Owen Bieber, who led the United Auto Workers union from the auto industry’s dark days of the early 1980s to the prosperity of the mid-1990s, has died. He was 90.
The low-key Mr. Bieber had an easygoing manner that belied his 6-foot-4, 265-pound frame and the results he produced at the bargaining table.
Taking over as its president in 1983, Mr. Bieber shepherded the UAW through a recession, the Reagan era, industry downsizing, and rapidly expanding global competition. Mr. Bieber led the UAW through contract talks that won its members wages, benefits, and job and income security that were unmatched in other major US industries.
“Owen Bieber’s death is a loss for our union and all working people,’’ UAW president Rory Gamble said in a statement. “He was not afraid of tough battles or taking a stand on controversial issues.”
Under Mr. Bieber, the UAW also actively supported the Solidarity labor movement and the antiapartheid movement in South Africa. Mr. Bieber traveled to South Africa twice, raising the alarm about the imprisonment of labor activists and smuggling images of torture out of the country. In 1986, he was arrested while marching at the South African Embassy in Washington D.C.
When former South African president Nelson Mandela toured the United States after his release from prison, Mr. Bieber stood at his side during a rally in Detroit. In 2003, Archbishop Desmond Tutu singled Mr. Bieber out during a visit to Grand Rapids, Mich.
Owen Bieber was born Dec. 28, 1929, in North Dorr, Mich. He joined the union in 1948 when he went to work bending wire for car seats at McInerney Spring and Wire Co. in Grand Rapids and became a shop steward the following year. By 1956 he was president of his local.
In 1961, then-UAW president Walter Reuther made Mr. Bieber a member of the regional staff. He became regional director in 1974 and was elected a UAW vice president in 1980. Three years later, he succeeded Fraser as president.
General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co., and Chrysler Corp. had to get leaner during Mr. Bieber’s tenure to compete with Japanese companies that were winning over American buyers with their smaller, more fuel-efficient cars. But the UAW was able to negotiate deals that helped workers keep their pensions or kept paychecks coming even if they were laid off.
‘‘We did what unions are supposed to do,’’ Mr. Bieber said shortly before Yokich succeeded him as president. “If you look at the rough road that workers have had to come over and live through since the late 1970s . . . a worker who belonged to the UAW, who was a member of the UAW, probably that was the best thing that could have happened to them.”
Union membership shrunk in size by about half between 1979 and 1995.
One of Mr. Bieber’s sons, Ron Bieber, is now president of the Michigan AFL-CIO labor union. “Owen Bieber left behind a world that is better off because of his activism and dedication to service to others,’’ Ron Bieber said in a statement.