Workers in Control: Venezuela's Occupied Factories
By Marie Trigona at Nov 10, 2006 |
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Interview with FRETECO representative By: Marie Trigona - Venezuelanalysis.com Latin America's occupied factories and enterprises represent the development of one of the most advanced strategies in defense of the working class and resistance against capitalism and neoliberalism. This new phenomenon catching hold throughout Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Venezuela continues to grow despite market challenges. More than 30,000 Latin American workers are employed at cooperative-run businesses, which were closed down by bosses and reopened by employees. In Venezuela alone, it is estimated that 1,200 business and factories have been occupied by their workers after bosses and owners abandoned them. In response to the Bolivarian revolution, many oligarchic and foreign investors have fled Venezuela leaving workers out to dry. Venezuela's working class has stood up to the destiny of unemployment and helped to build a road to socialism: taking over ransacked companies, calling for the nationalization and implementing worker self-management. Since 2005, the Venezuelan government passed a number of legal decrees expropriating abandoned factories for workers to start up production. Today in Venezuela some 20 companies have been nationalized and function under worker co-management or control. One such group working to coordinate the grass-roots based worker takeovers in Venezuela has been FRETECO (Co-managed and Occupied Factories' Worker's Revolutionary Front). Workers from the state-worker co-managed industrial valve plant INVEVAL formed FRETECO earlier this year to strategize how the worker occupied factory movement can multiply industry under genuine worker control. FRETECO held a small, but important conference in October where 15 worker co-managed companies (several producing and some still fighting to start up production) gathered to share how worker controlled companies are moving away from capitalism and challenges they must face. Pablo Cormenzana representative from FRETECO and INVEVAL traveled to Buenos Aires in November as part of the Hands Off Venezuela campaign. I caught him before a talk at the BAUEN hotel, a recuperated enterprise and worker run cooperative in the very heart of the city. In the interview and talk, Cormenzana overviewed the successes and challenges of the worker occupied factory movement in Venezuela. M.T.: What happened at INVEVAL that pushed the workers to take over their workplace? P.C.: INVEVAL started when the owner shut down production in the plant which was formerly called CNV (National Valve Manufacturer) in 2002. The owner of CNV, Sosa Pietri, was part of Venezuela's oligarchy. He decided to extend a management lock out and closed the company down on December 9, 2002, leaving all the workers out in the streets. On top of that he didn't arrange any indemnification for the workers, leaving them out to dry without paying their salaries, social security etc. Originally, there were 330 workers at the plant. A group of these workers decided to begin a fight to demand that the former owner pay them back what he owed them. Later, this demand transformed into the idea of recovering their jobs and to re-open the company. This stage lasted for two years, from March 2003 until April 2005. A group of about 65 workers continued fighting. They were alone in their fight, visiting labor courts and the labor ministry to demand the salaries that the owner never paid. This long and difficult process had a demoralizing effect on the workers and many abandoned the fight. The group was really dispersed at that time and in December 2004 only one worker continued to camp outside the factory. Around this time, the former boss decided that it was the perfect moment to empty out the factory. Until December groups of workers had been camping outside the plant's doors. One night the boss secretly began to transport the semi-constructed valves and tools from the plant. The workers found out that the owner was stealing material from the plant and re-mobilized. This time, more workers camped outside the company's doors so that the boss wouldn't continue to ransack the plant. They were thinking ‘this guy left us out in the streets and now he's leaving with the few things that could be sold to pay us back what he owed us.' At the very same time, two very important situations developed in Venezuela. In January 2005 during the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, President Chávez launched his proposal for socialism. This was very important moment for the worker controlled factories. The other important event for INVEVAL was the nationalization of the paper mill INVEPAL. The paper mill VENEPAL was in a similar situation as INVEVAL. The owner in this case claimed bankruptcy with the idea of breaking up the company and selling off shares to the transnational cardboard producer, Murphy. The owner of VENEPAL went bankrupt and left the workers out to dry. The Venezuelan government told the workers at VENEPAL that if they led a serious struggle and rallied on a large scale, President Chávez may consider nationalizing the company. The workers accepted the proposal and began to rally. They protested, pushing for nationalization of VENEPAL. The president accepted the proposal and decreed the nationalization of VENEPAL. The workers later formed INVEPAL. The nationalization of INVEPAL motivated the workers of INVEVAL and they launched a new campaign to get their jobs back. The president decreed the nationalization of CNV, which is to later become INVEPAL-national endogenous valve industry in April 2005. M.T.: How has the factory been re-organized since the worker take-over? P.C.: The workers had to fight hard to recover the factory. The factory has been worker run since April 2005, a factory that was abandoned. We're talking about a huge factory that runs with computers and giant machinery. And yet, the workers were able to make it work. They're proving the theory that workers can run industry without bosses. Not only are the workers at INVEVAL successfully running a company without bosses or an owner, they're also doing it without technocrats or bureaucracy from the government. The government has had little participation in the functioning of the company. The company was solely recovered by the very worker. M.T.: So no professionals stayed on in the plant? How have the workers managed without professionals? P.C.:No, only manual workers stayed on in the plant. Middle and high level management abandoned the company along with the boss. They had alliances with the boss. I imagine that the former owner paid them their salaries and indemnity for laying them off and they later found new jobs. The workers not only recovered a factory by taking over the manual tasks. The workers are also taking charge of the administrative areas. Currently, a group of workers are studying administration at the state-run university. They are proving wrong the theory that workers are unable to run a factory if they don't have a manager watching every move they make. Factories under worker control function democratically, unlike with a boss. All of the decisions made at INVEVAL are made in a workers' assembly. The factory is run by worker delegates. The current president of INVEVAL, Jorge Paredes worked in the plant's stock deposit. The delegates and president were voted democratically by the workers' assembly. If the delegates and representatives do not fulfill their responsibilities according to what the assembly says, the assembly can revoke the delegate from his or her position. All of the workers make the same salaries, it doesn't matter if they are truck drivers, line workers or the president of the company. They are putting into practice genuine worker control at INVEVAL. M.T.: What is the future of the worker controlled factory movement in Venezuela? P.C: From the perspective of FRETECO we have a very positive outlook for worker control in Venezuela. October 13-14, FRETECO held a national congress. Over 10 worker co-managed factories participated in the congress, though more than 15 companies are participating in FRETECO. Five companies couldn't participate because they couldn't access transportation and because of limited resources due to lack of government support. It's necessary to understand that in some cases workers are occupying factories that have been closed down and they have no income. Right now FRETECO is working with 15 companies, but we are getting a lot of calls from other companies that would like to join FRETECO. There are more than 1,200 business and factories that have been occupied by their workers after bosses and owners abandoned them. President Chávez has nationalized more than 20 companies that are all in different situations. VENEPAL and INVEVAL are at the forefront of the worker controlled factory movement. The working class in Venezuela is gaining strength and there's a lot of interest to continue to nationalize industry and put it in the hands of workers. After the December elections, which President Chávez is sure to win, the worker controlled factory movement will also move forward. We are going to push so that workers can recover their companies shut down by the owners and start up production under worker control. Marie Trigona is an independent journalist based in Buenos Aires. She has written extensively on Argentina's recuperated enterprises. She can be reached at mtrigona@msn.com



This is what " work towards removing term limits" means..
By Anonymous, Anonymous at Dec 04, 2006 12:11 PM
In relation to Term limits - I believe Venezuala (like the US) has a limit on the length that a president can rule. Actually this is one very good idea I think from US democracy (there are'nt many..!).
I've seen government after government (in the UK, US and Australia!) - some well-meaning, some just incompetent - from either side of politics become autocratic and corrupt after 1.5 to 2 terms - what 3rd term are typically truly awe-full...
This is to of course to allow Chavez to ignore this and continue to run the government....for as long as he so wishes...thus protecting the "Bolivarian revolution" and 'ensuring the workers paradise continues under the enlightened leadership of our great glorious leader Charman Chavez...!'
ahem...oops - bit of a flash-back there..! ;-)
Like other such note-worthy democrats as Singagore's Lee Kuan Yew
Oh the tangled web we weave..!
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Fascist socialism rears its ugly head again under Chavez..?
By Anonymous, Anonymous at Dec 04, 2006 12:03 PM
This is pure socialist BS...
All of this talk about "Bolivarian revolution" and "oligarchichy" shows the obvious political predujidices of the authors...
Stop smelling the cool-aid...this guy is'nt good for democracy, however you define it...
I've visited Venezuela and I know people who actually work there, (as opposed to reading some socialsist rag 10,000 miles away), and its not a pretty picture.International Investment is (of course) drying up, and professionals are all seeking to flee the country asap - it was'nt just "wealthy capitalists" (I never could afford those clubs!) but doctors, dentists, engineers, etc - the middle-classed professionals who actually keep the country running you know...! (hence the flying in of 1000s of cheap Cubans..!).
While Im sure that a trained worker can keep a production-line going, they are'nt going to construct a new factory, change a manufacturing process, or fix your teeth for that matter...!
Oh, and thats aside from the roaming Chavista gangs in the cities of course, robbing and mugging with impunity...
Actually I am somewhat in favour of his nationalising the oil industry (they were getting a very, very bad deal from the masive petro profits, and I have no time for those Yanks who say "a deal is a deal" - the Venezuelan government & people were completely ripped off before...).
That said oil-production dropped by upto a 1/3rd (due to lack of engineering knowledge) when his "Chavistas" took over production, and may struggle to recover. (I know that from people who actually worked on the oil-production, and got black-banned from ever working again for...get this...just signing a letter of protest against Chavez..!).
Similarly Im somewhat in favour of some serious wealth redistribution in a country with such a wealth disparity..but taxation and welfare are the way that democracies do such things..and by re-organising companys on more equal grounds (i.e. CEOs not urging 1000 time workers!)
Thats been done in Brazil by companies by Semco, without turning the country into a backwater..
Similarly democracy there is now a joke - the opposition party and reporters have been shot-at (some killed), freedom of the press is practically non-existent (oh, and you get 4 hours a day of "Chavez to the poeple" covering the TV - where he is interviewed by his own sycophantic supporters...democracy at work...??).
Its only the massively buoyant oil-prices that are stopping this country from becoming a total basket-case...
Its a real pity, as some of the basic wealth and poverty redistribution requirements there are real - but such a brain-drain of talent (and Im sure investment) I've not seen before in my life..!
At the end of the day the only sources of capital are going to be oil-the only workers unskilled and semi-skilled workers (who are'nt capable of creating, let alone changing a manufacturing process), so while Im sure that massive petro-$ can prop up some closed businesses, I'd be more interested in WHY those business closed shop in the first place - and why no-one's interested in investing in them anymore..!That leaves out his recent purchase of 100,000 AK-47s (and some assorted Mig-fighters) - to what end is the real question...?
100,000 AK-47s are not going to stop the US turning Venezuela into another Iraq (if it so wished, god-forbid!) - 1,000,000 (plus masses of other arms) didnt even slow them down in Iraq [it was Islamist's suicide bombings thats done that..].
So why the sudden massive arms purchase then...?
The two answers are equally disturbing...
Either he is planning on distributing them to his [near anarchist] supporters...100,000 thugs armed with AKs is not a pretty picture (just ask anyone who's living in Joberg in South Africia about that one...)...
OR
He is planning on giving them to the local rebel groups that apparently Chavez supports - who are intent on destablising his neighbours...
Neither are very pretty pictures...
Yes - capitialism (especially US capitalism!) has its problems, but the opposite extreeme can be just as nasty and dangerous...and in ways that you dont allways read in the headlines...
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big questions
By Kissenger, Clark at Nov 20, 2006 22:57 PM
Marie Trigona
mtrigona@msn.com
www.alavio.org
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Hope
By Kissenger, Clark at Nov 20, 2006 11:18 AM
I guess the cliche is right: the media might not tell you what to think but it sure tells you what to think about. That can only explain why I glossed over this nugget of good news and was focused on the recent U.S. elections.
So I join cyrano is saying this is great news ^_^.
Some question cropped up though:
Offtopic: I recently read that Chavez plans to work towards removing term limits, for presidents, in Venezuela. What is that all about?
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from dreams to action
By Cohen, Eric at Nov 17, 2006 15:07 PM
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Workers factories
By Kissenger, Clark at Nov 17, 2006 08:31 AM
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