Victories in the Flower Industry at Long Last!

Splendor Flowers

The contract signed at Splendor Flowers last week brings to
a triumphant close the most publicized battle for labor rights in Colombia’s
recent history. Last year, Dole,
Splendor’s owner, closed one of the subsidiary’s two farms in response to the
strong union organizing that was going on there. Even with the drop in morale
caused by the obliteration of the country’s strongest union, the union at the
other farm, Splendor El Rosal, continued negotiations with the company. They
were finally granted arbitration by the Colombian government after Rep. George
Miller intervened on their behalf. The arbitration tribunalP1010003
came to a close
last week, when workers signed a contract that includes significant
improvements in conditions and wages.  Among the benefits negotiated are a
$200-$400 bonus for not having received a salary increase in two years, a raise
of $14 above the legal minimum (bringing most flower workers to a monthly
salary of about $215), and improvements in vacation and sick time.

Fragrancia Flowers

Another contract was signed at a Dole Plantation following a
two-year struggle. Members of the Untrafragancia union are now entitled to a 6%
pay increase, bonuses for punctuality,
additional pay for fumigation workers who are exposed to hazardous chemicals,
and an education stipend so that flower workers can send their children to
school. Now workers at this plantation will have the ability to send all of their
children to school at once, and still afford food and clothing for their
families.

Flores Papagayo

With
nearly unprecedented speed (about 4 months), the Colombian government gave
legal recognition to the new union at the Flores Papagayo flower plantation.
While the company is appealing the approval of the union's registration, this
shows a marked change from past experience, when new unions would wait months
or years for registrations, often being denied multiple times.  This is an
example of the growing strength of worker organizations in the Colombian flower
sector, and gives us hope for more victories to come.

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Comments

re: Victories in the Flower Industry at Long Last!

This is great news! It's nice to read a post about trade unionists in Colombia where there's no mention of an assassination or some other grizzly detail.

That said, I wonder if you can share with us the struggle of these workers in their organizing efforts. From a U.S. perspective, we tend to overlook the fierce struggles of Colombian workers. Who died to get these workers to this point? Has Dole been complicit in any trade unionist kilings? What would the Colombia FTA mean to these workers?

Thanks for the update.

re: Victories in the Flower Industry at Long Last!

Hey John,

These advances definitely came with a lot of hardships and sacrifice, as union victories in Colombia are nearly unheard of. Over 400 trade unionists have been murdered since Uribe came into office, which is part of what makes it so infuriating when FTA proponents cite the recent decrease in violence in Colombia as a reason to sign the agreement. For more information, you should check out USLEAP's page about flower workers and their struggle for economic justice at http://usleap.org/node/94.