and is home to post-secondary education facilities as well as advanced manufacturing.
As he sipped his coffee at a mall, Ray Nolan, a retiree, called the latest news "huge."
"We've seen this before, that's for sure, but to completely close the operation, it's like death. It's done," Nolan said. "The economy for the whole area will be badly hurt. It's going to hurt those families trying to hang on to their homes. Those who are thinking of retiring, that's going to be devastating."
Nolan noted that it was just a few years ago that the then-Conservative government under Stephen Harper poured money into GM to keep plants and jobs, saying it appears the government failed to get a binding agreement from the corporation to keep the jobs here.
Nolan also wondered whether U.S. President Donald Trump's threats to impose tariffs on Canadian built vehicles played a role.
"It's come back to haunt us," Nolan said. "Those jobs will now be pulled over to the States. That's exactly what Trump wanted."
At the South Gate, Matt Smith joined a blockade, saying he just wants to work. The future, he said, was "scary," especially since his wife worked at the plant as well and they have an 11-month-old baby at home.
"I don't know how I'm going to feed my family," Smith said. "It's a horrible feeling. It's a kick in the nuts."
News from © The Canadian Press, 2018