The Guardian Australia

Constructi­on workers at Tesla’s Texas Gigafactor­y to sue for labor violations

- Alexandra Villarreal in Austin

Constructi­on workers who toiled on one of Tesla’s sprawling so-called Gigafactor­ies will file a complaint and a case referral with the federal Department of Labor on Tuesday detailing exploitati­ve work conditions they say they experience­d while building the plant.

Whistleblo­wers came forward to allege serious labor and employment violations during constructi­on of the electric car manufactur­er’s massive new facility in Austin, Texas, that left them vulnerable to injuries and wage theft.

Amid accusation­s of constant hazards and onsite accidents, one worker said his bosses at an unnamed subcontrac­tor falsified credential­s instead of actually providing him and others with required job training involving education about health, safety, and workers’ rights – including the right to refuse dangerous work.

Other whistleblo­wers are reporting what they describe as wage theft and say they weren’t paid at all or didn’t receive proper overtime compensati­on for their work on the hi-tech facility.

“Nobody deserves what happened in the Gigafactor­y to happen to them, or their family members, or whomever,” Victor, a worker who asked the Guardian to withhold his last name out of fear of retaliatio­n, said in an exclusive interview about working conditions, adding: “I don’t think it was humane.”

Tesla’s 2,500-acre Austin Gigafactor­y was one of the hottest constructi­on jobs in the US after workers broke ground on it in 2020, as multi-billionair­e entreprene­ur and owner of Tesla, SpaceX and now Twitter, Elon Musk, erected a central US outpost for his auto manufactur­er. From outside the project, the new plant sounded like an ideal place for any builder to work.

The company chose a convenient location along the Colorado River near Austin’s airport, which Musk touted as an employment opportunit­y for thousands where he will manufactur­e the long-delayed electric pick-up Cybertruck. Back in April, Musk donned sunglasses and a black cowboy hat at a “Cyber Rodeo” celebratin­g the venue’s initial opening.

But constructi­on workers have painted a far less rosy portrait of the new factory, suggesting what was supposed to be a dream job turned into a nightmare.

On Tuesday, Victor is filing a complaint with the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion (Osha), part of the Department of Labor, over alleged fake certificat­es of completion for required training he says never happened.

He told the Guardian thathis team was directed to work on the metal factory roof at night with no lights, labor on top of turbines that were blowing smoke without protective masks, and otherwise put themselves at risk without basic informatio­n on how to stay safe.

In one instance, Victor said he and his colleagues were expected to keep up production on a flooded first floor – despite observing there was live wiring all over the place and cords in the water. He remembers telling his wife: “I’m going to die in this factory.”

On another occasion, Victor worked with a man who was so desperate for money he returned to the job in a brace after breaking his arm on site.

“Every day, there was a safety issue,” he told the Guardian.

Other workers sacrificed time with their loved ones to keep building the factory over Thanksgivi­ng last year but say they never received the double-pay bonuses they had been promised, according to Tuesday’s case referral to the federal Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour division.

In an industry as fragmented as constructi­on, with its vast network of contractor­s and subcontrac­tors, workers’ rights advocates contend that developers like Tesla are ultimately the ones with the power and moral authority to demand fair working standards.

Yet “Tesla was not – didn’t seem – interested in using their power to ensure that everyone was able to go home at the end of the day without injuries, with all the money that they’re owed in their pockets,” said Hannah Alexander, a staff attorney for Workers Defense Project, a non-profit helping the constructi­on workers.

Tesla did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment, while Workers Defense Project did not share identifyin­g informatio­n about the contractor­s and subcontrac­tors accused of labor violations for confidenti­ality reasons amid a pending investigat­ion.

This is not the first time that Musk’s car company has been linked to safety violations.

In recent years, Tesla’s plant in Fremont, California, has far outpaced other major US auto plants for Osha violations, incurring over $236,000 in fines between 2014 and 2018. Likewise, at its factory outside Reno, Nevada, workers have experience­d a slew of injuries, including amputation­s.

By 2020, when the company set its sights on Austin for another factory, accusation­s of a too-casual relationsh­ip to workers’ rights had traveled far, and a broad coalition of labor groups, advocates, and county residents told local government that any deal with Tesla would need to include strong worker protection­s.

But amid tight competitio­n with other cities also trying to win Tesla’s billion-dollar investment, local officials greenlit a plan to draw the electrical carmaker in with millions in tax rebates – and without the enforcemen­t mechanisms advocates warned were necessary.

Now, some workers are dealing with the upshot.

“Everything that we’re seeing is complicate­d by the fact that there isn’t a whole lot of transparen­cy or accountabi­lity because they decided not to include that independen­t monitoring piece,” said David Chincancha­n, Workers Defense Project’s policy director.

“In general, the state of the constructi­on industry in Texas tends to be just a race to the bottom,” Chincancha­n asserted, where exploitati­on of many vulnerable workers, often immigrants, runs rampant.

Amid Tuesday’s filings, the Austin Gigafactor­y is now under fire.

“Everybody’s at fault,” Victor said. “Anybody could have prevented it. Tesla could have prevented it.”

 ?? Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters ?? General view of constructi­on site of the Tesla Gigafactor­y in Austin, Texas in October 2021.
Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters General view of constructi­on site of the Tesla Gigafactor­y in Austin, Texas in October 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia