Sponsored Links
Dresses
WOW Gold Cheap
China Wholesale
Forex Trading Online
Bluetooth Headset
Fashion Bridal Dresses
For worldwide flight & hotel reservation with instant confirmation. Up to 75% discount
HOME     |     LATEST STORIES     |     OPINION & ANALYSIS     |     SPECIAL REPORTS     |     MULTIMEDIA     Video     Slideshow     Audio/Podcasts     Webcasts
February 13, 2012
Manila, Philippines
Support progressive journalism.
Donate to Bulatlat.
SLIDESHOW Yearender: Victories of the Filipino People
VIDEO Demolisyon
STREET SHOOTER
Street Shooter: Off to work
SALUNGGUHIT Salungguhit: Unreasonable oil price increases
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo of the week: Death march post
TOP STORIES
Gabriela launches petition, vows more mass actions against price increases
KMP charges Aquino envoy of inking anomalous $300M agri-deal with Bahrain
Reveal details of VFA review, negotiations with US – progressive groups
OPINION
Economic interests behind push for greater US military presence in the region
Colonial and repressive
Mark Twain on Phil-Am War, 113 years ago
MUST-READS
On US Imperialism and a way forward for the Philippines
‘Arroyo should be liable for plunder not just graft, corruption’ – progressive groups
Urban poor march to Mendiola also blocked by the police
BROWSE BY SECTION OR SUBJECT
Politics
Economy
Human Rights
OFWs & Migration
Agrarian Reform
Labor & Employment
Urban Poor
Environment
Education
Youth
Indigenous Peoples
Women & Children
Health
Media
Culture
Poetry
Analysis & Opinion
Regions
International
Democratic Space
Press Releases
Downloads


As Workers Reel from Layoffs, They Find Enemy – Not Ally – in Labor Department

Published on August 30, 2009

The massive layoffs in the Philippines brought about by the global financial crisis and the increasing appetite of companies for more profit have exposed yet again the Arroyo regime’s sympathy not for workers but for capitalists. And instead of ensuring that workers’ rights are protected, the Department of Labor and Employment has become an even more willing tool by companies to satisfy their greed.

By MARYA SALAMAT
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — Crising Adao, vice-president of the union of employees of Triumph Philippines, tried hard to hold back her tears as she spoke before hundreds of workers, the unemployed and youth labor advocates in front of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) on Wednesday. “After years of service at Triumph, we are already considered too old to be hired as new workers in other companies,” she said. “What we need are stable jobs, not ‘livelihood’ programs that DOLE officials are dangling before us to make us bite Triumph’s retrenchment package.”

From Aug. 28 to 30, the management of Triumph said, the company would give its willing workers their separation pay. It refuses to rehire or retain them for its new plant despite the continuous picket-protest of hundreds of its 1,660 workers in one of its two factories in Taguig City.

In Hong Kong, migrant workers with the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body (AMCB) and labor rights advocates such as the Asia Monitor Resource Center (AMRC) and the Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM) also held a solidarity protest action at the Philippine and Thai embassies. They expressed support to the striking workers of Triumph International in Thailand and Philippines.


Workers troops to the Department of Labor office in Intramuros to denounce the agency’s bias for capitalists. (Photos by Marya Salamat / bulatlat.com)

Triumph International Philippines had announced last month they would “close down” their Philippine plants, but it did not file a notice of closure with the DOLE. Instead, it filed a notice of retrenchment, bolstering the workers’ suspicions that it would continue production in Laguna with lower paid, non-unionized contractual workers. Amid all these, the labor secretary had sat with Triumph’s management to convince the employees to accept the retrenchment.

“Why is DOLE behaving like this?” Adao asked. “Isn’t it DOLE’s job to protect Filipinos’ decent labor and employment conditions? They are not there to speak for capitalists, especially foreigners.” Why, she added, is the DOLE “hoodwinking workers to get rid of their unions and hard-won collective bargaining agreements?”

“The DOLE has become a graveyard of cases filed by workers,” said Dario Apuya, vice president of union of workers in Advan, a company making shoes. He said many workers have filed complaints before the DOLE, but it has always turned a deaf ear on them.

Whose Interests Is DOLE Protecting?

The workers union in Advan, the Bleustar Workers Labor Union (BWLU), has been shuttling to and from DOLE offices during the past year to complete the requirements so it could negotiate a collective bargaining agreement with its employer. The union said they have practically completed all the requirements demanded by law after their two-month strike last year, which ended with the signing of an agreement between the union and Jimmy Ong, their employer. But Ong had vowed to oppose union organizing in Advan, “even if I spend all of my money (to counter that),” he reportedly said.

Requirements from DOLE seem to favor Ong’s efforts to thwart the union, said Apuya, because although DOLE had sat with Ong’s representatives to sign a memorandum of agreement with BWLU last year to resolve their strike, DOLE and Ong are now saying another piece of paper is required to formalize the recognition of BWLU as Advan’s union and, therefore, its sole representative in collective bargaining.

In September, it would be a full year since Advan’s union and Ong signed the agreement, witnessed by DOLE. But so far, the union still lacks a certificate of recognition as workers’ sole bargaining agent, the only paper barring it from negotiating with Ong.

“We thought we have rights to form a union,” said the protesting workers of BWLU. “Why is it so hard to become a government and company-recognized union?”

Pages: 1 2

RELATED CONTENT

Workers picket DTI for opposing P125 wage hike

Labor Organizer Arrested

ARTICLE TOOLS
Printer-Friendly Version Printer-Friendly Version

TAGS
, ,
CATEGORIES
REPRINT
Feel free to reprint, repost or republish this material. (Read Bulatlat's syndication policy.)

One Response to “As Workers Reel from Layoffs, They Find Enemy – Not Ally – in Labor Department”

  1. As Workers Reel from Layoffs, They Find Enemy – Not Ally – in Labor Department – Davao Today Says:

    [...] As Workers Reel from Layoffs, They Find Enemy – Not Ally – in Labor Department [...]

Leave a Comment

HUMAN RIGHTS
2 activists nabbed in Laguna, charged with common crimes
International lawyers to Aquino: ‘Release political prisoners, stop impunity’
Palparan still no-show, yet issuing statement through ‘lawyer’
MIGRANTS
OFWs and Filipino residents in Italy protest the ‘remove middle name’ policy
Fil-Am groups call on Aquino to stop deportation of 12,000 Filipinos in Mariana Islands
OFW group calls for return of P13M overcharged by POEA, slams ‘institutionalized mulcting’
LABOR
To be idle and hungry
Labor woes and frozen wages in Davao
State university employees gain new benefits after holding mass actions
NEWS IN PICTURES


UP, artists reiterate call for release of Ericson Acosta (Photos by Ronalyn V. Olea and Fred E. Dabu)

REGIONS
Arakan farmers decry rights abuses
Criminal charges filed anew vs 2 political prisoners in Ilocos
Small-scale miners in Pantukan ask, why blame us?
INTERNATIONAL
‘Tamil sovereignty alone can check protracted genocide’ – Joma Sison
Should We Allow NATO Free Rein to Attack and Kill People?
‘Bugsplat’: The Ugly US Drone War in Pakistan
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Mining-related deaths, destruction haunt celebration of Mine Safety Week
Moros urge Aquino to stop his ‘all-out justice’ in Mindanao
A saga of all-out euphemisms vs peace, the Moro and the ordinary people
MULTIMEDIA


Slideshow: Art does bring in money, ask the Boracay boys


Yearender: Victories of the Filipino People


Video: Demolisyon

ON THE FRINGES
Easier to blame Azazel
Shoestring journalism
CULTURE
A Full Belly, A Happy Heart
Zombadings, on modern day acceptance
Guiltless? An activist on vacation
FULL COVERAGE
Wages and Labor Issues
Price Increases
GPH-NDFP Peace Talks
2010 Yearender
Morong 43
Aquino's First 100 Days
Hacienda Luisita
Ampatuan Massacre
Home         Subscribe (RSS or Email)        About Us        Donate         Contact Us         Archive         Advertise with Bulatlat
Copyright © 2009 Alipato Media Center Inc.         Read Bulatlat's Syndication Policy         Web design and hosting by Web Host Philippines