More rain, short news
As my last week kicks in, I find there is still more rattling around in my head then is either put down on paper or in this blog, and that is equally true for both work purposes and for general observations about this place. Today it is wet again.
It has been an exciting month at Firestone plantation, though I've only sporadically had direct involvement. Union Elections happened. Two weeks before, the opposition candidates won a court order barring the incumbent leadership from taking any actions on behalf of the FAWU (Firestone Union) until they had complied with the law requiring them to make available financial and administrative records from the last 2 years to any union member who requests them.
Then on the morning of the election the same court recognized the same leadership it had enjoined from taking any official actions and issued an injunction barring and voiding the election. Ground for that are not clear. The government spent something like $20,000 to facilitate a full election for the ~8,000 laborers spread over the vast network of towns and districts that comprise the Firestone plantation. The election went ahead. The reform candidates won in a landslide. The American Steelworkers and the Liberian Federation of Labor both had observers certify it as free and fair. Firestone management denounced it as illegal and unrigged. Guess which candidates they favor?
So the workers went ahead and had an inauguration ceremony. Something like 5-8,000 people showed up. Had a series of boisterous speaches. Carried the newly elected leaders on their shoulders over a mile to the union offices where the broke down the door and changed the locks to install the new team. Firestone management is not pleased, but international labor unions are lining up behind the FAWU and the legitimacy of the election. It will be a hot issue to watch.
