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auto bailout negotiations fail in senate, page-87

  1. 113 Posts.

    This link for the whole item

    http://www.google.com.au/search?q=rubber+room&sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1B5GGGL_enAU304AU305

    /snip
    The room is a windowless old storage shed for engine parts. It is filled with long tables, Mr. Mellon says, and has space for about 400 employees. They must arrive at 6 a.m. each day and stay until 2:30 p.m., with 45 minutes off for lunch. A supervisor roams the aisles, signing people out when they want to use the bathroom.

    Their job: to do nothing.

    This is the “Jobs Bank,” a two-decade-old program under which nearly 15,000 auto workers continue to get paid after their companies stop needing them. To earn wages and benefits that often top $100,000 a year, the workers must perform some company-approved activity. Many do volunteer jobs or go back to school. The rest must clock time in the rubber room or something like it.

    It is called the rubber room, Mr. Mellon says, because “a few days in there makes you go crazy.”

    The Jobs Bank at GM and other U.S. auto companies including Ford Motor Co. is likely to cost around $1.4 billion to $2 billion this year. The programs, which are up for renewal next year when union contracts expire, have become a symbol of why Detroit struggles even as Japanese auto makers with big U.S. operations prosper.
 
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