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Effect given to the recommendations of the Committee and the Governing Body
Effect given to the recommendations of the Committee and the Governing Body- 15. The Committee last examined this case at its November 2012 meeting
[see 365th Report, paras 216–235]. The Committee recalls that the complainant
organization, the Federation of Energy Workers of the Argentine Republic (FETERA),
alleged obstacles and an 11-year delay in processing the application for trade union
status filed with the labour administrative authority at its November 2012 session. In
examining the case, the Committee made the following recommendations [see 365th Report,
para. 235]:
- (a) The Committee regrets the length of time that
has elapsed (12 years) since the complainant’s request for trade union status and
recalls that a long delay in the procedure constitutes a serious obstacle to the
exercise of trade union rights.
- (b) The Committee urges
the Government to verify the percentages of membership to determine which of the two
trade unions in question (FETERA in the areas of coverage requested or the
organization with trade union status referred to by the Government) is most
representative. If the complainant organization is found to be more representative
than the organization with trade union status, the Committee requests the Government
to grant it the trade union status it has been requesting since 2000.
- 16. In a communication from February 2013, FETERA sent additional
information in relation to the complaint, recalling that it: (1) is a second-level
organization registered as a union since 10 February 1998; (2) groups together all the
first-level organizations representing workers employed in the production, exploitation,
sale, transmission, transport and distribution of energy, broadly defined, or
derivatives required for the production of energy, at every stage, and who work for
private employers, the State at national, provincial or municipal level, cooperatives or
employee stock ownership companies, whether as operators, administrative employees,
technicians or managers, with coverage across Argentina; and (3) started the application
procedure for the federation in 2000, and then in 2008 adjusted the application for
trade union status to cover the areas of its member organizations, the Light and Power
Workers’ Union of Mar del Plata and the Association of Professional Workers of the
National Atomic Energy Commission and the Nuclear Sector.
- 17. FETERA adds that, although the Committee urged the Government to
expedite the application, the Committee had asked the Government to perform the
comparative count (verifying the percentages and membership) in the manner provided for
in section 28 of Act No. 23551 on Trade Union Associations. Were this to happen, it
would seriously violate the freedom of association of the organization and its members.
The complainant organization recalls that both the Committee and the Committee of
Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations called into question the
counting procedure set out in this law.
- 18. In reference to the complaint, FETERA alleges that the Government
misled the Committee by maintaining that “in view of the personal coverage claimed by
FETERA and of the existence of another organization at the same level competing for
similar status, the provisions of section 28 of Act No. 23551 apply”. FETERA affirms
that the system set forth in section 28 of Act No. 23551 is applicable in cases in which
the competition for trade union status is between two first-level unions. Section 28 is
in other words not applicable when the application for trade union status is by a
federation, confederation or workers’ central organization, irrespective of whether or
not there are already bodies at the same level and scope which enjoy trade union status
(the complainant organization indicates that the Ministry of Labour has often stated
that the trade union status of a second- or third-level trade union body must be in line
with the geographical area and category of persons recognized in the status of the trade
unions which make up that trade union association. Trade union status has, for example,
been granted in this way to the Argentine Federation of Pastry, Cake, Ice Cream, Pizza
and Biscuit Makers, the Federation of Government Professionals of the Autonomous City of
Buenos Aires and the National Taxi Drivers’ Federation (FEPETAX)).
- 19. FETERA goes on to state that, when counting dues-paying members,
under the procedure covered by section 28: “if another association of workers with trade
union status exists, the same status can be granted to another association to carry out
its activity in the same area, occupation or category, only if the number of dues-paying
members of the applicant association, for a continuous period of at least six months
prior to the application, was considerably larger than that of the existing association
with trade union status”. FETERA claims that in reality it is almost impossible for a
trade union seeking trade union status to replace an existing trade union. This is on
account of a number of factors, including the requirement to count “dues-paying
members”. This requirement relates to section 38 of Act No. 23551, which obliges
employers to deduct union fees solely for bodies with trade union status. FETERA
maintains that, since a trade union which does not have trade union status must collect
its fees in person, each month receiving the relevant amount from each of the members,
the body seeking trade union status is at a clear disadvantage when it comes to
replacing other unions, given that it is specifically its “dues-paying” members who are
counted. Lastly, FETERA points out that under sections 23 and 31 of the Act on Trade
Union Associations, a trade union which does not enjoy union status lacks the basic
legal rights to represent its members adequately. This shortcoming not only applies to
collective bargaining, but also implies, for example, that its directors and members are
not protected or cannot call a strike.
- 20. The Committee regrets that, despite the time which has elapsed since
additional information was sent by the complainant organization, the Government has not
sent its observations on the matter. The Committee recalls that it has already had the
occasion to note “with concern that, for a number of years, it has had to examine cases
relating to Argentina concerning allegations of excessive delays – between three and
four years – in the processing of applications for trade union status [see, for example,
307th Report, Case No. 1872, paras 45–54; 309th Report, Case No. 1924, paras 45–55;
338th Report, Case No. 2302, paras 346–358; 346th Report, Case No. 2477, paras 209–246;
and 348th Report, Case No. 2515, para. 211]”. On that occasion too, the Committee
recalled that as early as 1997 it urged the Government to take the necessary measures to
ensure that in the future, when an organization requests registration or the granting of
recognition, the competent administrative authorities return their decisions without
unjustified delay” [see 307th Report, op. cit., paras 54 and 211]. Lastly, the Committee
requested the Government to “take, in consultation with representatives of workers’ and
employers’ organizations, the necessary steps to amend section 28 of the Act, under
which, in order to challenge another association’s trade union status, the petitioning
association must have a ‘considerably larger’ membership, and section 21 of implementing
Decree No. 467/88, which qualifies the term ‘considerably larger’ by laying down that
the association claiming trade union status should have at least 10 per cent more
dues-paying members than the organization which currently holds the status” [see 348th
Report, Case No. 2515, para. 214].
- 21. In these circumstances, the Committee urges the Government to take
the necessary measures without delay so that: (a) the trade union status for which
FETERA has been applying for over 14 years is awarded; and (b) in consultation with the
social partners, all the provisions of the Act on Trade Union Associations (No. 23551)
which do not conform to the principles of freedom of association are amended as
recommended by the ILO supervisory bodies. The Committee requests the Government to keep
it informed in this regard.