CAW National President Ken Lewenza speaks to reporters following a Canadian Auto Workers' news conference announcing the union will focus its talks with Ford as negotiations continue a day before a strike deadline between the union and the big three automakers in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Michelle Siu)
CAW National President Ken Lewenza speaks to reporters following a Canadian Auto Workers' news conference announcing the union will focus its talks with Ford as negotiations continue a day before a strike deadline between the union and the big three automakers in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Michelle Siu)
CAW National President Ken Lewenza, center, and CAW National Secretary Treasurer Peter Kennedy, right, walk into the Canadian Auto Workers' press conference to announce the union will focus its talks with Ford a day before a strike deadline between the union and the big three automakers in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Michelle Siu)
CAW National President Ken Lewenza, right, listens to a question during the Canadian Auto Workers' press conference announcing the union will focus its talks with Ford as negotiations continue a day before a strike deadline between the union and the big three automakers in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Michelle Siu)
CAW National President Ken Lewenza speaks at the Canadian Auto Workers' press conference announcing the union will focus its talks with Ford as negotiations continue a day before a strike deadline between the union and the big three automakers in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Michelle Siu)
TORONTO (AP) ? The Canadian Auto Workers union said that it reached a tentative contract deal with Ford Motor Co., but a midnight strike deadline looms with Detroit's two other automakers.
CAW President Ken Lewenza said he expects the four-year agreement with Ford ? which lowers wages for new hires and freezes wage increases ? will serve as a template for General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC. He said if there is "light at end of the tunnel" the union will extend the midnight deadline, but it will also consider a strike.
"If they say it is unacceptable, we will have no choice to withdraw our labor," Lewenza said. "Don't force us to use that last tool."
The union earlier told its members that it was optimistic strikes could be averted after the CAW decided to focus on talks with Ford. The automaker recognizes that the union won't accept a permanent lower wage for new hires, the union said.
Under the agreement reached Monday, Ford will pay new workers 60 percent of the current top wage of $33.89 Canadian dollars ($34.74) an hour, according to the CAW. That would mean new workers would be paid around $20.84. They can move up the wage scale and reach the top wage in 10 years.
U.S. workers at the Detroit automakers approved a similar two-tier wage agreement five years ago, but in those agreements, workers don't automatically get the top wage after 10 years.
There are no base wage increases during the life of the agreement, which lasts until Sept 2016, but each employee will receive a $2,000 lump sum payment which will cover cost of living increases and a $3,000 ratification bonus.
A spokeswoman for Chrysler said it is still reviewing the Ford deal and didn't have immediate comment. GM also declined comment.
If GM and Chrysler don't go along with the Ford deal, that could mean labor trouble, said Art Schwartz, a former General Motors negotiator who now runs a labor consulting business in Ann Arbor, Mich.
"I think the CAW is fully prepared to strike if they get a deal with one company and another decides to change it radically," he said.
Chrysler has taken issue with the CAW focusing its efforts on Ford, saying Ford doesn't have as large a footprint in Canada as Chrysler and GM do.
The auto companies say Canada is the most expensive place in the world to make cars and trucks, and they could move production south if the CAW doesn't cut costs. The CAW represents about 21,000 auto workers in Canada and about 16 percent of auto production in North America.
The agreement averts a strike at Ford, and 800 laid-off Ford employees will go back to work, partially through the creation of 600 new jobs at its Canadian operations.
Lewenza said it's a good deal in today's economic climate. He said Ford workers will vote on it this weekend.
Ford declined to provide specifics on the tentative deal because it hasn't been ratified by the workers.
"We believe that the tentative agreement offers unique-to-Canada solutions that will improve the competitiveness of the Canadian operations while providing employees the opportunity to earn a good living," Stacey Allerton, a Ford of Canada vice president, said in a statement.
Canada's advantages in the past ? a weaker Canadian dollar and government health care ? have all but vanished. In addition, the United Auto Workers union in the U.S. has agreed to steeper concessions than the CAW, making U.S. labor costs cheaper. Going into the talks, the Detroit automakers were paying an estimated $60 to $62 an hour for labor and benefits in Canada, compared with $50 an hour at Chrysler, $56 at Ford and $58 at GM, according to the Center for Automotive Research, a nonprofit research group.
The federal Canadian and Ontario province governments worked in tandem with the U.S. government on auto bailouts in 2009 to maintain Canada's share of North American auto production. Canada's share peaked at 3.2 million cars in 1999, about 17.4 percent of North American production. In 2011, Canada produced 2.1 million vehicles, or about 16 percent.
Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty said Monday his government has every confidence that the union and the companies will reach agreements.
"I'm confident that people know what's at stake and they're going to find a way," he said.
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Auto writers Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit contributed to this report.
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