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REPORT ON SITESABES ELECTION

Download the full report as a Word document by clicking here

On May 30 - 31st, a team of nine international observers participated in the first secret ballot election ever ordered by a labor board in Mexico. The decision by Lic. Libia Gomez Padilla, the president of the Junta Local de Conciliacion y Arbitraje in Leon, Guanajuato, to hold an election by secret ballot was unprecedented and a major step forward. The general practice in Mexican labor board elections is that workers are required to express their choice out loud in front of the labor authorities and representatives of the employer and competing unions. This is obviously an extremely intimidating and often risky proposition, as workers are subjected to psychological and often physical violence.

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Tyson

Unfortunately, Tyson busted the union in E. Washington. Teamsters local 556 was merged into another local.

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Cross-Border Campaign Wins Maquila Union Demands

Read the exciting new article published in the IRC´s Citizen Action in the Americas online journal! Or download the printable PDF version.

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SITESABES - Rural Teachers’ Independant Union

SITESABES is an independent union of adult education workers which, with the assistance of the FAT, has been fighting to gain the right to represent approximately 1,000 adult education workers in high schools and universities. The workers are employed by a state-funded program in the State of Guanajuato, called SABES.

This struggle is of particular significance to Mexican workers because the state government has engaged in a series of maneuvers to cancel the registration of the new union, depriving it of the legal authority to represent workers required under Mexican law. If the government succeeds, this tactic will have ominous implications for all workers seeking to establish real, democratic unions.

Through the FAT, these workers have excellent legal representation and we recently reported that they had won a decision from a three-member appeals court. The case was sent back to the labor court for reconsideration on the two technical issues that stood between SITESABES and the legal right to represent the SABES workers. The decision of the appeals court was an extremely positive development. Unfortunately, the lower court judge re-asserted his decision, apparently without considering either the order of the higher court or the additional materials that had been submitted. SITESABES has therefore been forced once again to file an appeal to the three-member appeals court.

Meanwhile, a very positive result was reached in the first of the cases of the fired union activists to be decided: not only was she ordered reinstated with full back pay, but she also was awarded full benefits—40 day’ bonus, 30 days’ vacation and credits in the savings (SAR) and housing (INFONAVIT) programs from 1997, when she was hired. This is a major victory, and will serve as an important precedent in the up-coming cases. The board has finally begun to set hearing dates for those: three are scheduled for November 13; four for November 27th and the remainder are expected to be scheduled soon.

Although we have received word that SABES complied with the decision, it then turned around and immediately fired her again. This is not surprising, as it is unlikely that there will be a positive resolution regarding the fired union activists without a resolution of their demand for representation. 

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Transnational Campaigns

Low-wage workers in the United States and Mexico are increasingly employed by large transnational corporations that use a variety of methods to suppress workers’ rights.  This relationship of grossly unequal power is a major cause of the growing gap between rich and poor, not only in North America, but also throughout the world.  These corporations use the superior mobility provided them by their transnational character to threaten—often carrying out those threats—to close down a business operation where workers insist that their rights be respected.  Workers and their organizations have to date been relatively unsuccessful in countering this aspect of corporate power.  Enlace affiliates are working to reverse this negative trend. 

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This victory would not have been possible without the help of our supporters

Enlace extends heartfelt thanks to all of the supporters and allies who contributed to the Pung Kook campaign.  Without your help this victory would not have been possible.

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We are grateful to all of the supporters of the Sara Lee campaign.

A partial list of organizations that have contributed substantially to the Sara Lee campaign includes:

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Supervisors and Leadership Training, Portland

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New Dates: July 14-15, Proactive Planning & Evaluation Training, Los Angeles

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Enlace’s Trainings

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Open Position: Enlace Field Organizer (full-time), Los Angeles office

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“Made in L.A.” now available on DVD!

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