Toronto

Fiat-Chrysler and Unifor talk contracts over Thanksgiving

There's no Thanksgiving break for management and union negotiators at Fiat-Chrysler's Canadian operations.

Unifor has threatened job action if a deal isn't reached by 11:59 p.m. Monday night

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Chairman and CEO Sergio Marchionne, left, shakes hands with Dino Chiodo, president of Unifor Local 444 in front of a 2017 Pacifica minivan on the Windsor Assembly Plant line Friday in Windsor, Ont. (Carlos Osorio/The Associated Press)

There is no Thanksgiving break for management and union negotiators at Fiat-Chrysler's Canadian operations.

The two sides are bargaining through the long weekend in hopes of reaching a contract.

Unifor has threatened job action if a deal isn't reached by 11:59 p.m. Monday night -- the deadline set by the union as it started talks with the automaker.

Unifor has said its top priority is securing jobs for its members by persuading the company to commit to investment in its Canadian operations.

The union reached a deal with General Motors last month that includes a commitment to new investments plus wage increases, signing bonuses and lump sum payments. 

Unifor customarily uses the first deal it reaches with the Detroit Three as a basis for contract talks with the other two
carmakers. 

Fiat-Chrysler employs 9,750 Unifor members at its assembly plants in Brampton, Ont., and Windsor, Ont., as well as a casting plant in Toronto.