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Independent monitor says UAW has ‘fallen short’ in reform efforts -Breaking

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© Reuters. FILEPHOTO: At a May Day rally held by The NewsGuild of New York to support media workers, a person is carrying a UAW flag and patch during an International Workers’ Day event in Manhattan. New York City. U.S. May 1.

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – An independent monitor appointed by the court to supervise the United Auto Workers union following a federal corruption investigation said that the union had “fallen short” of its reform efforts. He also disclosed that he currently has 15 investigations.

Neil Barofsky is a former federal prosecutor who stated in his first report that the UAW should “take more affirmative steps to completely eradicate the strong remnants [of the toxic] culture which characterized it recent past and continues to be present today.”

In December, federal prosecutors settled and the union consented to this oversight.

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