Jump to main content
IndustriALL logotype
Article placeholder image

Cuts at Glass Plants in Australia Bring Protests to General Motors

Read this article in:

10 September, 2005

Australian unionists protested further job cuts at two plants of Pilkington Glass in Geelong and Laverton following an announcement by General Motors Holden. The automobile manufacturer said it would discontinue its supply of windshield glass from Pilkington and begin import of the product from Thailand, thus costing 120 Pilkington jobs. Workers at the two plants, members of CFMEU, staged a three-hour stop-work protest at Holden’s Port Melbourne auto assembly plant last week. The 120 job cuts would come only four months after Pilkington made 660 workers redundant. Unionists blame both Holden and Pilkington. The glass-maker has been unwilling to make the necessary investment for continual supply to Holden, while the auto-maker is taking advantage of a free-trade agreement the Howard government put in place with Thailand.