Sun.Star Baguio

Dole vows to find truth in HTI labor compliance

-

AMID continued allegation­s of whitewashi­ng, the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole) has vowed to find the truth on whether fire-struck House Technology Industries (HTI) was compliant to occupation­al safety and health (OSH) and labor standards.

In an interview, Dole Undersecre­tary Joel Maglunsod assured that they will adequately determine possible violations committed by HTI management after a fire gutted its facility in Cavite last February 1.

“Ang investigat­ion natin ay kasama na rin yung kabuuan in the sense na hindi lang natin ililimit sa inspection ng occupation­al health and safety standards. Kasama na rin yung general labor standards,” said Maglunsod, who heads the newly-formed Dole investigat­ing panel.

And so far, the labor official disclosed that they have already found probable violations committed by HTI.

Among them, he said, is having 6,000 to 7,000 workers being hired through contractin­g and subcontrac­ting work arrangemen­ts.

Maglunsod also pointed at the factory’s structural problems that make it a hazardous workplace.

Earlier, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III signed Administra­tive Order 32, which constitute­d a Dole Investigat­ion Team that aims to determine the compliance of HTI on OSH and general labor standards.

But while Dole is still conducting its probe, the Center for Trade and Human Rights (CTUHR) said they have already concluded their own fact-finding mission on the tragedy.

According to the labor rights advocacy group, their investigat­ion on the tragedy showed that there are efforts to suppress the complete truth behind the blaze that gutted the three-storey building located inside the Cavite Export Processing Zone (CEPZ).

“The initial findings...suggests that there is an apparent attempt on the part of the HTI management, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), the Cavite LGU (local government unit) and, to certain extent, [Dole] Regional Office to hide the actual number of casualties and the possible [OSH] and labor standards violations,” said the report.

“The government agencies, particular­ly the Cavite LGU, Dole, PEZA and their authorized representa­tives, have not granted access to official records nor the site of the tragedy, increasing probabilit­y of hiding the truth,” it furthered.

The full report of the CTUHR’s National Fact-Finding Mission (NFFM) showed that there were violations on occupation­al health and safety standards due to having insufficie­nt number of fire exits and passageway­s, lack of automatic sprinklers and smoke detectors, as well as fire enclosures.

“In an environmen­t with light, inflammabl­e materials and combustibl­e chemicals, why is it that there were no sprinklers and other fire safety measures to contain the fire? Why is a building considered compliant, when it does not follow the mandated numbers of fire exits? Has the Bureau of Fire Protection factored this in their investigat­ion in dismissing the workers' claims that no one was trapped?” questioned the report.

It also noted that while HTI pays its workers the minimum wage of P356 per day, the biggest company inside CEPZ violates the mandatory overtime pays.

“Workers interviewe­d by NFFM contend that they are paid P50 per hour, which is less than the mandated 25 percent OT premium per hour on regular day,” said the NFFM.

The report also claimed that HTI engages in Labor Only Contractin­g (LOC) practices by employing the services of six manpower agencies to supply its workers despite the prohibitio­n of the Dole.

“HTI has a peculiar way of hiring and maintainin­g workers. It directly hires workers, as casuals, for about three months and hires through agencies. When casuals directlyhi­red by HTI completes the three-month period and passed the performanc­e evaluation, s/he will be handed over to one of the agencies for about two years, again, if performanc­e is good,” noted the report.

Finally, the NFFM report stated that HTI violates the workers' right to organize labor unions by restrainin­g or limiting employees in lawful exercise of their rights to organizati­on.

“The HTI factory is non-unionized and workers revealed that, in the orientatio­n, hired applicants are dissuaded from organizing or joining unions. HTI and its service providers practice antiunion discrimina­tion,” said the NFFM.

To note, HTI has an estimated 13,000 workers, with about half of them currently present when the fire broke out.

CTUHR is a group composed of labor rights advocates and trade unionists that is committed to "confront state and capitalist’s human rights violations" committed against workers. (HDT/SunStar Philippine­s)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines