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General Motors will invest more than a billion dollars to produce heavy-duty trucks in Flint

Vehicles go through the assembly line at a General Motors assembly plant in Lansing, Mich., on Feb. 21. GM is assessing the feasibility of converting its plants to make medical equipment.
Bill Pugliano
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Getty Images
Vehicles go through the assembly line at a General Motors assembly plant in Lansing, Mich., on Feb. 21. GM is assessing the feasibility of converting its plants to make medical equipment.

Officials with General Motors say the automaker will invest more than a billion (b) dollars to help produce heavy-duty trucks in Flint.

Most of the money is targeted to re-tool and expand the Flint Assembly plant…where workers will build the latest gasoline and diesel-powered heavy-duty pickup trucks.

The rest of the investment funds improvements at the Flint Metal Center. The move is despite G-M officials’ pledge to shift to an all-electric vehicle lineup by 2035.

But right now…the automakers’ heavy-duty pickups are proving extremely profitable.

   Last year…sales of the trucks reportedly rose almost 40 percent compared to the year before.

Quinn Klinefelter is a host and Senior News Editor for 101.9 WDET, anchoring midday newscasts and preparing reports for WDET, NPR and the BBC.