Former Windsor GM plant worker says Oshawa 'got kicked in the gut' - Action News
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Windsor

Former Windsor GM plant worker says Oshawa 'got kicked in the gut'

When Windsor's former GM plant closed in 2010, it was devastating for some workers. Now hearing that Oshawa's plant will be closed in 2019, it stirs up some old emotions.

The announcement of the Oshawa plant closure brought back many emotions for old Windsor plant workers

Duncan St. Amour looks at where the General Motors transmission plant used to be in Windsor, which was his workplace for almost 30 years before it shut down in 2010. (Jason Viau/CBC)

Feelings of devastation rushed back to former workers ofthe Windsor General Motors (GM) transmission plant which closed in 2010 with GM's announcementto close the plant in Oshawa, Ont.

While workers in Windsor received two years of notice for closure, the Oshawa plant only has one.

"It's going to be very, very gut-wrenching for everybody," said Ken Bruner, who used to work at the Windsor plant. "It brought back every single emotion I had in 2008."

GM announced 10 years ago it would close Windsor's transmission plant, with 1,400 salaried and hourly workers projected to lose their jobs.

Aside from the plant in Oshawa, plants in Detroit, Mich., Warren, Mich., White Marsh, Md. and Warren, Ohio will be unallocated in 2019. Closures will affect over 5,000 hourly workers from both sides of the border directly.

The current GM contract with the Oshawa plant doesnot have any vehicles being assembled beyondDecember 2019. According to Unifor's auto director, the union knew they had to go back to negotiate in 2020.

Ken Bruner who used to work at GM in Windsor says the Oshawa plant closure is gut-wrenching news. (CBC News)

"Right now they just got kicked in the gut," said Duncan St. Amour, who worked at GM for just under 30 years in Windsor before he lost his job.

On his last day, he remembers people crying and how devastating it was. Not only that, he said the plant disappearing changed Windsor.

"Everybody who makes a paycheque spends that money," he said. "And when those paycheques are not like they used to be, it's totally different."

Now he's worried about his pension because it's not fully funded yet, saying there'sabout 20 per cent left.

"I am very concerned, because General Motors, they're like the Grinch," he said.

With files from Jason Viau