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Freightliner hiring

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CLEVELAND — The company that owns Freightliner is expected to announce Thursday that it will add a significant number of jobs at its truck manufacturing plant here.



Daimler Trucks North America said today it plans a “major announcement”?at the plant Thursday morning. Roger Nielsen, chief operating officer of Daimler Trucks North America, will be joined by Gov. Beverly Perdue and other officials.



Town officials in Cleveland said they received invitations to the event, but have been given no details about the announcement. Commissioner Mary Frank Fleming-Adkins said she’s heard it’s about jobs.
 
Let's all hope so.



It would be nice to see an increase in employment somewhere besides China... .



Freightliner is grabbing some serious market share.



Navistar blew it when they passed on using DEF for the 2010 engines.



Detroit Diesel was all ready to go for 2010 with the DD15 and DD16 engines which are exclusive to Freightliner and Western Star trucks.



That decision is paying off for Daimler.



Mike. :)
 
I keep hearing Cat is going to be marketing their own line of trucks, with Navistar being an engine supplier. I wonder what Freightliner has to announce...
 
I keep hearing Cat is going to be marketing their own line of trucks, with Navistar being an engine supplier.



They already are marketing day cab vocational trucks.



#ad




They're also supplying short blocks to Navistar who is adding their own emissions hardware and selling the engines under the Navistar name.





Rusty
 
Navistar blew it when they passed on using DEF for the 2010 engines.

Mike. :)



Yep, I've seen other "brilliant" decisions made by those in the Navistar's "ivory tower" in Chicago (in a Chicago suburb now) that made those of us at the retail level want to tear our hair out. "What were they thinking... ":rolleyes:



Bill
 
Yep, they're built by Navistar in a Navistar facility. Cat claims that there are key differences, though - like aluminum versus steel doors for one. Whatever the case, one can bet that they'll be paying a premium for the CAT nameplate.



Rusty
 
Yep, they're built by Navistar in a Navistar facility. Cat claims that there are key differences, though - like aluminum versus steel doors for one. Whatever the case, one can bet that they'll be paying a premium for the CAT nameplate.



Rusty



I am going to make the assumption that this photo is the Austrailian CAT Truck that they test marketed down under.



The steering wheel is on the right and it also appears to have the Navistar Z-Leaf Air Ride suspension which I was told will not be offered here.



Only Hendrickson Spring or Chalmers available in the States.



I had a "CAT" truck salesman squirming as I pounded the questions to him a couple of months ago, like I was going to take all the info back to Freightliner or something. Paranoid bugger... ... ... . :D



I just wanted to be ready with a little knowledge of the chassis when they start to roll into our shop as CAT doesn't have any truck techs, I know it will happen... .....



There will be buyers lined up for this truck, just because it is Yellow and has CAT on the grill.



Then they will pay looooong dollar for parts and service until they realize what is happening to them at the CAT dealership... ...





Mike.
 
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Thanks for the link, just checked it out along with a couple more.



No, they didn't learn. It still has 2 turbos. A rehashed ACERT.

Can you say high warranty claims... ... ...



No mention of rear ends or suspensions, CAT has to outsource those so let's not bring that stuff up.



Look at our pretty bumpers and mirrors instead.

OMG, it has CAT stiched into the seats... ... . and cubbyholes everywhere... ... . and the mirrors are cowl mounted (like the Freightliner SD's for the last 10 years or so).



Not trying to be cynical but no mention of the rear half of the truck is not too impressive.



Time will tell, I wish 'em well. :D



Mike. :)
 
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No mention of Allison automatics? That does seem like a very set back front axle, though.



I couldn't tell if the "CAT" auto transmission was an Allision based item or not from the look of it.



Don't get me wrong, I love CAT equipment and powerplants as well as anyone, service and parts support is very good.



I just keep wondering what the hell they are thinking, trucks are a whole different animal.



Mike. :)
 
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CLEVELAND — The company that owns Freightliner is planning to announce the return of a full second shift at its truck building plant here, according to a letter sent out to union members.



Daimler Trucks North America said today it plans a “major announcement”?at the plant Thursday morning. Roger Nielsen, chief operating officer of Daimler Trucks North America, will be joined by Gov. Beverly Perdue and other officials.



The advisory gave no details about the announcement.



Town officials in Cleveland said they received invitations to the event, but have been given no details about the announcement. Commissioner Mary Frank Fleming-Adkins said she’s heard it’s about jobs.



“It’s only going to be a good thing, from what I?understand,” she said.



According to a letter to union members signed by United Auto Workers Local 3520 President Corey Hill, the company plans to “start ramping up production to a full second shift”?at the Cleveland plant by mid-February.



The company then plans to increase production to 150 trucks a day by the fourth quarter of this year, the letter said. If that projection becomes reality, “we will exhaust our current recall list,”?bringing laid-off employees back to work, the letter said.



Robert Van Geons, executive director of RowanWorks Economic Development, said his agency and the N. C. Department of Commerce have been working with Daimler. He declined to divulge details of the announcement, however.



“Let’s just say, from what I’ve heard, it would be a very positive thing for our community,” he said.



A Daimler spokeswoman did not return a telephone call or email from the Post today.



Layoffs in 2007 and 2008 decimated the workforce at Cleveland’s Freightliner plant, which once employed 4,000 people and manufactured 220 trucks per day.



Employment fell to 695 workers, and production bottomed out at 32 trucks per day. Rowan County and the town of Cleveland gave Freightliner economic incentives in 2009 to protect the remaining jobs and begin production of military vehicles.



When Nielsen came to Cleveland in April 2011 to promote a solar farm installed at the plant by Duke Energy, employment had gone back up to about 1,100.



Nielsen announced then that the company would be recalling an additional 225 workers previously laid off at the plant and might restore a second shift there if market conditions continued to improve.



“There is a strong customer need for trucks,” Nielsen said in April.



Hill, president of UAW Local 3520, said the company had been ramping up production and recalling workers throughout 2011. Employment at the plant is up to about 1,500 now, he said.



“We’ve been gradually growing throughout the whole year,”?he said. “Not anything major, but it’s been steady; our orders and production have steadily gone up. ”



Hill said he sees “pretty good growth for 2012” and while he declined Wednesday to discuss the planned announcement, he said it’s “going to be good news. ”



The company has been adding jobs elsewhere as well.



In June, the company added nearly 700 manufacturing jobs at its Mount Holly and Gastonia plants. That included a second shift in Mount Holly and meant the company had recalled most of the laid-off workers at those plants, the Gaston Gazette reported.



The announcement in Cleveland is scheduled for 9:30 a. m. Thursday.



Freightliner Trucks is the largest division of Daimler Trucks North America, which is headquartered in Portland, Ore.
 
Wouldn't it be smarter and much less expensive to buy a Navistar and paint it yellow? I'm sure a Caterpillar badge could be velcroed on the grille.
 
Wouldn't it be smarter and much less expensive to buy a Navistar and paint it yellow? I'm sure a Caterpillar badge could be velcroed on the grille.



Isn't that kinda' like putting perfume on a pig????:D





Seriously, Thank you Cumminz for posting the updates on the Cleveland plant, it is good news.

I'm surprised that we did not get a blurb of some sort at the dealership but maybe tomorrow I'll see something from Daimler.

Cleveland produces a good product and it ain't in Mexico!!!



Mike. :)
 
One of the guys at work told me last week that his wife got a job at the Freightliner plant in Portland. I was kind of surprised because it was not that long ago there were a lot of layoffs and most of the production was going elsewhere. I think I heard Mexico. I asked him about that and he said they where adding a lot of people to the plant here. Maybe it is not working out in Mexico and they are coming back.



I have heard of some other companies bringing some production back from China also. Lets just hope it keeps happening.
 
CLEVELAND — Corporate and government officials hail the return of a second shift and ramped-up production at the Freightliner Truck Manufacturing Plant as evidence of an economy on the rebound.



“The ripple effect in the local economy will be seen,” Roger Nielsen, chief operating officer for Daimler Trucks North America, said at press conference this morning when he confirmed that the Cleveland truck plant will be adding 1,100 new jobs by the end of 2012.



In addition, Daimler is adding 100 jobs at its Components and Logistics Plant in Gastonia.



“That's big news, my friends,” Gov. Bev Perdue told a crowd assembled on the manufacturing floor of the plant.



The majority of positions on the reestablished second shift will be filled with recalled workers who were laid off in 2009. The recalls will begin in early February, maybe earlier, and the new shift is scheduled to be at full strength by September.



“This extra shift, to me, is the most optimistic news,” Perdue said. N. C. Department of Commerce Secretary Keith Crisco also was on hand.



Nielsen said the past couple of years have been tough for the laid-off employees, their families, the Cleveland plant and the industry as a whole. To the workers in particular, he said, “We welcome your return to Freightliner. ”



First-shift employees left their spots on the plant floor and crowded in a semi-circle around the makeshift stage and an audience of 75 to 100 government officials, community leaders and media. They responded with applause at several junctures during the morning's proceedings.



The Cleveland plant, known mostly for its Freightliner Cascadia trucks, is expected to double production by October. Demand has created back orders of six months for the Cascadia, the company said.



Nielsen said nearly 20 percent of the trucks made at the Cleveland plant, which also produces the Columbia and Argosy lines, are sold through Daimler subsidiaries to markets in South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.



“These overseas markets absolutely love our trucks,” Nielsen said.



The Cleveland plant is the largest Freightliner truck manufacturing facility in the country.



Its current employment stands at approximately 1,400 shop employees and 72 engineers, managers and office staff.



The new shift will represent a 72 percent increase in personnel, of which 1,072 will be shop employees and the rest engineering and support positions.



“You have an economy that's recovering, even though the naysayers say it's not,” said Gary Casteel, Region 8 director for the United Auto Workers Union, which has a strong membership at the Cleveland plant.



Casteel said the trucking industry is usually a leading economic indicator for the United States. “We think this is good news for all the economy,” he said.



Thursday's press conference announcing the return of the second shift in Cleveland never would have occurred without the policies of President Obama's administration, Casteel added.



While it's not necessarily the end of the recession, Nielsen said, Daimler is proud to be leading the economy back into increased productivity. He boasted that the Cascadia truck made in Cleveland is the most innovative, fuel-efficient and comfortable Class 8, on-highway truck in the market, and he also touted the performance of its Detroit-brand engines.



As evidence of the ripple effect Freightliner's rebound will have, Nielsen mentioned some of the suppliers who are connected to the Cleveland plant, such as DuPont (paint colors), Magna Composites (plastics) of Salisbury, ConMet (lightweight aluminum components) of Monroe, Commercial Vehicle Group (interiors) of Statesville and Michelin tires of Greenville, S. C.



Perdue said she was optimistic about an economy she described as making improvements day by day. She praised Daimler for its strong footprint in North Carolina. The company provides paychecks for 4,800 families in the state, she said.



“These are good jobs,” Perdue added.



Thursday's announcement displays again how many N. C. jobs are still tied to making things and how “this section of North Carolina is robust for manufacturing,” Perdue said.



Thomas Built Buses in High Point, a part of Daimler Trucks North America, will be producing all school buses in North Carolina, thanks to its winning the most recent contract.



Corey Hill, president of UAW Local 3520, said he expected the Cleveland plant to produce up to 140 trucks a day by the end of 2012. The Cleveland plant has been experiencing a steady increase in production for much of 2011, he added.



The contract to make military trucks at the plant helped immensely in 2010, Hill said, and he touted the union's “Buy America” campaign for increasing trucking company orders in the United States.



“We build a good quality truck here,” he said.



The company provided tours through the plant later Thursday morning.



Parts of the plant are highly automated, with 87 robots in the pre-paint cab area, for example. To build strength in the cabs, it's a laminating process of “metal, on metal, on metal,” one tour guide explained.



The pre-paint cab area is producing about 65 cabs a day, in a building designed for up to 90 a day. Some unpainted cabs are being shipped to Freightliner's production facility in Mexico.



On Thursday, the two assembly lines were putting together trucks for Old Dominion, National, Schneider and U. S. Express.



At current production levels, one cab is coming off the final assembly line about every 10 minutes.





Daimler's online job listings are available at dtna. jobs.
 
CLEVELAND — Corporate and government officials hail the return of a second shift and ramped-up production at the Freightliner Truck Manufacturing Plant as evidence of an economy on the rebound.

“The ripple effect in the local economy will be seen,” Roger Nielsen, chief operating officer for Daimler Trucks North America, said at press conference this morning when he confirmed that the Cleveland truck plant will be adding 1,100 new jobs by the end of 2012.

In addition, Daimler is adding 100 jobs at its Components and Logistics Plant in Gastonia.

“That’s big news, my friends,” Gov. Bev Perdue told a crowd assembled on the manufacturing floor of the plant.

The majority of positions on the reestablished second shift will be filled with recalled workers who were laid off in 2009. The recalls will begin in early February, maybe earlier, and the new shift is scheduled to be at full strength by September.

“This extra shift, to me, is the most optimistic news,” Perdue said. N. C. Department of Commerce Secretary Keith Crisco also was on hand.

Nielsen said the past couple of years have been tough for the laid-off employees, their families, the Cleveland plant and the industry as a whole. To the workers in particular, he said, “We welcome your return to Freightliner. ”

First-shift employees left their spots on the plant floor and crowded in a semi-circle around the makeshift stage and an audience of 75 to 100 government officials, community leaders and media. They responded with applause at several junctures during the morning’s proceedings.

The Cleveland plant, known mostly for its Freightliner Cascadia trucks, is expected to double production by October. Demand has created back orders of six months for the Cascadia, the company said.

Nielsen said nearly 20 percent of the trucks made at the Cleveland plant, which also produces the Columbia and Argosy lines, are sold through Daimler subsidiaries to markets in South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

“These overseas markets absolutely love our trucks,” Nielsen said.

The Cleveland plant is the largest Freightliner truck manufacturing facility in the country.

Its current employment stands at approximately 1,400 shop employees and 72 engineers, managers and office staff.

The new shift will represent a 72 percent increase in personnel, of which 1,072 will be shop employees and the rest engineering and support positions.

“You have an economy that’s recovering, even though the naysayers say it’s not,” said Gary Casteel, Region 8 director for the United Auto Workers Union, which has a strong membership at the Cleveland plant.

Casteel said the trucking industry is usually a leading economic indicator for the United States. “We think this is good news for all the economy,” he said.

Thursday’s press conference announcing the return of the second shift in Cleveland never would have occurred without the policies of President Obama’s administration, Casteel added.

While it’s not necessarily the end of the recession, Nielsen said, Daimler is proud to be leading the economy back into increased productivity. He boasted that the Cascadia truck made in Cleveland is the most innovative, fuel-efficient and comfortable Class 8, on-highway truck in the market, and he also touted the performance of its Detroit-brand engines.

As evidence of the ripple effect Freightliner’s rebound will have, Nielsen mentioned some of the suppliers who are connected to the Cleveland plant, such as DuPont (paint colors), Magna Composites (plastics) of Salisbury, ConMet (lightweight aluminum components) of Monroe, Commercial Vehicle Group (interiors) of Statesville and Michelin tires of Greenville, S. C.

Perdue said she was optimistic about an economy she described as making improvements day by day. She praised Daimler for its strong footprint in North Carolina. The company provides paychecks for 4,800 families in the state, she said.

“These are good jobs,” Perdue added.

Thursday’s announcement displays again how many N. C. jobs are still tied to making things and how “this section of North Carolina is robust for manufacturing,” Perdue said.

Thomas Built Buses in High Point, a part of Daimler Trucks North America, will be producing all school buses in North Carolina, thanks to its winning the most recent contract.

Corey Hill, president of UAW Local 3520, said he expected the Cleveland plant to produce up to 140 trucks a day by the end of 2012. The Cleveland plant has been experiencing a steady increase in production for much of 2011, he added.

The contract to make military trucks at the plant helped immensely in 2010, Hill said, and he touted the union’s “Buy America” campaign for increasing trucking company orders in the United States.

“We build a good quality truck here,” he said.

The company provided tours through the plant later Thursday morning.

Parts of the plant are highly automated, with 87 robots in the pre-paint cab area, for example. To build strength in the cabs, it’s a laminating process of “metal, on metal, on metal,” one tour guide explained.

The pre-paint cab area is producing about 65 cabs a day, in a building designed for up to 90 a day. Some unpainted cabs are being shipped to Freightliner’s production facility in Mexico.

On Thursday, the two assembly lines were putting together trucks for Old Dominion, National, Schneider and U. S. Express.

At current production levels, one cab is coming off the final assembly line about every 10 minutes.


Daimler's online job listings are available at dtna. jobs.

The union leader and governor are lying through their teeth. The economy is not improving. The Daimler COO explained why that plant is putting a second shift back to work - to support Daimler truck exports to South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.
 
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