This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 12, April 30-May 6, 2006
Deadly Workplace Elmer
Pen needs no imagination to see how he’d look when he dies – he now looks
deathly pale. Compounding his worrisome look are his hands, which are
perpetually crooked. He can’t straighten them even if he tries. For 18 years
now Pen has been working at Unilox, or Union Lead & Oxide Industrial
Corporation, a company that produces lead oxide, stabilizers, and anodes.
BY
MARYA SALAMAT Elmer Pen needs no
imagination to see how he’d look when he dies – he now looks deathly pale.
Compounding his worrisome look are his hands, which are perpetually crooked. He
can’t straighten them even if he tries. For 18 years now Pen has
been working at Unilox, or Union Lead & Oxide Industrial Corporation in Pasig
City, which the workers say is owned by relations of the Aboitiz family. They
produce lead oxide, stabilizers and anodes, 70 percent of which are for export
while the rest are for the local market. In the course of
production, Elmer Pen and his co-workers use lead, PVC and carbon black. They
are exposed to lead in its various forms like powder, gas, bar, or dross. They
crush and grind lead, mold and repackage it, all the while freely inhaling its
gas and dust, or getting coated with lead powder. When they sweat- and they
profusely sweat owing to the heat emanating from their melting pot- more lead
powder stick to their skin. Their workplace has no ceiling and lacks windows. It
is not properly ventilated, said Emma Cellada, training officer of the Institute
for Occupational Health and Safety Development (Iohsad), a non-government
organization involved in advocacy efforts for ensuring a safe working
environment for workers. Like the rest of his
hundred-plus co-workers Elmer Pen is being poisoned by lead. A fellow worker
once bought bread as snacks for their union meeting. But after putting down the
bread, he couldn’t straighten his bent arms anymore. They have other health
complaints. But they were told by doctors of the private health insurance
company hired by Unilox that these are only “natural,”. On the average, Unilox
workers have been working there for 15 to 27 years now.
Unilox management has reasons to know of its workers’ growing lead poisoning,
said Iohsad. Every three or six months they check the workers’ blood for lead
content. But the company wouldn’t admit that the growing menace is work-related.
They don’t extend aid to their workers. Instead, they only require the most
poisoned or the weakest to rest for two weeks to one month. But the sick leave
is shouldered by the Social Security System (SSS). At present the Unilox union
is trying to get certification that their varying levels of lead poisoning is
work-related. They’re also urging the management to construct a proper
ventilation system. Effective ventilation is
achieved if local exhaust vents draw away the hazards at their source, and the
contaminated air is treated (say, scrubbed), and not returned to the workroom.
Meanwhile, another vent system should provide fresh, clean air. Health research
shows that air safety is achieved when the breathing zone of each worker is free
of vapors, fumes and dust, especially when poisonous substances used in
production is mingled with it. Unfortunately, in Unilox,
the union’s effort is being thwarted right from the start. The management won’t
even hear from “outsiders” like Iohsad whom the workers approached for expert
help. At present, the Unilox
workers’ struggle for a less deadly workplace has to compete for the union’s
time and effort. The union is also pressing management for wage increases. Left in the dark Improper ventilation and
working with toxic substances also define the day-to-day working environment of
workers in Mustad, makers of fishing hooks for export based in Novaliches. The
company is 80 percent owned by a Norwegian. The workers here have been employed
for an average of 20 to 25 years. Recently, two workers died from cancer. Absence of yearly medical
records and strict monitoring hamper the union’s efforts to make sense of the
cause of their deaths. They suspect these were work-related. Workers in Mustad
complain of chronic headaches, irritated nose, dizziness, stiff hands. But
whenever they go to their clinic for checkup, they are told that what they’re
feeling is “nothing serious to worry about.” In Unilox less than a third
of the workforce dimly remembered receiving orientation on the toxic materials
they work with. But workers in Mustad confessed to being left in the dark. They
have to research by themselves the nature of the substances they’re handling
every working day. Through their research they found out that the lead, solvents
and dyes they use are hazardous materials, yet, the management didn’t even
bother to inform them about it. Management didn’t even discuss with them what
to do in case of prolonged exposure, accidental ingestion, over-inhalation,
etc. Worse, the ventilation in their workplace is very inadequate, the workers
have no choice but to inhale the toxic vapors of the said substances. The union of Mustad workers
is now documenting their health conditions. But as in the case of Unilox, they
have to do it alongside their fight for the implementation of wage increases and
other previously granted benefits. Government statistics show
that over 40 percent of establishments inspected do not comply with general
labor standards, with underpayment of wages the leading offense. “It is
unfortunate that often, the issue of health and safety gets relegated behind the
more basic issues of wages and job security, said Iohsad’s Emma Cellada. “How
can you continue working if your health is damaged?” But that’s how it looks for
the country’s workers. Unfortunately, it appears
the government can’t do much to help. Government hardly monitors the
occupational health and safety in the Philippines – it seriously lacks
inspectors, and they’re more concerned about the technical aspects of
monitoring, such as electrical wiring, rather than the existing hazards in the
workplace that are deleterious to the workers' health, said Iohsad’s doctors. Iohsad noted in a report
that only a very small percentage of the few government inspectors submitted
their reports to the Department of Labor and Employment, leaving the department
helpless because it relies only on the “sanitized” reports of the employers.
Iohsad said this is due to the fact that another government agency is offering a
cash reward at the end of the year for any establishment that have no accidents
or illness recorded in a one year period. Iohsad added that, "There
is also a lack of penalty provisions as far as implementation of occupational
health and safety standards are concerned. For example, an employer who is found
violating the standards would just be fined about $500, which is very much
cheaper than improving working conditions." Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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