[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 81 (Monday, May 23, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S3050]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GENERAL MOTORS LORDSTOWN PLANT
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, on Saturday I visited the General Motors
Lordstown plant near Youngstown to celebrate its 50th anniversary. For
half a century, this plant has been an anchor of the Mahoning Valley.
It has supported good, middle-class union jobs through good times and
bad. Seven Ohioans--get this--seven workers at that plant have been
there for all 50 of those years. Albert Gifford, Mossco Dubose, John
Brincko, Robert Polansky, Thomas Koppel, John Rosa, and Stephen Gazdik
have helped build 21 different General Motors models since 1966,
starting with the Chevy Impala.
The car they make now is the Chevy Cruze. My wife and I are proud
Chevy Cruze owners. I drove to the plant in one. I was proud to be at
GM Lordstown in 2010 to see the very first Chevy Cruze roll off the
assembly line. The first three Cruzes were painted red, white, and
blue. They represented the determination of a community and a country--
think about the auto industry and the state of the economy back in
2010. They represented the determination of the country to bounce back
and succeed in the face of long odds and national naysayers who wanted
to write off this plant and that community.
It has been a rough few years for that industry. Think about where we
were less than a decade ago. Auto sales were down 40 percent, 1 million
jobs were at risk of being lost, on top of the 8 million jobs we had
already lost as President Obama took office. We heard rightwing
politicians on the news calling the American auto industry dead, but
what they meant was they didn't believe it was worth saving. They
wanted to bet against American companies and against American workers.
The workers at Lordstown and at plants like it across Ohio--in
Toledo, in Defiance and Cleveland and Walton Hills and Avon Lake--and
across the country proved them wrong. Working together with President
Obama, we invested in rescuing the American auto industry. Right now,
because of the auto rescue, because of workers in Lordstown, in Parma
and Cleveland and across the Midwest, the American auto industry is
roaring back to life. GM posted 5 percent gains in sales last year.
Let's be clear. Ohio and much of the Midwest would be close to a
depression if the doubters and the naysayers had their way. But we
refused to let the auto industry collapse, and history has proven it
was the right thing to do. The people of Northeast Ohio know how
important it was. So do people across the whole State. So do people
across that region. The cars made in Lordstown epitomize how central
the auto industry is to Ohio's economy. The Chevy Cruze features
components made at plants all across Ohio. The engine blocks are
manufactured in Defiance, the transmissions are assembled in Toledo,
the wheels for the Chevy Cruze Eco are made by Alcoa in Cleveland, and
parts are stamped in Parma and also in Lordstown.
Ever since the first Chevy Impala rolled off the lot in 1966, the
Mahoning Valley has depended on Lordstown. This is the industry and the
company on which the great American middle class was built.
On Saturday, anyone could see how central this plant is to its
community. GM estimates that more than 10,000 people--young and old,
families with their children, vintage car buffs, former workers--turned
out to watch the parade, stroll through the car show, and tour the
plant. The line to get into the plant stretched down the street and
around the block. That is what this plant and this auto industry mean
to the communities they serve.
I know this community and this State will continue to depend on auto
workers for another 50 years and beyond.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
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