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General Electric Workers Walk Off the Job, Demand To Make Ventilators (vice.com) 114

On Monday, General Electric factory workers walked off the job and demanded that the company convert its jet engine factories to make ventilators. From a report: Workers protested at GE's Lynn, Massachusetts aviation facility held a silent protest, standing six feet apart. Union members at the company's Boston headquarters also marched six feet apart, calling on the company to use its factories to help the country close its ventilator shortage amid the coronavirus pandemic. These protests come just after General Electric announced it would be laying off 10 percent of its domestic aviation workforce, firing nearly 2,600 workers, along with a "temporary" layoff of 50 percent of its maintenance workers in a bid to save the company "$500 million to $1 billion." This news came as Congress stood ready to pass a multi-trillion dollar corporate bailout that would include at least $50 billion in federal assistance and $25 billion in loans and temporary tax relief for the aviation industry, as well as a further $17 billion for federal assistance to companies deemed "crucial to national security" (e.g. defense contractors like Boeing or General Electric).
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General Electric Workers Walk Off the Job, Demand To Make Ventilators

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  • by koavf ( 1099649 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @02:38PM (#59889396) Homepage
    https://iww.org/ [iww.org] See also https://www.genstrike.org/ [genstrike.org].
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Only on /. is this communist propaganda upvoted.

      Russion trolls be busy.
    • Why, is Communism somehow going to magically work this time instead of being a brutal dictatorship like in EVERY OTHER TIME IN HISTORY?
      • by koavf ( 1099649 )
        The IWW is not a communist organization but communism works just fine for Hutterites and isn't a brutal dictatorship.
  • by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @02:39PM (#59889408) Journal

    As an hourly wage-earner with a lifetime in the skilled trades, I have to sympathize. There are a *lot* of companies in the USA that need to have zero employees for a while. That should get their attention. Did you know that a hundred years ago, people *died* so that you could have a 40-hour work week?

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 )

      Did you know that a hundred years ago, people *died* so that you could have a 40-hour work week?

      So what? People died for just about everything we have today and take for granted. It took centuries upon centuries for us to reach a point where people weren't chattel for barons or kings. We haven't quite figured out that it's not good for us to kill each other, but at least we're cutting down on sacking cities and the accompanying rapes and looting a little bit.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Ford Motor company went with a 40 hour work week because the factory was so expensive that having better rested and more alert employees was worth it. You get paid so well and treated so well because the capital that requires you to operate creates so much value that you being just a fraction of a bit better is worth your pay. A lot of jobs can be replaced by a robot or outsourced to India but companies don't do it because you marginal value is actually hire than what they pay you. If that wasn't true, y
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        I have no idea why you defend bullshit jobs like this.
        You earned less than I earn in an hour ... why are you not getting a real job an let a robot doing the "potato ship bag filling"?

        • He/She said " one of my FIRST jobs". Maybe you were making bank with your first job, but I doubt it.

        • You earned less than I earn in an hour ... why are you not getting a real job an let a robot doing the "potato ship bag filling"?

          I call bullshit on your first job paying you more than this. Especially since his job was worth more than your minimum wage, something which was only introduced in Germany in 2015, and became a divisive part of the 2013 election, meaning that a shitton of German jobs were paid at a lower rate than that still.

          You never earned less than $11/hour in your life? Congratulations on being a spoilt entitled arse, not everyone has their life handed to them on a silver platter. Remember that when the cleaning lady em

          • by Cederic ( 9623 )

            Yeah, I did a ten hour shift on Christmas Day for £2/hour in one job, back when discussions on introducing a minimum wage were looking at around £3.80/hour.

            People that have never worked a shitty job earning shitty money should really not try and judge those that do.

            • I did not judge him.

              The point is: countries with high automation, like Norway or Germany have low unemployment rates and high minimum wages. Fighting against automation, or claiming: I like doing simple jobs as filling potato bags makes no real sense.

          • My first "real job" was at the university as systems administrator for 3 unix clusters ... somewhere around 1987 ... can hardly be automated to a robot, though.

      • by cusco ( 717999 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `ybxib.nairb'> on Monday March 30, 2020 @10:34PM (#59891152)

        Ford Motor company went with a 40 hour work week because the factory was so expensive that having better rested and more alert employees was worth it.

        Holy carp, where did you ever come up with that bit of historical revisionism, the Ford web site? By all the gods, that is the most uninformed thing I've read all day..

        Henry Ford put more value on the machinery than on the humans who worked in his factory. My dad met UAW people who risked their lives to unionize the Detroit factories. There were jobs that would leave workers permanently disabled with repetitive stress injuries in less than a year on the assembly lines, and they refused to adjust the line because it was cheaper to replace the worker. There are damn good reasons why the Ford (and other) factories were unionized in spite of bands of thugs with Tommy guns and lead pipes breaking up the meetings.

    • Did you know that a hundred years ago, people *died* so that you could have a 40-hour work week?

      Oft-repeated bullshit. South Korea, for example, has the same unionization rate as the US, but their workweek has only recently been reduced to 40-52 hours [npr.org].

      Unions are nothing but (wanna-be) monopolies, openly seeking to maintain — and raise — the prices of what their members are selling (their labor). And they should be treated like other monopolies — with anti-trust laws.

      You're welcome to assoc

  • by Anonymous Coward
    the central government is (attempting) to command businesses what to do.
    the workers are (attempting) seizing the means of production
    • People want to work, especially in the United States where culturally your job is part of your identity.
      Right now only critical businesses are open, this means there are many non-critical businesses with people who want to work, but cannot. There is a temporary shortage in supply so the people are saying. Put us back to work and we will help fix this critical shortage.

      Most people do not want to be on Social Security or Unemployment and would rather have a job that paid less than stay on support.

      This attit

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        Most factories and businesses are open, the service industry has shut down largely, but even that is being supplanted by deliveries. Most office jobs are simply shifted towards remote work and many businesses will finally realize that with the right investments in technology, they can drastically cut office space.

        I don't foresee a massive economic disaster. Sure it will have an impact, but with better regulatory frameworks (eg. FDA has now proven it can do things in days and weeks while the rest of the Fede

        • I don't foresee a massive economic disaster.

          Of course you don't...
          You think Trumps $2 Trillion dollars will fix it, and at the same time count as keeping hands off the economy.

      • This attitude isn't a Conservative or Liberal Value but an American One. Americans Live to Work, vs other cultures the Work to Live. This isn't necessarily a healthy trait but it is one, that America strongly follows.

        Agreed, now mention this in the same breath as UBI and watch folks here go mental.

  • They be responsible for making the very ventilators that keep GE workers (themselves and others) surviving this thing.

    Time to mobilize for war against Coronavirus.

    • Only about 20% of patients that require a ventilator will ever become free breathing ever again. About half will die. The rest will be on the ventilator until someone decides they shouldn't be. A massive supply of ventilators won't make much of a difference in this fight.
      • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @03:01PM (#59889516) Homepage
        Citations please? Ventilators save lives by helping push fluid back into the bloodstream as well as enabling your internal organs to stay alive, which would otherwise shut down due to lack of oxygen. Ventilators are the difference between coronavirus having a 4% mortality rate and having a 0.2% mortality rate.
        • I read that your chances of survival are very low once your pneumonia progresses to where you need one.

          My info is, yes, anecdotal, that maybe one in three to one in ten are saved by one. Doctors are claiming it is a last ditch effort to grasp at a chance of hanging on to life.

          I hate it when people say "citation please", but can you point me at info claiming a 20-fold reduction in death rate from treating people with ventilators?

          • I went through a 5 hour surgery while quiet healthy and ended up barely able to walk. Part due to the type of surgery, but the recovery time even for someone like me that was younger 35 at the time, and running 3 miles a day 3 times a week from a serious surgery was unbelievable. It was a serious 6 months before I was mostly back to normal. I lost nearly 20 lbs in 2 weeks and took a while to regain... now I think that'd be great to loose 40 lbs. but that was just 5 years ago. Until you've been through a sig
            • You are simply ignorant.

              Who are you even replying to? The person you replied to gave anecdotes of ventilator survival rates which is the topic being discussed. His anecdotes are largely backed by reality https://www.physiciansweekly.c... [physiciansweekly.com]

              Your off topic rant has nothing to do with anything being discussed and just because you had a shitty medical issue doesn't make the GP ignorant.

        • Ventilators are the difference between coronavirus having a 4% mortality rate and having a 0.2% mortality rate.

          Citation Please. I was curious on this topic myself so I looked it up. https://www.physiciansweekly.c... [physiciansweekly.com] this article cites a number of different studies on the outcomes of advanced care. Numbers cited are:
          86% mortality in the ICU in China
          97% mortality from another ICU in China
          66% mortality from one study in the UK

          Even without the virus a ventilator still has a 36% mortality.

          So basically I have found nothing to back your assertion that ventilators reduce the mortality to 5% compared to non ventilated patien

      • by JMZero ( 449047 )

        That really depends on why they're on a ventilator. Often, it's a chronic condition that will continue to deteriorate, and the respirator is just about life extension.

        In this case, it's not a chronic condition, it's COVID, and most patients (without serious pre-existing conditions) will recover as long as they can be helped through an acute symptomatic period (where they may die without a respirator).

        • by sixoh1 ( 996418 )

          It's not at all clear that massive numbers of ventilators will actually help, v.s. masks and testing systems.

          That really depends on why they're on a ventilator.

          This is just a layman's analysis, but the CT scans and chest x-rays they are talking about "ground glass" appearance in the lungs: Good imagery here [ajronline.org]

          most patients (without serious pre-existing conditions) will recover

          The patients ending up on ventilators may never recover, and or will require permanent help from oxygen concentrators, because the fibroblasts and lymphocytes attacking the viral load in the lungs 'burst' the avoili and likely permanently reduce the abil

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        You can't use the figures that include things like patients with COPD for patients dealing with a respiratory infection.

        About 2/3 of patients who get ventilated for COVID-19 will die. Of the 1/3 who survive you'd expect nearly all of them who don't have an underlying permanent lung condition to be weaned off the ventilator.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        Only about 20% of patients that require a ventilator will ever become free breathing ever again. About half will die. The rest will be on the ventilator until someone decides they shouldn't be.

        I think it's closer to three-fifths who die, actually, but what's your source for that 20% number? That doesn't seem very plausible to me. When the virus is gone, the inflammation goes away, and you can breathe again, unless you're brain dead. You might need supplemental oxygen, but that's quite different from bein

        • If 3/5's of ventilator patients die, it means 40 percent of them live vs the 20 percent number for which you are demanding a citation.

          If I were a cancer patient and some painful, debilitating chemo regime doubled my odds of living from 1 in 5 to 2 and 5, maybe I would go for it, but this doesn't constitute a miracle cure.

          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            True. The drug most likely to be miracle cure is tocilizumab (Actemra). By blocking the IL-6 antibody over-production that causes most of the lung damage, that drug and others like it seem like by far the most likely candidates for changing this from a high-mortality illness into a common cold for almost everybody.

            I'll also be curious whether we see any correlation between countries with high black tea consumption and lower fatality rates, because of theaflavin-3,3'-digallate, though it probably won't ma

    • They be responsible for making the very ventilators

      This is just unions being unions — grandstanding being large part of it.

      Ford and GE are gearing up for massive production of ventilators already [cnbc.com], union antics have nothing to do with it.

  • Is it practical? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by The Grim Reefer ( 1162755 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @02:48PM (#59889466)

    Is a jet engine manufacturing plant a practical place to produce ventilators? Obviously they have a lot of specialized tooling, but is it the type of production line that would lend itself to making ventilators? Or are all of the machines too specialized? Also, how long would it take to retool and what about quality control? Since this is (I assume) totally different from producing a jet engine, how many ventilators would fail Q/C?

    I have a general understanding of how both jet engines and ventilators work, but know nothing about the manufacturing of either one. I'm genuinely curious if this would make sense to do.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      It doesn't make sense. Unless you want ventilators from machined aluminum.

      GE tried to bid on the ventilator craze but it proved to be unnecessary, the US, thus-far, doesn't have a shortage of ventilators, most areas have a surplus. We've only got 6x as much ventilators per capita as the NHS across the pond and even they aren't running out yet.

      It's a boondoggle trying to manufacture this stuff right now. By the time they've retooled and got whatever design working and FDA approval, the crisis will be over. Y

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        It seems every large company on the planet is trying to get in on the "emergency rushed ventilators" business. Why not? It lets you both stay open when you otherwise would have been shuttered, *and* is good PR.

        In the end, the world is going to be paving streets with all the surplus.

      • We've only got 6x as much ventilators per capita as the NHS across the pond and even they aren't running out yet.

        You currently have 7.4x the number of patients than the NHS infected with COVID, and that number keeps increasing daily.

        Maybe your idea of planning should be based on science and trends rather than the Trump school of preparedness.

      • the US, thus-far, doesn't have a shortage of ventilators, most areas have a surplus.

        LOL You truly are delusional guruevi.

    • Perhaps not as practical as a factory who builds ventilators all the time. However, with some retooling, a jet engine company can probably do the job. As these companies usually have Lazer cutters or at least computerized metal punch. Metal press, 3d Printers. They can probably make ventilators at a smaller scale.

    • I would imagine that the vast majority of it is CNC mills and sheetmetal machines. I'm quite familiar with metalworking and have friends in the biz.

      • hahaha, why don't you go look on youtube and see what a jet engine maker has. Exactly nothing useful for making ventilators. GE has subsidiary (GE Healthcare) that is already going to quadruple production for ventillators. These jet factory workers are being obtuse.

    • Given that air transportation is going to have way more supply than demand for the foreseeable future, isn't it better to get some contributions to supply shortages instead of the inevitable shutdown of the plant?

    • "Is a jet engine manufacturing plant a practical place to produce ventilators?"

      More useful than an empty field and 1,000 laid-off waiters.

      The jet engine division is part of the same company, has facilities and equipment that are going to be idle, and about-to-be-laid-off workers with at least marginal mechanical aptitude. The healthcare division had demand that will outstrip their manufacturing capacity and equipment already designed. Obviously you are going to get lower productivity from workers that you a

    • by tokul ( 682258 )

      > Is a jet engine manufacturing plant a practical place to produce ventilators?

      They did the math and figured that they won't have buyers for their engines soon.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @03:14PM (#59889568)
    Shouldn't those factories be making ventilators instead of aircraft engine factories?
    • Why do you think the GE Healthcare facilities won't be making ventilators?

      The obvious implication is that GE Healthcare has more demand than current facilities and headcount could satisfy.

    • The similarity between an MRI scanner and a ventilator is not much greater than that between a jet engine and a ventilator.

      • So basically if you have a supply of pure Helium the aircraft factory can make MRI machines. Good to know.

        • by flink ( 18449 )

          So basically if you have a supply of pure Helium the aircraft factory can make MRI machines. Good to know.

          A ventilator is basically a bunch of valves, actuators, and industrial control circuits to mix and route compressed gasses around. There is probably most of the equipment to build one laying around in a machine shop that services an aircraft factory. I'm sure the facilities that can manufacture ventilators are already going full bore, but a line that is currently producing, say HVAC for an aircraft, is probably in a better position to retool to produce ventilators or ventilator sub-assemblies than a line

  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @03:15PM (#59889572)

    It's always been my feeling that company balance sheets should be black not red. Last time I checked, GE was pretty close to being insolvent. In a choice between keeping half of your workers or keeping the company I'd choose the company. Because with no company, you have no workers.

    • I have long suspected that their financials are for tax purposes only, since they pay basically zero. Much like Hollywood accounting. That is why it galls me so much to see them going to the Government looking for money. Like, if they're gonna ask money from the Feds, maybe they should try paying into it sometime. Like their workers do.

    • by edis ( 266347 )

      The main line for me in given report is, that government rolls out massive support of billions and trillions, yet people are to be fired.
      In my country (Lithuania), support is only given to companies, that will put effort into preserving workforce at this time of tries. Government also takes part in the coverage of idleness for the workers.

      You just have to bundle whole proper package of support, binding it with the responsibilities taken.

      • The main line for me in given report is, that government rolls out massive support of billions and trillions, yet people are to be fired.

        Indeed if you run around losing money simply getting a loan is not going to make you stop losing money. You can't just survive on loans and debt unless you're the US Government itself.

        • by edis ( 266347 )

          If you get money from the government (not even loan), its purpose is opposite to encouraging lay-offs. This has to be set hard.
          Or do you have slightest notion of that being start of some New Business? If not, let the silence spell truth.

  • I guess GE knows now who is on the next list to be furloughed...

    • Maybe. Since we are nowhere near running out of ventilators and there are other manufacturers already better suited, it seems like this might be more about agitating than anything.

  • by CQDX ( 2720013 ) on Monday March 30, 2020 @03:49PM (#59889736)

    gelifescinces.com

    Seems to me that if any part of GE will make ventilators, it would be the life science factories and not the jet engine factories.

    • Is this the branch of GE that makes evil TSA GE scanning machines at airports?
      • Scanning machines at airports are no different to CT scanners in a hospital. The only difference is you send baggage through them and don't need to carefully control the radiation dose.

    • gelifescinces.com

      Seems to me that if any part of GE will make ventilators, it would be the life science factories and not the jet engine factories.

      I'm sure GE didn't think of that and their life sciences division are twiddling their thumbs right now.

  • GE is no stranger to the medical device industry. Some might say they define it.
    • GE is doing it, their subsidiary GE Healthcare is quadrupling ventillator production and partnering with Ford and 3M so they can crank them out too.

      I'm thinking these factory workers are twiiter sjw snowflakes with no common sense. Their parent company is going to making ventillators like hotcakes and they're doing symbolism over substance.

  • I can honestly say I don't think I'd have the strength of character to do what these guys just did. Hell, I'm not even sure it's wrong for me not to. These are national heroes, and deserve to be remembered in history books.
  • ... workers walked off the job and demanded that the company convert its jet engine factories to make ventilators.

    I don't know if I want a jet engine powering my ventilator.

  • These people have their heads on straight and GE should do as they ask.
  • Morons...if GE "needs" to make them, then under the rules set down by the "war time" whatever it was called, then they will make them. It's not up to the workers to "demand" a company make something else. Don't like it? Quit, form your OWN company.
  • Really? I fail to see how jet engine manufacturing technology can be converted to making ventilators, unless you want titanium ventilator impellers operating at 1000 psi and 1000 degrees.

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