Bobbi Marsh puts her 11-year-old son to bed each night and then heads to her job at General Motors’ metal-stamping plant in Lordstown, Ohio. She gets home in time to make him breakfast.

Marsh, 34, is one of thousands of auto workers in the U.S. benefiting from the return of a third shift at factories — often from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. — translating to 24-hour-a-day production at many plants for the first time since the industry collapse in 2009. At the nadir, some plants ran only one eight-hour shift.

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