UAW Contract: What Fords Go Where?

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

UAW-affiliated Ford workers will vote by week’s end to ratify their union’s tentative four-year agreement with Ford Motor Company, or choose to kick it back in their faces and ask for something better. The General Motors contract, recently ratified, was a fairly close thing.

While bonuses, pay, and healthcare costs might be top of mind for most Ford employees, product is what concerns us here. Thankfully, leaked copies of the tentative agreement have emerged, providing a look at what vehicles we can expect Ford to build, and where.

For Michigan’s Flat Rock Assembly, it seems the near future won’t be as exciting as initially thought.

Bloomberg first broke the story that Ford, which has already changed its Flat Rock plans in the recent past, won’t have a pair of electric crossovers ready to join the Mustang and departing Lincoln Continental at the Michigan plant. Instead, sources said, Ford’s Ohio Assembly Plant will gain “new product” in 2023, greased with $900 million in plant upgrade cash.

These claims were quickly proven after the document came to light.

While Flat Rock will remain viable, building the next-generation Mustang ($250 million goes towards that effort), it seems the Continental is good and dead in the near future. Hardly a shock. The Mustang build includes “derivatives,” while the contract also guarantees that Flat Rock will remain open for the duration of the four-year term.

Originally, Ford tapped Flat Rock for production of the “Mustang-inspired” electric crossover, but soon punted assembly to Mexico. Earlier this year, news arose that the automaker planned a pair of Ford and Lincoln midsize EV crossovers for the plant come 2023. Now, Ohio seems to be the chosen home for those products. The plant will continue building E-Series cutaway and chassis models, as well as medium-duty trucks and Super Duty chassis cabs.

The contract states that Ford will continue “to explore future opportunities” for Flat Rock.

Elsewhere in the automaker’s assembly realm, Dearborn will be home to the electric F-150, joining the stock truck and its upcoming hybrid variant. A new Raptor will also make its appearance. That effort gets $700 million, according to details published by The Detroit News. Kansas City Assembly, in addition to the new F-150, will see production of a Transit EV commercial van.

In powertrain news, Dearborn Engine will gain a new mill during the contract term.

[Image: Ford]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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 6 comments
  • Lichtronamo Lichtronamo on Nov 05, 2019

    It is almost shocking what Ford has become - a hollowed out maker of pickups. And maybe a few other CUVs and a sports car. More shocking perhaps when you read that with the PSA-FCA merger the 4 largest car companies are VW, Toyota, Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi, and PSA-FCA. This suggest the future of Ford as an independent company is at risk.

    • See 4 previous
    • John John on Nov 05, 2019

      Only in the USA, OVERSEAS, Ford still makes and sells cars.

  • Wjtinfwb Malibu will be the Ford Panther of this decade. We won't miss it until its gone. GM will tell you there's no market for sedans anymore. Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Hyundai, Kia, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, VW, Audi and others will challenge you on that. GM gave up on Malibu as soon as it was introduced in 2017, no development, only de-contenting and relegation to "Fleet" status. I've had a lot of Malibu rentals, they were fine. Not as nice as an Accord or Camry, but preferable to an Altima, Sentra, Sonata or Jetta in my mind. A little development in the powertrain, refinement of the suspension and clean up on the styling would have done wonders. But that's not the GM way. Replace it with something else equally mediocre or worse but charge more because it sits higher. It's a shame GM has been relegated to such a back of the class manufacturer when spectacular cars like the C8 Corvette show what they can do when someone really gives a damn.
  • SCE to AUX This has been a topic for at least four decades.In a world filled with carcinogens, you'd need an enormous study to isolate the effects of seat foam compared to every other exposure we have.Besides, do people really drive around without any fresh air purging the cabin?
  • Rna65689660 This is NOT new information. They’ve known this for decades.
  • Wjtinfwb Had an E38, loved it dearly. I thought nothing could make me love the subsequent "Bangle" 7 series, but this latest version did. Apparently the psychotic drug epidemic plaguing North America has made its way to Munich and filtered into the design studios. This car is just grotesque.
  • Wjtinfwb Any Focus with a manual is a great car. The automatics... beware. I've had two, both manuals, a Gen 1 SVT and a Gen 2 ST, bulletproof, super low maintenance costs, reasonably entertaining to drive and very comfortable for long drives. Unfortunately, manuals are very scarce, this one, if decently maintained and not thrashed, would be a helluva deal at 4k and under 100k miles.
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