02) SUDBURY MINERS
TAKE ON A BIG FOE
(The following article
is from the August 1-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
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By Sam Hammond, Chair
of the Central
Trade Union Commission, Communist Party of Canada
Vale Inco, a subsidiary of Companhia
Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), was founded by the Brazilian government in
1942. Just seven years later, it was responsible for over 80% of
Brazilian iron ore exports. As a publicly owned company, CVRD had
access not only to government capital but to all the vast resources of
Brazil. By 1970 CVRD was the major stakeholder of the Carajas Mine,
which still has reserves of 1.5 billion tones of iron ore, and had
become the biggest exporter of iron ore in the world. During its time
of public ownership CVRD (Vale) had developed ownership and investment
in transportation (railroads), built ports for the export of ore, and
branched out into hydro electric and steel.
In 1997 the
Brazilian federal government, in a much disputed political decision,
allowed the privatization of Vale. The company was delivered to the
lusting hands of the "Brazil Consortium" formed and led by the National
Steel Company (CSN). This privatization of course transferred huge
profits from the public purse to the bank accounts of Brazil's wealthy
investors. It also gave considerable geography and access to natural
wealth that was previously controlled by a public company into the
hands of a private industrial/investment cabal.
Between 2000
and 2007 the huge and varied holdings of Vale were sold off. The
company consolidated itself using $4.9 billion of its now privatized
capital to purchase outright most of its competitors, which gave it
ownership of 85% of Brazil's iron ore and virtual 100% ownership of all
Brazilian iron ore exports. The consolidation of Vale into a
mining-only company set the stage for Vale to release itself from its
dependency on the price of iron ore and to diversify into non-ferrous
metals.
In 2006 Vale
acquired Inco, Canada's second largest mining company, paying $17.7
billion in cash and assuming Inco's $1.2 billion in debt. This was a
major part of the transfer of Canadian extraction, manufacturing,
transportation, energy and forest industries into foreign ownership and
control, a process very advanced but not yet complete. With the
acquisition of Inco, Vale boosted the output of non‑ferrous metals to
34% of its world output and broke its dependency on the iron ore
market, although iron ore is still 64% of its business.
Just prior
to the Inco grab, Vale's largest customer, Arcelor-Mittal (the worlds
largest steel producer), purchased Canada's second largest steel mill
(Dofasco) located next door to the largest (Stelco) which was soon
consumed by U.S. Steel. These three purchases passed a huge part of the
Canadian economy into foreign hands, allowed access to cheap Canadian
energy, and gave control of iron ore and precious metal mining to South
American, Eurasian and U.S. capital.
Vale owns
six mines in the greater Sudbury area, a refinery in Port Colborne,
Ontario, two mines in Manitoba, and the very rich Voisey's Bay mine in
Newfoundland/Labrador. They have made more profit in Canada in the last
two years than Inco made in the last ten years of ownership. They have
launched what can only be described as an attack, not only on the
Steelworkers in Sudbury and Port Colborne, but on the communities that
depend on the wages and benefits of these workers for economic
sustenance and stability.
Under the
guise of the current economic crisis, Vale has attacked the "Nickel
Bonus", which is important to even out the effect of world market
prices that dictate the level of mining activity or lay‑offs, directly
affecting the yearly income of miners. Vale demands concessions on
contracting out, and introduction of a two‑tier pension program -
including switching to a defined contribution plan that would become a
money maker for the company and condemn retirees to lives of dependency
on international finance capital, the architects of the present global
crisis debacle. Vale wants to interfere with the Cost of Living
Adjustment (COLA) by refusing to roll it into the base hourly rate
annually, thus effectively freezing wage rates so the COLA becomes a
transient add‑on that does not affect pension programs, holiday pay,
overtime rates or any other program that is based on wages.
All this
sounded familiar to the striking civic workers in Toronto and Windsor,
where municipal administrators must have attended the same labour
relations classes as the corporate yap dogs of the global neo‑cons.
Vale offers the Steelworkers contracting out, two‑tiered wages and
pensions, using the global crisis as an excuse to attack future
generations of our youth, weaken our unions, ruin our economy and run
with the profits to offshore low wage enterprises and "money as a
commodity" financial investments.
The
municipal leaders attacking CUPE workers offered the same cup of
hemlock. But here there is no surplus value, only acquiescence with the
neo‑liberal agenda that impoverished our cities in the form of tax cuts
to the corporations while cutting transfer payments to the provincial
and municipal governments. The recipients of the tax cuts include the
foreign based monopolies like Vale. So the monopolies prosper at the
expense of the municipalities (where 90% of our population lives),
while municipal leaders react to a poverty of government funding by
attacking the wages and pensions of public sector workers. Not
satisfied with super profits and low taxes, the monopolies attack
private sector workers for a double whammy of profit to invest in the
global financial casinos.
Sudbury
miners, whether the CAW descendants of the Mine Mill and Smelter
Workers or the presently embattled Steelworkers, have a reputation for
standing firm in the face of adversity. The militancy of these workers,
the massive support for their leadership and their ability to rouse the
entire community, can win against Vale and can recruit global
solidarity with international labour. Vale is a foreign corporation
trying to impose its agenda on Canadian workers.
A
Steelworkers victory in Sudbury and Port Colborne will have a
strengthening effect on all public and private sector workers standing
against the same drive to impose two-tiered injustice for the future
generation and a demeaning loss of quality‑of‑life for the present. In
the environment of a vicious attack on Ontario Autoworkers and the
foreign-rigged tragedy of Hamilton Steelworkers, the working class in
Ontario very badly needs to win.
The Ontario
Federation of Labour cannot remain relatively passive. It must lead a
massive campaign to recruit public support for these strikes. The OFL
should welcome, without conditions, the re‑entry of the CAW, whose
militancy and organization could be a decisive factor in the emerging
solidarity and labour unity.