The prospects were not good. The conciliation hearing held
on October 23 in a civil court had been a preview of what
the outcome would be. As soon as mediator Virginia
Fernández began the hearing, the company presented its
offer. But the sum was so low, it did not even merit a
response.
The offer made by Panificadora Bimbo del Uruguay SA
amounted to a mere 8,224.50 pesos, and with that sum the
company intended to compensate Simón’s tragic
death and cover all unpaid wages and other labor benefits
due, as well as the damages and loss of income claimed by
his family.
The company “disputed all the information presented in the
claim, including the date on which the worker was hired and
the category he occupied,” Luis Rodríguez Turrina,
the lawyer that represents the family, said to the local
newspaper LA REPUBLICA. “We won’t accept the sum offered.”
Therefore “the conciliation mechanisms available through the
Ministry of Labor and Social Security (MTSS) have
been exhausted, and we will now bring an action in a labor
court,” the lawyer said.
Simón’s family was present when the company’s
representatives made their offer. But they were prepared for
it. At the conciliation hearing held in the Second Term
Conciliation Court in Civil Matters, the company “challenged
the entire proceeding and refused to accept our claim or the
damages requested,” Rodríguez Turrina said.
An avoidable death
Simón Santana
was performing cleaning tasks in the Maintenance Department
of Panificadora Bimbo del Uruguay SA, a Mexico-based
transnational corporation that operates in 18 countries
throughout the world, including the Americas,
Europe and Asia, with more than 70 plants, 900
distribution centers, and over 80 thousand workers.
Simón
joined the Bimbo workforce in January 2008, with
great expectations for his future in the company. Less than
a year later, on September 3, he went to work like on any
other day. But three hours later he suffered a serious work
accident that cost him his life. He was only 26 years old.
When he suffered the deadly injury, the young worker was
cleaning one of the cooling machines at the plant. Cleaning
tasks were performed with the machines running, and Simón
was caught on the gears and dragged into the machine. He was
alone. The investigation revealed that he was trapped in the
machine for 15 minutes before anyone came to his aid.
According to the investigation conducted by the MTSS
General Inspection Office, Simón “was probably trying
to go from one side of the platform to the other when the
safety belt he was wearing got caught on the cooling
machine’s transmission system, snagged by the moving discs
that had no protective guards.”
The MTSS report also indicates that the fatal
accident occurred due to technical and human error. There
was a “mechanical risk” because the system had no safety
shields, “thus exposing the workers to the risk of being
dragged, crushed and trapped,” but also “the company failed
to identify the mechanical risk (posed by the transmission
system and unguarded moving parts).”
“The investigation reveals that the accident was the result
of the multiple causes identified above and the company’s
failure to comply with applicable safety and health
regulations in force. If the transmission system of the
cooling machine had been properly protected, this accident
would not have occurred,” the MTSS report concludes.
Simón’s
case will now be investigated in civil and labor courts, as
well as in a criminal court, as the Eighth Term Criminal
Court Judge Graciela Eustachio is hearing the case.
Judge Eustachio is awaiting the response to a number
of court orders issued as part of the inquiry into the death
of this young worker and the causes and responsible parties.
Republished from La República, Uruguay
December 11, 2008