It doesn’t come as
a surprise to see Nestlé breaching its own agreements. The transnational
corporation has become a typical example of corporate cynicism. What’s truly
surprising is that this time Brazil’s Labor Ministry has levied a fine of
US$ 320,000 on Nestlé for violating an agreement with its workers. In what
constitutes a very positive sign, the company has agreed to pay the fines
through donations to various health institutions.
This
penalty, however, seems merely like an inconvenience to the company when
compared to the severity and potential implications of the violations of the
Conduct Adjustment Terms (TAC) agreement that regulates the length of
the workday, as well as the work environment. The TAC was signed
between Nestlé and its plants’ trade unions in 2007, with the
Labor Ministry as guarantor to monitor compliance.
Nestlé
has four plants in the city of Araras, an inland city of the state of São
Paulo, Brazil, where it produces chocolate milk, yoghurt, Nescafé
instant coffee, and other food items. These factories had already become
notorious through several reports featured on these very same pages, where
workers denounced the excessive work pace they were forced to maintain.
The result
of this extreme demand on its workers was an epidemic of cases of Repetitive
Stress Injuries (RSI), which was documented in the book “Silent
Massacre. The Invisible Illness at the Nestlé plants in Araras,” published
by IUF Latin America in 2006.
Now, four
years later, Brazil’s Labor Ministry informs that through its
inspections of the Nestlé plants the Labor Prosecutor’s Office
found that “the lack of breaks, the excessive working hours, and the
pressure to work weekends and holidays” are the norm in these plants.
It also
found that the world’s leading food producer had stopped replacing the old
chairs used by the workers with proper seats, as required, and had failed to
place safety protections in some of the machines.
In total,
the inspection detected seven violations of the TAC, and levied a
fine for each of those violations, for various amounts. In late May 2010,
Nestlé agreed to pay the fines (which in all amount to US$ 320,000)
through donations to several local health care institutions, and to the
Labor Ministry.
For the
workers of Nestlé Araras affected by RSI, the Labor
Ministry’s decision represents an official acknowledgement of their
denunciations and a vigorous denial of the cynical claims of the
transnational corporation, which has systematically refused to assume any
responsibility for the harm caused to the victims of its unchecked ambition.
For current
Nestlé workers, this decision has served to ratify the terms of the
TAC signed in 2007, and has enabled them to sign a new one, whereby
Nestlé undertakes to refrain from forcing its employees to work on
Saturdays and Sundays.
This is a
new commitment that the transnational corporation takes on at a time in
which its actions are publicly exposed, but past experience indicates that
if the workers are not organized and alert the company will not honor its
commitment. So a strong presence of organized labor is necessary to closely
monitor the company’s actions.
IUF Latin America
will continue in its vigilant stance and will also monitor the situation, as
Nestlé has a record of being one of the most antiunion companies in
the world and one of the most likely to breach its agreements with labor
organizations.