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Ford to build Explorer in Chicago, add jobs

Ford already builds the Ford Taurus and Lincoln MKS sedans at the Chicago plant, which currently has about 1,300 hourly workers represented by the United Auto Workers union.

Ford to build Explorer in Chicago, add jobs
Ford Motor Co plans to announce on Tuesday that it will build the next version of its Explorer sport-utility vehicle at its Chicago assembly plant, adding 1,200 jobs, a source familiar with the matter said.                                           
 
Ford already builds the Ford Taurus and Lincoln MKS sedans at the Chicago plant, which currently has about 1,300 hourly workers represented by the United Auto Workers union.                                           
Ford spokesman Todd Nissen declined to comment.                                           

The Chicago plant, which opened in 1924, was one of five in the United States that was promised a new vehicle program in February when the UAW approved a cost-cutting agreement with the automaker.                                           

The Chicago assembly plant had about 2,300 workers before it went to a single shift in summer 2008.                                           

The announcement of the move is expected to come two days before Ford releases its fourth-quarter and full 2009 earnings results and at a time when it has been gaining both market share and critical raves for a revamped product line.                                           

Ford has scheduled a news conference with Mark Fields, Ford's president of the Americas, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn and others at the Chicago plant on Tuesday.                                           

UAW officials also are expected to attend the event.                                           

The person who discussed Ford's production plans asked not to be named because a formal announcement has not been made.                                           

It was not clear whether workers for the additional Chicago-based jobs would be hired in at a second-tier wage of $14 per hour.                                           

That lower hourly wage is about half of what current UAW assembly workers make.

Ford, GM and Chrysler won the right to hire new workers at that wage rate as part of an effort to bring labor costs in line with wages paid to non-union workers at factories run by rivals led by Toyota Motor Corp.                                           

The Explorer has been built at Ford's Louisville assembly plant in Kentucky, one of three truck plants being converted to produce smaller vehicles. Ford has not announced which vehicles will be built in Louisville.                                           

The only large US automaker not to reorganize under a government-managed bankruptcy, Ford has said that it expects to be solidly profitable in 2011. However, many analysts believe Ford will be profitable in 2010 and Ford is expected to update its outlook on Thursday.                                            

Sales of the Explorer have slipped sharply from the peak of the SUV boom of a decade ago but the vehicle remains a key part of Ford's line-up. Explorer sales peaked at more than 445,000 in 2000, and sales averaged about 412,000 per year from 1995 through 2003.                                           

Sales of the Explorer fell 34% to 52,190 in 2009 but the aging SUV still outsold the Taurus and MKS.                                           

Sales of the Taurus, also a one-time driver of Ford profits during its heyday in the 1980s and 1990s, fell 13% in 2009 to 45,617. Lincoln MKS sales fell 32% to 17,174. 

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