Toledo Jeep Plant Preparing Over 1,000 Layoffs
After quite a bit of speculation, Stellantis confirmed on Wednesday that it would be cutting roughly 1,100 employees from the Jeep plant located in Toledo, Ohio. Due to slowing Jeep sales and rising vehicle inventories, the automaker had decided to eliminate a production shift in January.
Stellantis, which has an oversupply problem for more than just its Jeep brand, has signaled that it’ll take proactive steps to remedy the issue. However, its only near-term solution is to eliminate shifts in order to scale back production. Building new models that may be better suited to today’s cash-strapped consumers will take years and Stellantis’ smaller European imports vying to fill that space haven’t done particularly well on the American market.
Frankly, few automakers have seemed interested in going downmarket in recent years. The play has broadly been to maximize the margins on whatever segments were already popular — an issue made worse by several years of aggressive inflation. But this has left several markets (including ours) with a dearth of truly affordable vehicles right when many consumers cannot afford anything else.
The automaker has issued a formal Work Adjustment and Retraining Notification to the local government, citing that the layoffs would commence at the Toledo South Assembly Plant on January 5th. The unionized employees will receive additional unemployment benefits for a year in addition to the typical state unemployment benefits. Their health insurance will also remain in place for 24 months.
"As Stellantis navigates a transitional year, the focus is on realigning its U.S. operations to ensure a strong start to 2025, which includes taking the difficult but necessary action to reduce high inventory levels by managing production to meet sales," spokeswoman Jodi Tinson told the Detroit Free Press. "As a result, the company will adjust the operating pattern at the Toledo South Assembly Plant, moving from a two-shift to a one-shift operating pattern, while also improving overall efficiency across the complex."
The statement included an acknowledgment that the layoffs were “difficult actions to take.” However, Stellantis leadership believes they “are necessary to enable the company to regain its competitive edge and eventually return production to prior levels.”
The South Assembly Plant is responsible for the Jeep Gladiator, with the rest of the facility responsible for non-pickup variants of the Wrangler SUV. All told, the facility will be losing roughly a quarter of its employees.
Considering the automaker has repeatedly signaled that the Fiat-Chrysler brands acquired during the merger would undertake a competition where only the fittest nameplates survive, the notion that production could return to past levels rings a little hollow. But we don’t yet know which brands are slated for the chopping block and Jeep has been one of the higher volume nameplates. We’ll see what Stellantis does in 2025.
[Images: Stellantis]
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Consumer advocate tracking industry trends and regulations. Before joining TTAC, Matt spent a decade working for marketing and research firms based in NYC. Clients included several of the world’s largest automakers, global tire brands, and aftermarket part suppliers. Dissatisfied, he pivoted to writing about cars. Since then, he has become an ardent supporter of the right-to-repair movement, been interviewed about the automotive sector by national broadcasts, participated in a few amateur rallying events, and driven more rental cars than anyone ever should. Handy with a wrench, Matt grew up surrounded by Detroit auto workers and learned to drive by twelve. A contrarian, Matt claims to prefer understeer and motorcycles.
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non-AWD models should be front wheel drive. And Stellantis needs to offer more Fiat four cylinder engines on the smaller jeeps.
A big story that goes hand in hand with this one: sales of the Wrangler's closest competitor, the Ford Bronco, are also down pretty dramatically this year (-16%). The F-series is also down for the year. Meanwhile, Maverick sales are up 64%. Could it be that car buyers have had enough of spending big money on codpieces like off road vehicles that they will never take off road, or full size trucks that they will never use to haul anything but groceries, and more apt to spend less on a practical, affordable truck? I believe so. Are you listening, Ram Product Planning Department? https://s201.q4cdn.com/693218008/files/doc_news/2024/Oct/02/ford-u-s-q3-2024-sales-release.pdf