-How did
you feel when the plant closed down?
-It was
devastating. A factory with over 200 workers that shuts down overnight, and
in a country that is going through very difficult times… None of us has been
able to get back into the labor market.
-How are
the country’s difficulties manifested?
-The thing
is that economically the country is doing bad, inflation is very high, and
there’s an acute crisis. The little money people are able to scrounge
together is not enough for them to eat decently. I’m sure that many of my
fellow workers are already going hungry, because everything is so expensive…
The government says the country is stable, but that’s not so, and you can
see it when you go to the supermarket: a pack of low-quality meat costs 150
pesos (approximately 4.3 US dollars).
-Are the
prices of food items very steep?
-The price
of everything is exorbitant, medicines too. Being sick here is a luxury,
because unfortunately there is no way to cover basic expenses. I myself have
not recovered yet; I can hardly sleep; I’ve lost ten pounds… I don’t like to
talk about this… It’s getting very difficult, for all of us… -Nereyda
breaks off, choked by a lump in her throat that makes her voice break.
…it’s just
that I don’t like to have to be airing these things out; I spent many, many
years inside the plant and I felt like I was part of a family. We’d already
been having a hard time with the new Human Resource manager, Ana Isabel,
who had been gradually taking away our benefits, but now this… It’s the
worst possible time to be throwing so many workers out on the street.
Somehow, this company should’ve shown a bit more gratefulness towards the
country, a country that made it possible for it to amass so much money. And
it should’ve also shown some appreciation to its workers, who worked hard
day after day to give their best to the job.
Even the toys that were distributed as gifts to the children on
Three Wise Men’s Day, as established in the Collective
Agreement, went down so much in quality that it was shameful. |
-How old
are you?
-I’m 41
years old, but some of my fellow workers are 53 or older, so it’s very
unlikely that they’ll be able to reinsert themselves in the labor market.
Nestlé
should’ve had some consideration with them.
In its statements to the
newspapers the company said that they had relocated 76 percent of the
personnel, but that’s a total lie
because they found new positions for management and administrative
employees, but not for the workers.
None of the unionized workers
have been relocated, and that’s because they discriminate against us,
because they don’t want unions.
They also said that they were giving us six months of salary as
compensation, but they actually only paid us three months. When they spoke
with us they promised that they would maintain our health insurance for six
months, but that was just another lie. I know because a couple of weeks ago
I had to go to the doctor to see if I could be treated for these emotional
problems I’m having, because I just can’t seem to find any peace, and there
they told me that I had no coverage because
Nestlé
had stopped paying the insurance. It’s terrible.
-How long
did you work at the
Nestlé
ice cream plant?
-I started
working at the company when it was still Helados Polo, some 17 years
ago. Six years ago it was sold to
Nestlé
and I continued working under the new owners. My position was “line
control.”
-And what
were the wages and working conditions like?
-The wages
were not very good, because they were inadequate for the effort we put in.
The last salary I earned was 13,600 pesos (some 390 US dollars), after the
last raise.
-Were you a
member of the union?
-I was the
union’s Minutes Secretary. As soon as I joined I started to feel a lot of
pressure, especially from one of the managers, Walter Brauque, who,
whenever we presented a demand for some benefit that had been denied to a
fellow worker, the next day he would either ignore us or harass us. That’s
not the way a good manager should behave, because a manager has no right to
mistreat workers under any circumstances. This manager came to the company
with Ana Isabel of Human Resources, and they had been cutting back
our benefits ever since they arrived. Several of the fired workers were
denied compensation and we had to appeal several times to the Secretary of
Labor.
I went to the doctor to see if I could be treated for these
emotional problems I’m having, because I just can’t seem to find
any peace, and they told me that I had no coverage because
Nestlé had stopped paying the insurance. |
The vacancies began to be
handled according to the interests of these people, so that there were
practically no promotions for the plant’s old personnel. They would bring in
their relatives, who were less qualified than us.
Ever since they arrived at the plant everything started to go wrong; even
the toys that were distributed as gifts to the children on Three Wise Men’s
Day, as established in the Collective Agreement, went down so much in
quality that it was shameful. The entire attitude of this woman, Isabel,
was appalling. There was even a case, right before the plant closed down, in
which she denied a raise that was due in July to our fellow worker Eudalí
Jiménez, because she said he earned too much. And this year none of the
benefits established under the Collective Agreement were complied with, not
even the benefits granted to schoolchildren.
-Were union
members persecuted?
-There was
a great deal of persecution. Many of our fellow workers were offered loans
and promotions in exchange for leaving the union, and those who weren’t in
the union yet were threatened with being laid off if they joined. We even
had a case of a fellow worker who left the union, but her letter of
resignation was drawn up in company letterhead.
The grief we suffered there is
indescribable. We struggled, but it was like fighting against an enormous
monster that was always stronger than us, so we were unable to eradicate
those practices.
-How do you
feel now?
-I can’t
describe it. You have to live through this to know what it’s like. All of my
fellow workers feel very bad. Not only because the company was shut down,
but also because of how badly we were treated on the day it was closed down.
They wouldn’t let us in, there were security guards everywhere, they didn’t
even let us through to use the bathrooms. To give us the news, they didn’t
have the decency to appoint someone who knew what they were doing; they
couldn’t be bothered. Somebody just came and told us: “As of today the
company is dead; it no longer exists, not here, not anywhere else.” But, how
can you explain that a company is about to close down but has for months
been making their personnel work ten to twelve hours a day to accumulate
production? They haven’t stopped selling their products.
You have to live through this to know what it’s like. All of my
fellow workers feel very bad. Not only because the company was
shut down, but also because of how badly we were treated on the
day it was closed down |
-What
health problems are you having?
-I
can’t sleep, I’m eating practically nothing, and on top of that I feel
really depressed; I cry all the time
(again
her voice breaks)… I feel terrible, because it wasn’t just a couple days
that I had devoted to the job. That’s why I went to the doctor, so that he
would give me some pills; but as you can see, it’s only been two months
since the plant closed down and the company is no longer paying the
insurance.
-Do you
have any children?
-No. But I
was pregnant a few years ago, and I slipped at work and lost the baby; ever
since then I haven’t been able to get pregnant again.
-And did
you report this fall you had during working hours?
-No. Maybe
out of ignorance, and of fear of losing my job, I kept quiet. Because there
we work with fat, and it ends up all over the factory, and the floor is
slippery.
-Are you
looking for a job?
-Every day.
But when I go to the interviews, even though they don’t say it, I can tell
that they think I’m too old for the positions they have open. Because in
this country if you’re older than 35, nobody will hire you. The situation
I’m in is very difficult.
-What would
you like to say to Nestlé workers around the world?
-That they
keep their eyes wide open; and I’d tell them to unite, struggle and be wary,
because Nestlé
paints a very pretty picture, saying we’re all part of a large family, but
their actions show that we’re anything but a family.
I’d like to tell them that it
is very important to be united, because if all three Nestlé plants would’ve
united here, maybe they wouldn’t have been able to get away with this.
But, they saw how weak we were, and that emboldened them. I would tell them
to fight, and above all not to trust
Nestlé,
because they make a lot of promises, but they treat their workers very
badly.