As U.S. auto supply chain revs up, worker safety fears
linger in Mexico
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[May 06, 2020] By
Daina Beth Solomon
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Workers at a Lear
Corp <LEA.N> autoparts plant in northern Mexico that saw the worst known
coronavirus outbreak of any factory in the Americas are now bracing to
be sent back to work.
They just don't know when, and some worry it still may not be safe just
weeks after the pandemic struck factories in the industrial city of
Ciudad Juarez, just across the U.S. border from El Paso, Texas.
For many, it's an agonizing bind after the outbreak at Lear's Rio Bravo
plant that Lear said has killed 18 employees.
Even though a return to their posts may be scary, most are desperate to
recover their full salaries that Lear reduced when it shuttered the
plant of about 3,000 workers. Part of a wider international supply chain
crucial to the U.S. auto sector, they are also aware that pressures from
beyond Mexico may factor into the timetable.
"When the United States opens the automotive industry, we have to go
back," said Dagoberto Galindo, 42, one of ten Lear employees at the Rio
Bravo industrial park Reuters has interviewed since mid-April. He has
worked 14 years at the factory that makes car seat trim covers for
Daimler AG's <DAIGn.DE> Mercedes-Benz and Ford Motor Co's <F.N> Mustangs
and Explorers.
"I would go back for economic reasons, because I'm not going to have
money left. But not because I'd feel safe," said Galindo, who said he is
taking home just 65% of his salary while the plant is closed, making it
harder to support his wife and six children.
Galindo is one of thousands of workers at various U.S.-owned factories
known as "maquiladoras" along Mexico's northern border.
Corporate America has benefited from lower wages and laxer health,
safety and environmental strictures at the maquiladoras for decades. And
they rely heavily on intertwined supply chains between the two countries
that fueled $614.5 billion in U.S.-Mexico trade last year, according to
the U.S. Census Bureau.
That made Mexico the top U.S. trade partner, pushing past China, which
has suffered from a bitter tariff conflict with U.S. President Donald
Trump. But those benefits have come at a cost for Mexican workers, who
earn less than U.S. counterparts and typically have weaker protections
from unions.
Now with the Mexican infection curve several weeks behind the U.S.
epidemic, experts say workers are right to be concerned about returning
too quickly. As of Tuesday, Ciudad Juarez had the largest concentration
of coronavirus in Chihuahua state, with 418 cases and 97 deaths.
"The maquiladora industry was a factor in the contagion," said human
rights activist Cecilia Espinosa in Ciudad Juarez, urging health and
labor authorities to inspect factories before allowing workers to
return.
PROTESTS SOUTH OF THE BORDER
Multiple protests erupted in mid-April over safe working conditions
following reported worker deaths at Honeywell International Inc <HON.N>
and Lear, highlighting friction over which factories should remain open
in the pandemic.
Ten workers at the Rio Bravo plant have since told Reuters that Lear
took minimal protection measures there in the weeks before halting
operations in late March - a month after Mexico detected its first
coronavirus cases and as the U.S. death toll surpassed 1,000.
Lear, which employs 24,000 workers in 10 different plants in Ciudad
Juarez, said that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control did not recommend
the wearing of masks for non COVID-19 positive people until early April.
[to top of second column] |
The logo of Lear Corporation, a Michigan-based car seat maker, is
pictured at one of their premises closed after some workers have
died from respiratory illnesses, during the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico April 16, 2020.
REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
The company said there was no sign of an uptick in visits to the factory's
infirmary in the weeks before the closure, and that it learned of the first
hospitalization on April 3.
"We are truly and deeply saddened by the situation," said Frank Orsini, a Lear
executive vice president who oversees the seating business of the company that
operates in 39 different countries. "We have not seen anything like this
anywhere else in the world."
Orsini said the families told Lear that the official causes of deaths were
pneumonia. Lear was not aware of any testing for COVID-19, the disease caused by
the coronavirus, Orsini said, noting that testing in Mexico has been limited.
The company did an "extensive study" to look for links among the workers who
died - including shifts, lunch breaks and busing - but did not find
commonalities, Orsini said.
A lack of information is not helping ease some worker concerns about restarting
factories. The ten workers interviewed by Reuters said the company never told
them directly if some of their colleagues were sick from the coronavirus, or if
any had died.
"We're a family, then from one minute to the next, they're not there anymore,"
said Lorenza Piña, 59, referring to her close-knit group of colleagues.
Orsini said Lear's human resources staff made an effort to check in with
employees by phone, and told them there were infections and fatalities, without
disclosing how many. Lear also acknowledged in statements to Reuters since
mid-April that an unspecified number had become casualties of the virus.
'SAFE WORK PLAYBOOK'
Some Lear workers last week posted videos on social media of preparations to
re-open the Rio Bravo plant. Tall cubicles now protect sewing machines, and a
person in a white hazmat suit is shown spraying walls and floors with
disinfectant spray with the words "safety is built step by step" emblazoned in
large letters across a set of stairs.
Lear in recent weeks has promoted a detailed handbook to reopening factories
safely, including instructions to install hand sanitizer floor stands in work
areas per 50 employees, provide workers with masks and gloves and take their
temperatures at the start of shifts.
Now in its second edition, the "Safe Work Playbook" of best practices has been
downloaded from Lear's website some 18,000 times, the company said.
Orsini said Lear will re-open in Mexico only once "employees are comfortable
with the precautions that we've taken," and government regulations allow it.
In a sign of the Trump administration's hunger for a quick ramp-up, the U.S.
Ambassador to Mexico, Christopher Landau, has also called for restarting work
there to coincide with the United States and Canada.
"I am doing everything I can to save the supply chains that were built over the
past decades," he said on Twitter in late April. "It's possible and essential to
take care of workers' health without destroying these chains. The economic
integration of North America demands coordination."
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; Editing by Christian Plumb, Dan
Flynn and Edward Tobin)
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