Stellantis hires back first 165 laid-off autoworkers in Belvidere to staff new parts distribution center
Chicago Tribune · Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune/TNS

Laid off when Stellantis idled the Belvidere Assembly Plant in Illinois in February, nearly 165 workers were back on the job this week as the automaker’s first hires for a new parts distribution center, part of a broader plan to restart a facility that once employed thousands.

About 115 of the workers are already processing parts at a warehouse near the auto plant, while another 50 are completing training at the Stellantis parts distribution center in Naperville before joining their colleagues in Belvidere next week, the automaker said.

“It has always been our goal to find full-time employment opportunities for the Belvidere workforce,” Mark Stewart, Stellantis North America COO, said in a news release Thursday. “This is a great first step in our plans to restore operations in this community and provide meaningful, high-paying jobs with excellent benefits for those who are still on layoff and, eventually, for many who want to return home.”

Stellantis laid off the last 1,200 workers at the plant after halting production of the Jeep Cherokee amid dwindling sales 10 months ago. As part of a new labor agreement with the United Auto Workers, Stellantis committed to investing nearly $5 billion to retool the plant for production of a new midsize truck, build an adjacent electric vehicle battery plant and create a “megahub” parts distribution center.

The UAW ratified four-year labor agreements with Stellantis, General Motors and Ford in November following a six-week strike against the Big Three automakers.

The agreement with Stellantis includes a 25% increase in base wages, cost of living adjustments and the right to strike over plant closures, mirroring similar deals struck by Ford and General Motors. But the Stellantis agreement made restarting the 60-year-old plant a centerpiece of negotiations, with the promise of hiring back thousands of workers to Belvidere.

While the assembly and battery plants have yet to break ground, Stellantis reached out to the laid-off assembly workers several weeks ago to fill 270 parts distribution jobs, according to Matt Frantzen, head of UAW Local 1268 in Belvidere.

“It’s a good opportunity for them,” Frantzen said. “They can get in, build up some money and then some weeks’ work toward next year’s vacation allotment.”

The UAW agreement eliminated the wage tier between assembly and parts distribution workers, meaning the former Belvidere plant employees will actually make more money picking and packing parts than they did building cars under the new deal, Frantzen said.

Stellantis will invest $100 million to create the megahub parts distribution center at Belvidere through the consolidation of facilities in Chicago, Milwaukee and Marysville, Michigan. The 30-year-old Stellantis parts distribution center in Naperville will be closed and its operations folded into the new facility.