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Pay Blackout for Auto workers!

900 workers hit by a sudden pay blackout as $148M automaker collapses

OMG!

900 workers hit by a sudden pay blackout as $148M automaker collapses

Story by Silas Redmond
 • 18h • 
8 min read
900 workers hit by a sudden pay blackout as $148M automaker collapses
900 workers hit by a sudden pay blackout as $148M automaker collapses

The sudden halt of paychecks for hundreds of auto workers is not an isolated shock, it is the latest flashpoint in a year when tariffs, shifting demand and production pauses have repeatedly thrown factory jobs into limbo. As one automaker's $148 million operation unravels, roughly 900 people are discovering how quickly a stable paycheck can vanish when global trade policy and corporate strategy collide.



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I see this collapse not as a one-off failure, but as part of a broader pattern in which tariff fights, electric vehicle growing pains and cross-border supply chains are converging on the same vulnerable point: the workers on the line. From Stellantis to General Motors, the same number keeps surfacing, 900, and with it a warning about how fragile "good manufacturing jobs" have become in the current policy and market environment.

Tariffs, Trump and the new shock to auto paychecks

The immediate trigger for the latest pay blackout sits at the intersection of trade policy and corporate risk management. As President Donald Trump's new auto tariffs bite into cross-border supply chains, Stellantis has moved to put 900 U.S. Jobs on Hold, effectively freezing income for hundreds of families while the company recalibrates. The move underscores how quickly a policy decision in Washington can cascade into a payroll crisis on the factory floor, especially when a company's business model depends on shuttling parts and vehicles across borders.

Related video: Truck maker shuts down after missed payrolls—hundreds laid off (Veuer)
Truck maker shuts down after missed payrolls, Hundreds laid off
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Truck maker shuts down after missed payrolls—hundreds laid off

In practical terms, "on hold" means workers who expected steady wages are suddenly staring at reduced hours, temporary layoffs or unpaid downtime while Stellantis Responds to the new Auto Tariffs. The company is not alone in pointing to Trump's trade measures as the catalyst, but its decision to hit pause on 900 positions shows how tariffs can function like a circuit breaker in the labor market, cutting power to paychecks even before a plant formally closes. For workers, the distinction between a temporary freeze and a permanent layoff matters less than the immediate reality that the next paycheck may not arrive.

Stellantis pauses production across borders

Behind the suspended paychecks is a broader production strategy that stretches beyond U.S. borders. Stellantis has begun idling assembly plants in Canada and Mexico, a move that ripples back into U.S. facilities that depend on a steady flow of parts and partially assembled vehicles. When production slows in one country, overtime evaporates and shifts are cut in another, and the first sign workers see is a thinner paycheck or a notice that their hours are being "temporarily adjusted."

The company's own framing is that these steps are necessary to absorb the cost of new tariffs and adapt to a more fragmented trade landscape. Yet for the people whose livelihoods depend on those cross-border plants, the language of "temporary" offers limited comfort. As Stellantis leans on its North American network to manage the shock, the workers in Canada and Mexico who see their plants idled are joined by U.S. colleagues whose jobs are suddenly on hold, all caught in the same tariff-driven squeeze.

How 900 U.S. workers became the face of tariff fallout

The number 900 has become a shorthand for the human cost of the current tariff regime. Earlier this year, company leaders acknowledged that 900 workers to be laid off temporarily from U.S. auto plants were directly affected as they cited Trump tariffs and weakening net revenues. Those workers are not just statistics in a trade dispute, they are the people who suddenly have to decide which bills can wait, whether to dip into savings, and how to explain to their kids that the next vacation or school activity is off the table.


When executives point to tariffs as the reason for these temporary layoffs, they are effectively acknowledging that policy choices in Washington are being translated into unpaid days on the shop floor. The fact that leadership explicitly linked the 900 layoffs to Trump's measures and to pressure on net revenues shows how tightly financial performance and trade rules are now intertwined. For workers, the message is blunt: their job security is contingent not only on how many cars the company can sell, but also on how the White House chooses to tax the parts and vehicles that cross the border.

Stellantis and the $148M question

The collapse of a $148 million automaker is not just a balance sheet event, it is a test of how resilient the modern auto workforce really is. When a company with that level of investment suddenly falters, the first visible impact is a pay blackout for the people who build its vehicles, maintain its equipment and keep its logistics running. I see that financial implosion as the backdrop for Stellantis's decision to put 900 jobs on hold, a sign that management is trying to avoid a similar fate by cutting labor costs before losses deepen.

At the same time, Stellantis is pausing production at assembly plants in Canada and Mexico while also adjusting schedules at factories in Michigan and Indiana. That cross-border retrenchment is a reminder that the $148 million at stake is not just tied up in buildings and machinery, it is embedded in a network of workers whose paychecks depend on every link in the chain staying profitable. When one part of that network buckles under tariffs and market pressure, the financial shock travels quickly, and the people who feel it first are the ones whose wages are easiest to switch off.

General Motors and the 900-worker pattern

The Stellantis turmoil is not happening in isolation, it is unfolding alongside a parallel story at General Motors that features the same haunting figure: 900. At the Fairfax Assembly and Stamping Plant near Kansas City, Kansas, General Motors has laid off roughly 900 workers as it suspends a second shift. For those employees, the production pause translates directly into lost wages, and for the surrounding community it means fewer paychecks circulating through local shops, restaurants and service businesses.

The company has framed the Fairfax decision as a response to a production pause and scheduling changes, but the effect on workers is similar to what Stellantis employees are experiencing under the tariff squeeze. In both cases, 900 people find themselves suddenly sidelined, their income dependent on decisions made far above their pay grade. The Fairfax Assembly and Stamping Plant becomes another symbol of how quickly a modern auto plant can go from humming to half-idle, with hundreds of families left to absorb the financial shock.

From temporary cuts to indefinite layoffs

What begins as a "temporary" adjustment can easily harden into something more permanent. General Motors has already shown how that progression can look in practice, putting 900 workers on indefinite lay-off at its Fairfax facility as it navigates weak EV demand and delayed scheduling. For those employees, the shift from a short-term furlough to an open-ended layoff means the difference between waiting out a rough patch and having to contemplate a full career reset.

Indefinite status also changes the power dynamic between workers and management. When a layoff has no clear end date, it becomes harder for unions and local officials to negotiate around a specific recall timeline, and easier for the company to quietly restructure its workforce. The Fairfax case shows how a production pause can evolve into a long-term reduction in headcount, leaving 900 people in limbo while the company retools its strategy.

The EV slowdown and a wider wave of cuts

Layered on top of tariff pressures is a separate but related challenge: the cooling of the electric vehicle market after years of aggressive investment. General Motors has temporarily cut about 5,500 workers across three U.S. plants as it reassesses its EV strategy following years of heavy spending on plug-in technology. Those 5,500 workers join the 900 at Fairfax and the 900 at Stellantis-linked plants in a growing cohort of employees whose paychecks are collateral damage in the industry's pivot toward electrification.

The EV slowdown complicates any simple narrative about tariffs being the sole culprit. Even in plants not directly hit by new trade rules, workers are seeing shifts cut and overtime vanish as companies recalibrate their EV production targets. For employees, the distinction between a tariff-driven layoff and an EV-demand-driven furlough is academic, the result is the same: less money in the bank and more uncertainty about whether the job they trained for will still exist in a year.

Communities absorbing the $148M collapse

When a $148 million automaker collapses or a major plant goes dark, the damage radiates far beyond the factory gates. Local tax bases shrink as payrolls fall, school districts lose revenue, and small businesses that depend on worker spending see sales drop. In places like Kansas City, Kansas, where the Fairfax Assembly and Stamping Plant has long been an anchor employer, the loss of 900 steady paychecks can tip marginal businesses into the red and accelerate population decline as families move in search of work.

The same pattern plays out around Stellantis facilities affected by tariffs and production pauses. As 900 U.S. Jobs on Hold turn into weeks or months without full pay, landlords, credit unions and local hospitals all feel the strain. The collapse of a $148 million operation is therefore not just a corporate failure, it is a community event that reshapes housing markets, public services and even local politics, as residents demand answers about why national trade policy and corporate strategy left their town exposed.

What the 900-worker shocks reveal about the next downturn

Looking across Stellantis and General Motors, I see the repeated 900-worker shocks as an early warning about how the next industrial downturn will unfold. Instead of a single dramatic plant closure, companies are increasingly using rolling temporary layoffs, indefinite furloughs and cross-border production pauses to manage risk. That approach spreads the pain across multiple facilities and countries, but it also makes it harder for workers to organize a clear response, since each group is told its situation is unique or temporary.

At the same time, the combination of Trump's Auto Tariffs, EV market volatility and the collapse of a $148 million automaker suggests that workers are now exposed to a wider range of forces than in past cycles. Their paychecks depend not only on how many vehicles roll off the line, but also on trade negotiations, battery supply chains and executive bets on future technology. The 900 people whose pay has suddenly gone dark are the visible edge of that new reality, and unless policy makers and corporate leaders adjust, they are unlikely to be the last.

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Entry #9,365

Missouri pick 3, midday specific.

Midday as of 12/20/2025

Number Filter Option Information 
353 Draw Occurrence Chart 
268 (8/353): 682 628 268 286 628 268 628 ... 
279 (7/353): 729 792 792 792 927 297 972 
156 (6/353): 561 615 651 156 156 165 
457 (6/353): 475 457 547 457 457 475 
059 (5/353): 590 095 905 509 590 
134 (5/353): 431 314 143 431 143 
178 (5/353): 187 178 718 187 718 
258 (5/353): 528 582 852 852 582 
567 (5/353): 765 657 576 567 675 
045 (4/353): 540 054 450 045 
119 (4/353): 911 119 119 119 
147 (4/353): 471 174 471 471 
158 (4/353): 581 158 158 518 
223 (4/353): 223 322 223 223 
249 (4/353): 429 492 492 924 
269 (4/353): 962 269 629 296 
349 (4/353): 349 394 439 439 
357 (4/353): 357 735 753 753 
478 (4/353): 487 874 748 487 
489 (4/353): 948 849 984 498 
589 (4/353): 859 598 859 589 
012 (3/353): 120 021 201 
015 (3/353): 501 150 105 
016 (3/353): 160 061 106 
017 (3/353): 170 701 107 
018 (3/353): 108 801 081 
025 (3/353): 520 052 025 
037 (3/353): 073 037 073 
038 (3/353): 830 038 803 
039 (3/353): 903 309 930 
049 (3/353): 409 490 409 
058 (3/353): 058 580 580 
113 (3/353): 311 131 113 
139 (3/353): 319 319 193 
159 (3/353): 591 591 519 
167 (3/353): 617 176 176 
169 (3/353): 619 196 196 
199 (3/353): 991 991 199 
225 (3/353): 252 225 252 
237 (3/353): 273 273 732 
299 (3/353): 929 992 929 
344 (3/353): 344 344 434 
356 (3/353): 365 356 635 
388 (3/353): 388 838 883 
469 (3/353): 946 649 496 
568 (3/353): 865 568 568 
588 (3/353): 858 885 885 
678 (3/353): 876 687 786 
889 (3/353): 988 988 889 
899 (3/353): 998 899 998 
001 (2/353): 001 100 
003 (2/353): 003 030 
005 (2/353): 500 500 
009 (2/353): 009 900 
013 (2/353): 130 031 
024 (2/353): 240 240 
028 (2/353): 028 028 
033 (2/353): 033 033 
034 (2/353): 304 430 
036 (2/353): 360 360 
044 (2/353): 044 440 
046 (2/353): 046 064 
048 (2/353): 840 408 
057 (2/353): 057 057 
066 (2/353): 066 606 
068 (2/353): 680 860 
069 (2/353): 096 096 
078 (2/353): 780 087 
079 (2/353): 907 079 
112 (2/353): 211 112 
123 (2/353): 213 123 
125 (2/353): 125 251 
127 (2/353): 712 217 
129 (2/353): 912 219 
137 (2/353): 317 731 
148 (2/353): 814 418 
179 (2/353): 917 197 
188 (2/353): 188 881 
229 (2/353): 292 922 
233 (2/353): 323 332 
235 (2/353): 523 532 
236 (2/353): 236 632 
238 (2/353): 832 238 
239 (2/353): 329 239 
245 (2/353): 524 245 
246 (2/353): 642 246 
267 (2/353): 627 627 
277 (2/353): 727 772 
278 (2/353): 827 287 
289 (2/353): 829 982 
338 (2/353): 383 338 
346 (2/353): 346 364 
369 (2/353): 396 963 
399 (2/353): 939 939 
448 (2/353): 448 448 
455 (2/353): 554 554 
458 (2/353): 845 845 
466 (2/353): 466 466 
557 (2/353): 575 575 
577 (2/353): 775 775 
578 (2/353): 578 587 
579 (2/353): 975 957 
668 (2/353): 866 668 
788 (2/353): 878 878 
799 (2/353): 997 997 
002 (1/353): 002 
004 (1/353): 004 
006 (1/353): 006 
007 (1/353): 700 
008 (1/353): 008 
019 (1/353): 109 
023 (1/353): 023 
026 (1/353): 026 
029 (1/353): 902 
056 (1/353): 065 
067 (1/353): 670 
089 (1/353): 089 
099 (1/353): 990 
111 (1/353): 111 
114 (1/353): 141 
118 (1/353): 181 
124 (1/353): 214 
135 (1/353): 315 
136 (1/353): 163 
145 (1/353): 154 
146 (1/353): 416 
157 (1/353): 715 
166 (1/353): 661 
168 (1/353): 168 
189 (1/353): 918 
227 (1/353): 722 
234 (1/353): 423 
244 (1/353): 442 
247 (1/353): 247 
248 (1/353): 482 
255 (1/353): 525 
259 (1/353): 295 
266 (1/353): 266 
334 (1/353): 343 
336 (1/353): 363 
348 (1/353): 438 
355 (1/353): 553 
358 (1/353): 358 
366 (1/353): 663 
378 (1/353): 873 
379 (1/353): 397 
445 (1/353): 445 
449 (1/353): 494 
456 (1/353): 654 
479 (1/353): 947 
488 (1/353): 488 
556 (1/353): 565 
558 (1/353): 855 
569 (1/353): 965 
667 (1/353): 676 
669 (1/353): 696 
677 (1/353): 776 
679 (1/353): 679 
688 (1/353): 688 
689 (1/353): 869 
778 (1/353): 877 

59 filter options were not found in the 353 numbers 
000 011 014 022 027 035 047 055 077 088 115 116 117 122 126 128 133 138 144 149 155 177 222 224 226 228 256 257 288 333 335 337 339 345 347 359 367 368 377 389 444 446 447 459 467 468 477 499 555 559 566 599 666 699 777 779 789 888 999 

Entry #9,364

New Hospital in Missouri! Children's Hospital!

NAACP says SSM Cardinal Glennon Hospital is not fulfilling promises

 

NAACP says SSM Cardinal Glennon Hospital is not fulfilling promises

Story by First Alert 4 Staff
 • 16h • 
1 min read
NAACP says SSM Cardinal Glennon Hospital is not fulfilling promises
NAACP says SSM Cardinal Glennon Hospital is not fulfilling promises

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (First Alert 4) - The St. Louis chapter of the NAACP is calling out SSM Health, claiming they aren’t fulfilling their commitment to hire minorities in the construction of the new Cardinal Glennon Hospital.

Well, the standard for women owned businesses is 11% that
Current Time  0:34
Duration  1:37
KMOV St. Louis
NAACP says SSM Cardinal Glennon Hospital is not fulfilling promises
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The new hospital is located in Midtown and slated to open in 2027.

The NAACP says millions of tax dollars were given to the project, under the agreement that SSM would meet certain standards, hiring standards.

For example, 21% of contracts were supposed to go to African-American-owned businesses, but the NAACP says it’s under 10% for the new hospital.



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The standard for women-owned businesses is 11%, but this project has less than half of that.

The NAACP says there’s also very little Hispanic, Asian and Native-American representation.

SSM Health responded in a statement, saying in part:

“From the start, we’ve engaged key stakeholders and worked diligently to meet voluntary workforce goals while balancing project costs and health care affordability. Current participation numbers remain strong.”

SSM also says it has invested significantly in the Midtown redevelopment area and is investing in a credit union, which will help provide money for minority businesses.

Entry #9,360

Missouri pick 3 evening: Sum 14

Sum 14,  skips evening specific:  58 draws out! 

Tier 4
914(419,419,194) 815(581,518,851)

Tier 2
284(248) 509(509) 464(464) 275(572) 176(716) 680(680)

Tier 1
077 635 266 923

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tier 1
338 347 455

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tier 6
347(374,437,473,734,743)

Tier 5
059(095,590,905,950) 068(086,608,806,860) 239(293,329,392,932) 356(365,536,563,653)

Tier 4
167(617,671,761) 257(527,725,752) 428(482,824,842)

Tier 3
149(491,941) 338(383,833) 455(545,554)

Tier 2
158(185) 446(644) 626(662) 707(770)

Entry #9,358

Powerball @ 1.1 Billion.

 

I played Mega Million last week in Florida, didn't win nothing and 2 lines cost $10 bucks, I could have played a lot of numbers in pick 3 with those $10 bucks I lost, 🤣

Entry #9,356

Feeling some type of way on 938 hitting.

I had all intentions of going out to play last night, but, I didn't.

I have been slamming this number for over a month heavy , but, like all year.

I just don't know how to feel about it, other than, keep hope alive that it is drawn on midday as a repeat, because,

Missouri does like to repeat numbers.

When the 829 played, I had 839!

With 3 being the wild ball for the 829, that was a trigger, but, I fumbled the bag.

Good Luck.

Entry #9,352