Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Guatemalan Tire Workers Protest Working Conditions

In New Bedford, a city with a population just shy of 100,000 people, the workers of Bob’s Tire Company are fighting for better working conditions and a fair contract.

WorkersMedia

May 25, 2016
Facebook Twitter Share

“In the fight for better salaries, Guatemalan Mayans in New Bedford join a union.” So began a local Boston radio report on the ongoing struggle of about 65 workers at a tire recycling plant in New Bedford, located in southern Massachusetts. The workers, who are from indigenous Quiché villages of Guatemala, voted unanimously last year to form a union, but the boss has refused to accept a union contract. They’re fighting to organize themselves in a union with the greater objective of improving the harsh working conditions that the managers enforce with racist rules based on super-exploitation, physical and verbal abuse, and discrimination. (1)

img_1589.jpg
On September 24, 2015, the Bob’s Tire Company workers’ “yes” vote to join the UFCW local 328 was a historic victory which was published on the union’s webpage. It was a culmination of a process that began when Bob, the owner of the company, fired three workers for demanding a salary increase that he had promised the months earlier. According to this boss the workers who have been working there for over 10 years don’t deserve a raise. (2)

Tomás Ventura is a young Quiché who moved to the area when he was 18 years old. A short time later, he started to work at Bob’s Tire Company. He has now been working there for eight years. Tomás was one of the three who were fired for demanding a raise. However, together they fought and were able to get their jobs back. Upon returning, they quickly began to organize.

img_1579.jpg

The workers have built up their courage after many years of exploitation, threats and retaliation. As Tomás says, “We were fired to teach a lesson to the other workers. Nobody can say anything. Nobody can ask for a raise.” But silence did not prevail and now the workers are making history. It is a historic struggle because it is the first time that a group of Mayans has become unionized in the United States. These workers are setting an example in an area of the US where there are thousands of Mayan immigrants who share similar working conditions.

The city of New Bedford is located in southern Massachusetts and is known for its reference in the classic novel Moby Dick. New England was once a center of industry in the United States. It was here that the heart of the textile industry took root. Just as in the days of the industrial revolution, immigrants continue to be an important sector of the working class and amongst the most exploited. New England can be seen as a reflection of capitalist decay.

img_1609.jpg

The textile industry has long since disappeared. Today, Southern Massachusetts is an impoverished region with high levels of unemployment. Here, thousands of Mayans work in the fishing industry, an industry that has not yet been completely destroyed by capitalism. Business owners base their earnings on the super-exploitatation of immigrant workers, paying low wages and maintaining sweatshop-like conditions. The workers at Bob’s Tire are fighting to set an example for other young workers.Through organization and struggle, they can defeat the bosses and win their demands.

After six long months of fruitless negotiations, the UFCW has finally organized their first protest to make the voices of the workers heard. At the protest, WorkersMedia with Left Voice interviewed Tomás Ventura, who talked about the ongoing struggle. During the protest, the President of UFCW Local 328, Tim Melia, gave a vibrant speech where he promised they would continue fighting until a fair contract was achieved.

Bob’s Tire workers are showing their strength and unity to the bosses. It is through mobilization and struggle and with the solidarity of the community that they will win their demands and impose a contract on the company owner–with better wages and better working conditions.

Solidarity with Bob’s Tire Company Workers!
An injury to one is an injury to all!

1. Rios, Simon. “In Fight For Better Wages, New Bedford Mayans Join Trade Union.” In Fight For Better Wages New Bedford Mayans Join Trade Union RSS 20. WBUR News Station, 16 Oct. 2015. Web. 06 Nov. 2015. .
2. “Bob’s Tire Company Workforce Votes Union “YES” in Historic Victory.”UFCW Local 328. N.p., 24 Sept. 2015. Web. .


Guatemalan Workers' Protest BOB'S TIRE CO – YouTube

Facebook Twitter Share

Labor Movement

Cargo ship crashing into a bridge in Baltimore on March 26, 2024.

Baltimore Bridge Collapse Reveals Unsafe Working Conditions for Immigrant Workers

Six Latine immigrant workers died in the March 26 bridge collapse in Baltimore. The accident exposed how capitalism perpetuates dangerous working conditions for many immigrants, and funds genocide over crumbling public infrastructure.

Julia Wallace

April 4, 2024

Self Organization and the Mexican Student Strike 

Left Voice member speaks about the massive 1999 Mexican student strike and the role of assemblies.

Jimena Vergara

March 30, 2024

“Our Big Push Was for Union Democracy and a Plan to Win”: An Interview with the Amazon Labour Union Democratic Reform Caucus

Two years after the historic victory at JFK8, Amazon workers voted in a referendum in their union. They want to hold new elections and revise the constitution, as part of a struggle to make ALU more democratic and militant. Left Voice spoke with two organizers to discuss the struggle in ALU.

Luigi Morris

March 20, 2024
A banner reads "Real Wages Or We Strike" at a rally for CUNY, which is experiencing cuts from Mayor Eric Adams and Governor Kathy Hochul.

CUNY Faculty and Staff Have Gone One Year Without a Contract — It’s Time to Strike

CUNY workers have been without a new contract for a full year and the university has yet to make any economic offers. It's time to take action.

Olivia Wood

February 29, 2024

MOST RECENT

U.S. Imperialism is Pushing Tensions in the Middle East to a Boiling Point

U.S. Imperialism's support for Israel is driving the tensions behind Iran's attack and the escalations in the Middle East. It is all the more urgent for the working class to unite with the movement for Palestine against imperialism and chart a way out of the crisis in the region.

Samuel Karlin

April 15, 2024

Thousands of Police Deployed to Shut Down Congress on Palestine in Berlin

This weekend, a Palestine Congress was supposed to take place in the German capital. But 2,500 police were mobilized and shut down the event before the first speech could be held. Multiple Jewish comrades were arrested.

Nathaniel Flakin

April 12, 2024

Liberal Towns in New Jersey Are Increasing Attacks on Pro-Palestine Activists

A group of neighbors in South Orange and Maplewood have become a reference point for pro-Palestine organizing in New Jersey suburbs. Now these liberal towns are upping repression against the local activists.

Samuel Karlin

April 12, 2024

“We Shouldn’t Let this Stop Us”: Suspended Columbia Student Activist Speaks Out

Aidan Parisi, a student at Columbia University’s School of Social Work, was recently suspended and has been threatened with eviction from their graduate student housing for pro-Palestinian activism on campus. Aidan talked to Left Voice about the state of repression, the movement at Columbia, and the path forward for uniting the student movement with the labor movement and other movements against oppression.

Left Voice

April 11, 2024