Tennessee Ultium Workers Join UAW in Majority Union Vote
The Facts -
- Ultium Cells workers in Tennessee joined the UAW without interference or threats.
- This win reflects a trend of Southern autoworkers unionizing, such as VW in Chattanooga.
- Ultium's Spring Hill plant follows Lordstown's example, benefiting future battery job sites.
Ultium Cells Workers in Tennessee Join UAW
SPRING HILL, Tenn. — A majority of workers at Ultium Cells in Tennessee have signed cards to join the UAW, and the company has agreed to recognize their union without interference. Ultium, a joint venture of General Motors and LG Energy Solution, saw 1,000 employees organize without facing threats or intimidation.
“This is a great day for Ultium workers and for every worker in Tennessee and the South,” said Trudy Lindahl, a worker at Ultium in Spring Hill. “Southern workers are ready to stand up and win our fair share by winning our unions. And when we have a free and fair choice, we will win every time.”
The Ultium workers’ victory is the latest win for autoworkers in the South. In April, 4,300 workers at Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tenn., became the first Southern autoworkers outside of the Big Three to win their union.
“The UAW members at Ultium and VW are proving that the new jobs of the South will be union jobs,” said Director Tim Smith of UAW Region 8. “In the battery plants and EV factories springing up from Georgia to Kentucky to Texas, workers know they deserve the same strong pay and benefits our members have won. And we’re going to make sure they have the support they need to win their unions and win their fair share.”
The Ultium plant in Spring Hill, which started production this year, is the second Ultium factory in the U.S. and the second to go union. The first, in Lordstown, Ohio, opened in 2022, and workers there also organized with the UAW.
“Being unionized will help us reap the benefits as far as better healthcare, better pay, and overall, just having decency within the workplace— not just for us, but future generations,” said Tradistine Chambers, a worker at Ultium in Spring Hill.
Ultium worker Jim Erwin noted, “You’re grouped together, and you can stand up as one. That’s the power of being a union.” He added, “Instead of just one stick, you’ve got several. You can’t snap several sticks, but you can snap one.”
Just two months ago, the Ultium workers in Lordstown won a breakthrough contract that sets a new standard for the EV industry. It includes strong health and safety standards and life-changing wage increases. By 2027, the pay for Ultium Lordstown workers will be more than double what it was when the plant opened.
The Ultium contract in Lordstown sets a powerful precedent for Spring Hill and for the tens of thousands of new battery jobs coming online soon across the South, including at Ford’s Blue Oval plants in Tennessee and Kentucky.
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