Over half of Trinidad’s Unilever’s unionised workers being retrenched

Unilever workers protest outside the company’s compound Champ Fleurs in August this year.
Unilever workers protest outside the company’s compound Champ Fleurs in August this year.

(Trinidad Guardian) The Oil­field Work­ers’ Trade Union (OW­TU) has been no­ti­fied that 178 out of the to­tal unionised work­force of 286 work­ers at Unilever Caribbean Ltd (UCL) work­ers are be­ing sent home.

OW­TU branch rep­re­sen­ta­tive, Neil Mc Each­nie told Guardian Me­dia Lim­it­ed via a tele­phone in­ter­view yes­ter­day that the com­pa­ny “went ahead and is­sued re­trench­ment no­tices for 178 work­ers. Unilever’s man­age­ment is in the process of is­su­ing re­trench­ment no­tices un­til about 7 pm tonight when the last em­ploy­ee se­lect­ed is sched­uled to re­ceive their pack­age.”

A me­dia re­lease from UCL yes­ter­day said: “The com­pa­ny will con­tin­ue to pri­ori­tise the safe­ty of all per­son­nel and will ac­tive­ly pur­sue the well­be­ing of the peo­ple and the op­er­a­tions of the com­pa­ny. UCL will abide by and op­er­ate in ac­cor­dance with all le­gal oblig­a­tions in all mat­ters re­lat­ing to this de­ci­sion.”

UCL said it will sharp­en the fo­cus of its core busi­ness to en­sure the long-term sus­tain­abil­i­ty of its op­er­a­tions in T&T and the re­gion.

Mc Each­nie ex­pressed frus­tra­tion that so many work­ers are be­ing sent home es­pe­cial­ly around the Christ­mas sea­son.

“How does one feel if they are be­ing sent home? Es­pe­cial­ly some work­ers who have worked with the com­pa­ny in ex­cess of 20 years par­tic­u­lar­ly this time of the year? There is a mix of frus­tra­tion, anger and anx­i­ety and all those types of emo­tions that will at­tend to this type of sit­u­a­tion,” he told the Guardian yes­ter­day.

Mc Each­nie al­so ex­pressed scep­ti­cism that Unilever’s man­age­ment is abid­ing by due process.

“I have not been se­lect­ed for re­trench­ment at this time but hav­ing been very in­ti­mate­ly in the process I can say em­phat­i­cal­ly that noth­ing that re­sem­bles good faith hap­pened in these dis­cus­sions. It start­ed with a lie and end­ed with a lie. It was shroud­ed in de­cep­tion, de­ceit and out­right lies through­out the en­tire process. There is no ex­pec­ta­tion from the com­pa­ny that they will dis­con­nect them­selves from that type of be­hav­iour,” he said.