Brazil Post Office’s Month-Long Strike Ends After Court’s Intervention

Brazilian postal worker After 28 days of strike, it will take between seven and ten days for the Brazilian Post Office to normalize mail delivery, says the vice president in charge of its Legal Office, Jeferson Carus Guedes.

The biggest problems will be in large metropolitan areas and some isolated rural regions, such as in the state of Pará. The Post Office estimates that some 185 million items were not delivered since the beginning of the work stoppage.

Brazil’s Superior Labor Court ordered that striking workers be docked for seven days and that the other 21 days they were on strike must be compensated for by working overtime on weekends.

After four weeks without mail delivery, the Superior Labor Court (Tribunal Superior do Trabalho – TST) has ordered postal workers back to work today, Thursday, October 13.

The ruling came down on October 11, and was for workers to return the next day, but as October 12 was a national holiday the mail will once again begin to move only today.

In the ruling by the section of the court specialized in labor disputes, the Post Office was allowed to dock striking workers for seven days and make them work weekends to make up for the other 21 days on strike. The postal worker union can be fined 50,000 reais (US$ 28,000) per day if it refuses to obey.

The question as to whether or not the striking workers would be paid for the days they did not work was one of the flash points in the long postal strike negotiations. There is a Brazilian tradition of paying striking workers in the public sector that has been changing slowly.

Radical striking workers are opposed to any change, while the public in the role of victims of the strikes and government authorities responsible for a more efficient administration, are more and more in favor of docking pay.

The TST Chief Justice, João Oreste Dalazen, who wanted to allow all the days not worked to be docked from the striking workers salaries, declared:

“A negotiated solution was close on a number of occasions but the striking workers were not sensitive to the situation and there were people infiltrated in the strike who were interested in radicalizing positions. This was strike that had unequivocal political characteristics a number of times.”

As if to emphasize that the strike had lasted too long, the TST ordered a new labor contract that was the same as one offered at the end of September during the first round of negotiations: a real increase of 80 reais for all postal workers beginning October 1st; and an across-the-board salary and benefits increase of 6.87%, retroactive to August 1st. It is estimated that the new contract will add around 850 million reais (US$ 484 million) to the Post Office’s annual budget.

The general secretary of the lead postal worker union (Federação Nacional dos Trabalhadores de Empresas de Correios, Telégrafos e Similares – Fentect), José Rivaldo da Silva, lamented that the court ordered a solution that had been rejected by the unions.

No less than 35 unions negotiated for the workers, many of them from different states. “We expected more,” said a disappointed José Rivaldo da Silva, who added that the lesson of this strike seemed to be that a negotiated deal was better than a Labor Court order.

The TST Chief Justice, Delazen, criticized the unions, pointing out that there was an obvious disconnect between labor leaders and the rank and file. “This is a conflict that weakens the union movement. This fragility in the organization of Brazilian labor unions should be resolved quickly.”

The last strike by postal workers was in 2009 and lasted for 12 days. The biggest postal worker strike was for 32 days in 1994.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Despite Crisis, Emirates, Indian and Thailand Are Buying More from Brazil

Brazilian exports of agribusiness products totaled US$ 6.287 billion, in July, which represented a ...

Brazilians on the Streets Against the U.S.

Brazilians by the thousands will be hitting the street this weekend in demonstrations throughout ...

Brazilian Medical Firm is Equipping Iraq’s Hospitals

The manufacturer of medical and hospital instruments, Erwin Guth, located in the city of ...

Brasília's air control tower known as Cindacta-1 in Brazil

Command of English Would Have Prevented Brazil’s Worst Air Tragedy Ever

Brazil's worst air accident ever, on September 29, 2006, when an executive Legacy jet ...

Young Piquet from Brazil Wins Britain’s A1 Grand Prix

The Brazilian driver Nelsinho Piquet won the first phase of the new world car ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Reaches Average 1.8 Million Barrels a Day. A Record

Petrobras, Brazil's state-controlled oil multinational, announced on Thursday, July 3, that it achieved a ...

Sílvia Poloto’s hard work of art

After having broken the rules in Brazil by successfully participating in an area (engineering) ...

Pressured by Military Lula Removes ‘Political Repression’ from Human Right’s Text

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed a new decree changing the wording ...

Raped by Modernist Zeal

The left had a very good showing in major cities. On the other side ...

Indians Get a Stronger Voice on Brazil’s Politics

In an interview with National AM Radio, professor PatrÀ­cia Melo, who teaches history at ...