Time Marches On
It was the summer of 1983 and most of the autoworkers from
the Pontiac Fisher Body Plant and the Pontiac Motors Facility had been laid off
for over two years. That’s when the call
came to report to the Williams Lake School in Waterford to attend teamwork and
orientation training prior to hiring into what would become our future, Orion
Assembly Center in Orion Township, Michigan.
The facility had been under construction on the site of an old airstrip
for several years. There were a few
salaried employees working out of trailers and UAW Skilled Trades Members
inside the empty plant working to finish up construction of the facility that
would eventually house a workforce of approximately seven thousand team
members. Later that fall of ’83, the
first hourly employees were brought in to begin start of production the
following spring.
The following 40 years includes a rich history of hard work
and innovation by a workforce that was second to none in a very competitive
industry. From being the first facility to build five car lines on a single
production line while winning J.D. Power Awards to hosting Oprah Winfrey and
then producing General Motor’s first mass produced electric vehicle, the plant
and workforce really led the way.
And so now the next chapter of the Orion Story begins. As the Williams Lake School, opened in 1945,
meets its day with the wrecking ball; the facility it so proudly supported has
gained in size and responsibility. Orion
Assembly is a big part GM’s New Green Future and will soon assemble a mixture
of vehicles that will provide customers with reliable transportation into the foreseeable
future.
Orion Assembly and UAW Local 5960 have been around for over 40
years now. That means that some
autoworkers, that have only ever worked at Orion Assembly, are now eligible for
retirement. Well done Orion Assembly and UAW Local 5960! No job is more important than this one. Our credo was, Great Cars, Built by Great
People and we did all this while supporting the local community and our
customers. We always felt after working on a customers’ vehicle that we were
riding along with them and their family.
And so now a new generation of autoworkers will carry the
torch into the future. My friends and I,
mostly retired, will cheer you on as you do great things for The UAW, GM and our
customers. Best of luck to all of you; now and into the future. Although we
can’t be there to advise you we have left some pretty deep tracks for you to
follow and it all started at Williams Lake School.
