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Ford, Toyota and now GM halt production as trucker blockade chokes off parts

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    Ford, Toyota and now GM halt production as trucker blockade chokes off parts

    https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/windsor-protests-hit-ford-motors-supply-chain-forcing-it-to-idle-engine-plant

    Ford, Toyota and now GM halt production as trucker blockade chokes off parts

    GM said on Thursday it was forced to cancel two production shifts at a plant in Michigan as a result of the Canadian protests

    Feb 09, 2022 • 25 minutes ago • 5 minute read •

    General Motors Co said on Thursday it was forced to cancel two production shifts at a plant in Michigan where it builds sport utility vehicles as a result of the Canadian trucking protests.

    Both Ford Motor Co and Toyota Motor Corp said on Wednesday they had been forced to halt some operations because of supply chain disruptions stemming from protests that have snarled traffic at the Ambassador Bridge connecting Detroit and Windsor. Chrysler-maker Stellantis has also been disrupted.

    Toyota, the top U.S. seller, said it was not expecting to produce vehicles at its Ontario sites for the rest of the week.

    Ford’s engine plant in Windsor is shut down and the schedule cut back at its Oakville assembly plant outside Toronto that makes the Edge model, spokesperson Said Deep said Wednesday an email. The automaker is continuing to ship engine inventory to U.S. plants, he added.

    The blockade of the Ambassador Bridge by protesters angry over Covid restrictions is in its third day, with no end in sight. Windsor officials said Wednesday they prefer a negotiated settlement over using force to tow away the vehicles that have clogged the city’s streets and prevented trucks from crossing the border.

    Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens said the city’s police department is negotiating with multiple groups to try to persuade them to voluntarily leave the city’s streets so the bridge can be fully reopened. Even as they negotiate, Dilkens said they can’t let protests go on too long because of the threat of economic damage — including the potential impact on U.S.-Canada trade and the auto plants in Ontario and
    “We need to plan for a protracted protest,” Dilkens said in a press conference in Windsor. “We are striving to resolve this issue safely and peacefully. Our community will not tolerate this situation for long. Every hour this protests continues, our community hurts.”

    Dilkens said the city fears bringing in tow trucks would inflame the situation on the ground, where 50 to 75 vehicles and about 100 protesters remain after two days.

    “You have people on the ground that say this cause is so passionate for them that they are willing to die for it,” Dilkens said. “It’s fair to say for all of us that we don’t want to see people get hurt. You’re trying to have a rational conversation and not every person on the ground is a rational actor.”

    Chrysler-maker Stellantis has also faced a shortage of parts at its assembly plant in Windsor, Ontario, where it had to end shifts early on Tuesday, but was able to resume production on Wednesday.

    “The Windsor Assembly Plant had to cut short its first and second shifts on Tuesday due to parts shortages,” Stellantis said in a statement on Wednesday. “The plant resumed production this morning. We continue to work closely with our carriers to get parts into the plant to mitigate further disruptions.”

    The blockades are on course to cause layoffs for the very people that the protesters say they represent, warned Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association.

    The blockades are on course to cause layoffs for the very people protesters say they represent, warned Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association.
    Volpe said choking off truck traffic between the two countries was a “brain dead move”.

    “By allowing the protests to continue, we’re giving the impression that you can take over the country with a couple Hyundai Tucsons and a flimsy cover that you’re representing a group that has clearly said you do not,” Volpe told the Guardian.

    Rob Wildeboer may have to decide as soon as Thursday whether the protest that is blocking the Ambassador Bridge will require him to furlough some of his several thousand factory workers.

    Wildeboer, 62, the chairman of Martinrea International, which produces components for every global automaker, said Wednesday that the protests are within hours of halting some of his production lines. The company’s engine blocks, transmissions, subframes and brake lines can be found in GM Sierra pickup trucks, Ford Escapes and Jeep Grand Cherokees.
    Each day, Wildeboer’s trucks make 38 trips across the Ambassador Bridge, shuttling half-finished products between company plants in both countries.

    “We make a part Monday morning, it’s probably on a vehicle by Wednesday,” Wildeboer said.

    Washington is working with authorities across the border to reroute traffic to the Blue Water Bridge, which links Port Huron in Michigan with Sarnia in Ontario, amid worries protests could turn violent, she told reporters.

    More than two-thirds of the C$650 billion ($511 billion) in goods traded annually between Canada and the United States is transported by road.

    “I think it’s important for everyone in Canada and the United States to understand what the impact of this blockage is – potential impact – on workers, on the supply chain, and that is where we’re most focused,” White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said on Wednesday.

    “We’re also looking to track potential disruptions to U.S. agricultural exports from Michigan into Canada.”

    Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem called for a swift resolution.

    “If there were to be prolonged blockages at key entry points into Canada that could start to have a measurable impact on economic activity,” he said.
    “We’ve already got a strained global supply chain. We don’t need this.”

    The protests were disrupting jobs too and “must end before further damage occurs,” Canada’s Emergency Preparedness Minister, Bill Blair, told reporters.

    Protesters say they are peaceful, but some Ottawa residents have said they were attacked and harassed. In Toronto, streets were being blocked.

    “We continue to know that science and public health rules and guidance is the best way to this pandemic is the way we’re going to get to the other side,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    The issue has caused a sharp split between the ruling Liberals and the opposition Conservatives, many of whom have expressed open support for the protesters in Ottawa and accuse Trudeau of using the mandates issue for political purposes.

    In the United States, prosecutors in Missouri and Texas will probe crowd funding service GoFundMe over the decision to take down a page for a campaign in support of the drivers after some Republicans vowed to investigate.

    Downtown Ottawa residents criticized police for their initially permissive attitude toward the blockade, but authorities began trying to take back control Sunday night with the seizure of thousands of liters of fuel and the removal of an oil tanker truck.

    Police have asked for reinforcements – both officers and people with legal expertise in insurance and licensing – suggesting intentions to pursue enforcement through commercial vehicle licenses.

    But as the authorities attempt to quell demonstrations in one area, they pop up elsewhere.

    “Even as we have made some headway in Ottawa, we’ve seen an illegal blockade emerge in Windsor,” said Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino.

    #2
    So are the farmers on this site who support the "freedom" protests and blockades on side if the protest and blockades spread and they block imports of fertlizers,chemicals, seed, farm machinery, parts, animal feed, and food?

    Maybe Truckers on the US side will block imports of grain, livestock, meat and other Canadian ag exports.

    Honk if you want the blockades to continue and expand.
    Last edited by chuckChuck; Feb 10, 2022, 08:29.

    Comment


      #3
      they're getting a taste of the oilpatch
      talk to my native friends in fort nelson when they told them they couldn't have an LNG plant because of the green dream ?
      or the pipelines that obama and trudeau stopped , etc., etc.
      Last edited by Guest; Feb 10, 2022, 08:31.

      Comment


        #4
        I thought Trudeau killed the oil patch? Oh I forgot! Trudeau bought a pipeline to expand and help export oil to the west coast. Silly me.

        Are you honking there Case?

        Comment


          #5
          Doug Ford and Trudeau want the border blockades to end. Oh Oh Ford is siding with Trudeau. Ford is going to lose the 1% radical extremist Trucker vote. LOL

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
            I thought Trudeau killed the oil patch? Oh I forgot! Trudeau bought a pipeline to expand and help export oil to the west coast. Silly me.

            Are you honking there Case?
            On November 1 2021 at COP26, Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada is the first major oil-producing country moving to capping and reducing pollution from the oil and gas sector to net zero by 2050. ... Since 2015, the Government of Canada has invested over $100 billion in clean growth.
            oil is what canada has

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
              Doug Ford and Trudeau want the border blockades to end. Oh Oh Ford is siding with Trudeau. Ford is going to lose the 1% radical extremist Trucker vote. LOL
              you said ford was an idiot , more than once

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by caseih View Post
                On November 1 2021 at COP26, Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Canada is the first major oil-producing country moving to capping and reducing pollution from the oil and gas sector to net zero by 2050. ... Since 2015, the Government of Canada has invested over $100 billion in clean growth.
                oil is what canada has
                And Steve Harper signed a G7 agreement to stop using oil as an energy source by 2100. And you voted for Harper?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Little hint chuck diapers are on sale at Walmart.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    chuck how much snow around north battle ford?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                      And Steve Harper signed a G7 agreement to stop using oil as an energy source by 2100. And you voted for Harper?
                      2100 sounds logical
                      2050 sounds idiotic

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Its very telling when the law and order, freedom loving, pro business posters on this site are not prepared to speak out against border blockades. dance around the issue all you want we already know how far out on the right extremist fringe many of you are.
                        Last edited by chuckChuck; Feb 10, 2022, 08:53.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                          And Steve Harper signed a G7 agreement to stop using oil as an energy source by 2100. And you voted for Harper?
                          that agreement 90+ years out would have as much value as the Crow had for us

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                            So are the farmers on this site who support the "freedom" protests and blockades on side if the protest and blockades spread and they block imports of fertlizers,chemicals, seed, farm machinery, parts, animal feed, and food?

                            Maybe Truckers on the US side will block imports of grain, livestock, meat and other Canadian ag exports.

                            Honk if you want the blockades to continue and expand.
                            I readily admit that I am not the protesting type. During the flood years I always felt direct access to govt ministers was more effective to effect change. Lobbying always has had a place in a democracy. When Trudeau is steadfastly refusing to have any dialogue, he has created the situation we are now in. The protestors are now prepared I would expect to become martyr's if and when the police or military goes in. Who is going to be the winner then? Ya all people want a resolution but until the federal govt changes the way they have reacted to all of this I expect that for each protest site that is shut down a couple other sites will pop up. The suggestion by the Liberals that the Conservatives can and have the power to make the protests end is ridiculous. I would expect each protest to have some sort of boss but there is no unified leadership beyond the original fundraising crew. I would admit that seeing auto plants and packing plants shut down is a bad thing. Until Trudeau "man's up" (not a politically correct term anyway I know) and faces this thing properly and personally it's going to be a shit show.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                              Its very telling when the law and order, freedom loving, pro business posters on this site are not prepared to speak out against border blockades.
                              i think they would be wise to pull out , myself
                              trudeau is done , that is a momentous achievement

                              Comment

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