Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne with UAW President Bob King seen earlier this year.

Working well into the night, Chrysler and United Auto Workers Union negotiators hammered out a new contract for 26,000 hourly employees – nearly a month after the maker’s original labor contract was set to expire.

The deal makes the conclusion of this year’s round of bargaining for the Detroit makers – contract talks considered crucial to both labor and management.  Significantly, the talks steered clear of the angry rhetoric and confrontations that had seemed a traditional part of bargaining for the domestic manufacturers.

While specific details of the Chrysler contract have yet to be released initial indications are that the settlement follows the pattern set last month by the UAW’s contract with General Motors, which would include a small “signing bonus,” improvements in profit sharing, some inflation protection and a modest increase in wages for new workers hired into a lower second tier.

But, notably, there will be no increase in base wages for its hourly workers.  And, overall, Chrysler is likely to have accepted little of an increase in its overall labor costs, which averaged just over $50 an hour going into this round of talks.

Meanwhile, as at GM as well as Ford, Chrysler is expected to come away with union-authorized improvements to its productivity efforts.  Those measures were considered significant enough that ratings agencies Moody’s and S&P upgraded General Motors and are expected to give Ford a much-needed upgrade, as well, if its tentative contract is ratified – as union leaders anticipate.

Chrysler’s settlement has taken a bit longer to reach than anticipated.  In fact, it initially appeared likely it would be the first maker to come up with a new 4-year agreement.  But in the hours before the September 14th deadline a snag set in and UAW leaders decided to focus on GM.  That drew an angry written rebuke from Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne.

But what could have become a nasty public squabble quickly cooled off – perhaps because the UAW was prohibited from striking under the terms of the 2009 federal bailout that saved the maker after it emerged from Chapter 11 protection.

Some observers thought a settlement would be reached this past weekend, after local union leaders from Chrysler plants all over the U.S. were summoned from Detroit – but it appears the final terms were delayed as the maker continued to demand that any increase in one column of the new contract be offset by cuts elsewhere.

The union is expected to quickly outline the terms of the agreement after meeting with those local officials now in Detroit, a ratification vote set to follow.

With contracts in hand for all three makers, UAW President Bob King is expected to next focus his efforts on trying to organize the mostly non-union “transplant” assembly plants operated by makers like Toyota, BMW and Hyundai that now dot the American landscape.

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