-The Tennessee Titans promoted Mike Reinfeldt to Senior Executive Vice President/Chief Operating Officer after serving as the team’s General Manager for the past five seasons, and Ruston Webster was elevated to Executive Vice President/General Manager after serving two seasons as the Titans Vice President of Player Personnel. Additionally, Lake Dawson has been promoted to Vice President of Player Personnel.
Reinfeldt will oversee all aspects of the organization - both football and non-football - in Nashville and will report to Titans owner K.S. “Bud” Adams, Jr.. Webster will assume control of all football operations for the team.
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| Lake Dawson has been promoted to Vice President of Player Personnel. |
“Mike has done a nice job for us as our general manager, but I believe we need someone in place who oversees the entire franchise there in Nashville,” said Adams. “Mike is uniquely qualified for that position with his previous experience. Our VP’s have done an outstanding job over the past couple of years managing their departments, but this will streamline things to have someone on site to direct the entire organization and who will execute things the way I want them done.
“With this shuffle, we really have the best of both worlds – as you might remember our final two candidates when we were filling the general manager position five years ago were Mike (Reinfeldt) and Ruston Webster. We now have both of them working for us and Ruston will take over the General Manager role.”
Head coach Mike Munchak called Webster a "great talent evaluator."
“This is a great decision by Mr. Adams to keep a group of good people together," Munchak said. "Ruston is a ready for this job. He did a great job last year with the draft – organizing things, involving all of the parties, evaluating the talent, communicating through the draft process. His greatest access is his ability to evaluate talent and I expect that to continue and look forward to working with him. Ruston also will benefit from having Mike as a resource and a sounding board.”
“I want to thank Mr. Adams for naming me to this position,” added Reinfeldt. “I look forward to further integrating all of our departments and believe a lot of good will stem from this move. I am really happy for Ruston, because he is ready to be a general manager and I expect he will excel in that role.”
Webster has six years of experience in the Player Personnel role split between three teams – two years with the Titans, four with the Seattle Seahawks and one with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He also served as the interim General Manager for the Seahawks for the conclusion of the 2009 season, after Tim Ruskell’s departure from the team. In addition to working in Pro Personnel, Webster has a vast depth of experience as a college scout, serving as the Director of College Scouting for Tampa Bay for four seasons (2001-04) and 10 seasons as a regional scout for the Bucs.
Dawson has spent five seasons with the Titans – his first four as Director of Pro Scouting and last season as VP/Football Operations. He originally joined the Titans in 2007 as the Director of Pro Scouting.
Reinfeldt’s background:
Tennessee Titans (2007-2011), General Manager; Seattle Seahawks (1999-03, 2005-06), Sr. VP (1999-03), VP-Football Operations (2005-06); Green Bay Packers (1991-98), CFO (1991-93), VP-Administration (1994-98); University of Southern California (1988-90), Associate Athletic Director; Los Angeles Raiders (1985-87), CFO; Houston Oilers (1976-83), Safety; Oakland Raiders (1975-76), Safety.
Webster’s background:
Tennessee Titans (2010-11), VP-Player Personnel; Seattle Seahawks (2006-09) VP-Player Personnel; Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1988 – 2005), Dir. of Player Personnel (2005), Dir. of College Scouting (2001-04), Dir. of Pro Personnel (1989-91), Regional Scout (1988, 1992-2000); College Coach, Tulsa (1987), Alabama (1986), Southwestern Louisiana (1985).
Some 1,700 jobs and two car lines will return to Spring Hill under a proposed agreement between General Motors and United Auto workers, various news sources are reporting today.
Two mid-sized vehicles would be produced at Spring Hill. Production has originally been planned for Mexico.
General Motors closed the Spring Hill plan in 2009 during the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression despite huge modernization of the Maury County facility.
Additional need for Ecotec four-cylinder engines used in Chevrolet's fuel-efficient cars and crossovers, including the all-new 2013 Malibu, is driving $65 million in new investment at plants in New York and Tennessee that will create or retain 163 jobs.
"GM is committed to investing in manufacturing and jobs in the U.S.," said Cathy Clegg, vice president Labor Relations. "These investments in powertrain manufacturing technology will help us meet the growing needs of our customers for high quality, fuel efficient vehicles - both today and in the future."
In Spring Hill, Tenn., the engine plant is adding capacity for direct-injection four-cylinder engines to support the acceleration of the 2013 Chevrolet Malibu. GM Is investing $32 million that will create or retain 63 positions.
In Tonawanda, N.Y., additional capacity is being added for engines used in the Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain crossovers that achieve 32 mpg on the highway and can travel up to 600 miles between fill-ups. GM is investing $33 million that will create or retain 100 jobs.
The next-generation Malibu is scheduled to start production in early 2012. It will be sold in about 100 countries on six continents. Chevrolet will begin sales in the United States with the Eco, the most fuel-efficient Malibu ever. It features GM's 2.4L Ecotec with eAssist technology. Malibu will debut an all-new 2.5L Ecotec engine next summer. The new Malibu will be assembled at the Fairfax Assembly plant in Kansas City, Kan., and Detroit-Hamtramck plant in the United States, as well as other plants around the world.
"With gas prices becoming increasingly unstable, investment in new powertrains is vital if GM wants to be competitive," said Joe Ashton, UAW vice president-GM Department. "Our customers want vehicles that get great gas mileage and our members have proven they can build innovative products that exceed our customers' expectations."
The Tonawanda and Spring Hill investments are part of $2 billion in U.S. manufacturing investment GM announced May 10 that will create or retain 4,000 jobs in 17 facilities in eight states. These investments are in addition to $3.4 million GM has invested in U.S. manufacturing facilities since July 2009, adding or retaining more than 9,000 jobs.
Additionally, GM announced Friday the Saginaw Metal Casting Operations will export aluminum castings for the lightweight Ecotec 2.4L engine that is used in fuel-efficient vehicles like the Opel Antara and Chevrolet Captiva in Asia. The Saginaw work will create or retain 53 jobs.
General Motors (NYSE: GM, TSX: GMM), one of the world's largest automakers, traces its roots back to 1908. With its global headquarters in Detroit, GM employs 202,000 people in every major region of the world and does business in more than 120 countries. GM and its strategic partners produce cars and trucks in 30 countries, and sell and service these vehicles through the following brands: Baojun, Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC, Daewoo, Holden, Isuzu, Jiefang, Opel, Vauxhall, and Wuling. GM's largest national market is China, followed by the United States, Brazil, the United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, and Italy. GM's OnStar subsidiary is the industry leader in vehicle safety, security and information services. More information on the new General Motors can be found at www.gm.com.
SOURCE General Motors






