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UAW: Deadline For Automakers Unrealistic

United Auto Workers president Ron Gettelfinger suggested that a mid-February deadline for GM and Chrysler to complete their restructuring plans may be 'almost unattainable.'

WASHINGTON (AP) -- United Auto Workers president Ron Gettelfinger suggested Monday that a mid-February deadline for General Motors and Chrysler to complete their restructuring plans may be "almost unattainable" and no formal talks had commenced between the union and car makers.

Gettelfinger told reporters that he thought General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC would meet the Feb. 17 deadline "unless there is an extension because, honestly, most people that would look at this from a realistic standpoint would say this timeline is almost unattainable."

"I said myself that I hope this wasn't set up to intentionally fail because the people who were a part of this have no idea of the magnitude of what they were asking these companies to do," Gettelfinger said at a pre-Inaugural reception.

The Treasury Department provided $17.4 billion in loans to General Motors and Chrysler last month, but the companies need to file detailed restructuring plans by Feb. 17 that include concessions from the UAW and bondholders.

Detroit's automakers have 20 plants in Ohio, including a Chrysler complex that makes Jeeps in Toledo and a GM factory that makes the Cobalt and Pontiac G5 in Lordstown. The state's production of vehicles is second only to Michigan in the U.S, with nearly 100,000 people working in auto plants around the state.

The bailout engineered by the outgoing Bush administration requires GM and Chrysler to achieve "viability" by March 31. The loans may be called back if the government determines the automakers haven't meet that goal.

GM spokesman Greg Martin said the company was "working hard to meet the terms of the loan and to comply with all deadlines." Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan said the automaker would continue to work toward "the dates as outlined by the government."

Gettelfinger said union leaders "haven't had any real formal discussions" with the companies and the UAW was reviewing documents related to the loans.

The incoming Obama administration will be free to reopen the agreement from the government's side if they choose to. Asked whether the UAW would ask Obama for changes, Gettelfinger said, "all we want is the Obama administration to be fair as opposed to somebody taking a shot at organized labor."

The UAW has opposed provisions in the plan that requires the automakers to get new concessions from their workers, including wage and benefits cuts in 2009 to make them competitive with U.S. employees at Japanese auto plants.

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