Four years on, the vanguard of Detroit Auto bankruptcies emerges
Delphi Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy four years ago today, shaking the foundations of the Detroit auto industry. Former parent General Motors Corp. changed; the United Auto Workers couldn't fight the change; Delphi shrank -- plants, people, business lines -- to less than half its size; and legions of Delphi hands, especially its salaried employees and retirees, began a long, painful journey that would culminate in them preparing to say goodbye to roughly two-thirds of their expected pensions.
This week, Delphi is out of bankruptcy. It's renamed as Delphi Holdings LLC, is privately held and is little more than a headquarters in its home country. Yes, Delphi is American inasmuch as a Swiss bank with major operations in London and New York can credibly be called a Swiss company.
What did we learn from the sordid, painful and contentious exercise? That departing Chairman Steve Miller, the serial bankruptcy guy, was right: Delphi's C11 was the warm-up act for the industry's mother of all bankruptcies (and its stepchild), the BKs of GM and Chrysler.
Second, that GM really did set Delphi up to fail when it spun the former parts unit off in 1999 with its own board, GM alums-turned-Delphi execs, and a business plan that essentially wouldn't allow Delphi to distance itself from GM's North American business or its ridiculously uncompetitive labor agreements.
Third, that UAW master agreements subjected to the detailed scrutiny of bankruptcy proceedings, open court and comparison to industry standards can be proven to be as uncompetitive as the unions critics had long insisted they were. No matter how many times UAW President Ron Gettelfinger called Delphi execs "pigs slopping at the trough" or personally denigrated (by name and in public) execs who he said didn't earn their pay, the facts were clear: GM, the UAW and, yes, Delphi were complicit in perpetuating an unsustainable labor cost model that helped push Delphi over the edge.
Fourth, that publicly saying Delphi can't afford to pay a guy $75 an hour (in wages and benefits), as Miller did early in the bankruptcy, may be directionally correct. But it's ill-advised and needlessly provocative, akin to former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's cheap shot about "Old Europe" being unable to defend itself. Arguably true, but better said behind closed doors.
Fifth, that there's still value in Delphi. However many plants it closed or businesses it sold, the slimmed down supplier operated business-as-usual outside the United States; never missed a shipment inside the United States; and, over the course of the four-year bankruptcy, managed to book nearly $90 billion in new business contracts, CEO Rodney O'Neal told The News today. That's hardly evidence of a worthless company unable to compete or deliver value to its owners, now a consortium of banks.
Finally, Detroit still matters at the intersection of national politics and the economy. So do its political connections, especially those of the UAW, to a Democratic Party with one of its own as president. End of the day, it was BHO's auto task force and, more broadly, his Treasury Department that forced GM into bankruptcy, forced all parties to finally finish a Delphi, and forced Delphi to cast the pension of its active and retired salaried folks onto the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.
Four years ago, The News's banner headline on its Delphi bankruptcy package was two simple words: "Staggering blow," it read. We were right.
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Delphi BK 4 years in the making; others followed
Well GM fell in 30 days..delphi ..4 years Thorn Apple valley..Tower Automotve..Fedreal Mogul..geneva Stel Company..Edison brothers..La Roche industries..mPower holdings Corp..Trans world Airlines..V
Visteon Corp...Federal Mogul global.Inc.venture holdings.Inc. Well FELIX ROHATYN in Charge of the BANKRUPTCY and earned A $ 1, Million a months for 4 years etc.. for"ALL that HARD WORK"!
Check out "FELIX ROHATYN on WIKIPEDIA and www.laRouchepac.com
Love your country
Delphi
Mr.Howes:
I have friends that worked at the Delphi Plant here in Lockport when it was still part of GM until it was spun off. One thing that you failed to mention was the fact that Delphi was never honest about its accounting until Mr.Miller arrived. This is not my opinion, but the opinion of the US Justice Department, the SEC, the FBI and others. My friends who worked as hourly in the union contend that if management were honest up front they would have made concessions even sooner. When Delphi restructured its contract to lower wages and keep Lockport and a few other plants open, the UAW local at Lockport voted 90% against the contract not because of the wages or job cuts. They voted against it because they did not believe the numbers that Delphi was putting in its statement. The fact that Battenberg and others were indicted clearly shows how corrupt the leadership was. This is something that clearly needs to be mentioned and written about.
Sincerely
Mike Callahan
Williamsville,NY
Discriminatory Treatment of GM-Delphi SALARIED Retirees
GM-Delphi SALARIED retirees (folks who worked 20-30 years or more for GM, then another 5-10 years for GM's spinoff -- castoff -- Delphi) are the ONLY retirees in the auto industry who have lost 100% of our health care, 100% of our life insurance, 100% of our deferred compensation we received in the form of Delphi stock and/or options, and 30-70% of our pensions (depending on the individual). The OBAMA ADMINISTRATION (Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Auto Task Force head Ron Bloom) and GENERAL MOTORS (CEO Fritz Henderson) made sure that union-represented hourly employees will get the full pensions they were promised over a lifetime of work. BUT NOT SALARIED RETIREES! If this isn't blatant DISCRIMINATION I don't know what is. GM-Delphi SALARIED retirees have already paid a terrible price -- lost a tremendous amount financially -- for the GM and Delphi bankruptcies and deserve fair and equitable treatment with all we have left -- our pensions!
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