The delicate balance between life and death: a child with hemophilia, a single mother and maquiladora worker in Ciudad Acuña.
by
Elvia R. Arriola, J.D., M.A., Executive
Director, Women on the Border, Inc.
The Place: Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, Mexico, October 13,
2007 (All names of persons met in Mexico are pseudonyms).
Amada, a maquiladora
worker for one of the ALCOA factories in Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, greeted the
group of visitors from Austin, Texas with a big smile. We were late getting to
her house for a scheduled visit arranged by volunteers of the Comité Fronterizo
de Obreras (CFO). Our group had
traveled by van from Austin to meet with the CFO volunteers who guide
delegations of U.S. visitors to meet maquiladora workers and to hear about their
struggles for justice against abusive employers. On this particular trip the
arrangement between Austin Tan Cerca de la Frontera and the CFO, two
organizations that have forged an admirable cross-border solidarity
relationship since 1999, chose Piedras Negras and Acuña for the fall 2007
delegation. I served as an interpreter along with our delegation leader, Howard
H., a computer programmer for the Austin community college system.
Amada’s house was
tiny. We were at least fifteen,
including a CFO organizer who had already been in touch with Amada and may have
asked if she was open to a visit by travelers from the U.S. on an educational
trip. We stepped on a rocky path to the house built out of large grey concrete
blocks. At the border, the grey block homes are a step up for the workers who
come to the border looking for work, having left rural farmlands, and start out
in “casas de carton” literally shacks built from foraged scrap wood and
construction pallets, sheet metal and even hammered out soda pop and beer tins.
Amada’s rocky “front
yard” was also a laundry area. We gathered inside the first of two large rooms,
one designated as a large kitchen/dining area and living/bedroom area. Most of us stood, a few sat on the floor with
their notepads and cameras. A little
boy, with warm dark eyes and straight black hair scampered on to a bed against
the wall. From the corner he peered out curiously, holding a toy in his hands,
returning a shy smile to a stranger’s gaze.
At first Amada’s
story about her work life at an ALCOA factory in Ciudad Acuña resembled that of
many others we had met on previous trips to the border. We heard of the awful hours, limited
bathroom breaks, exhaustion from repetitive tasks and merciless supervisors and
their rigid enforcement of attendance rules. A single mother’s tardiness is met
with spirit-crushing economic penalties as they struggle to do their very best
to raise families on their own.
“I go in on the late
shift so that my daughter can stay with my son when I leave for work. He needs
constant attention because he has a very serious condition. He does not heal easily from cuts and
bruises.” Amada went into more details about being a single mother of a boy
with hemophilia and a maquiladora worker. Hemophilia can be fatal. Some of us
remember stories in history books about European royalty and little boys
afflicted with a once untreatable disease. Today hemophilia is manageable,
somewhat like diabetes. It is
sex-linked, i.e., only males manifest the inherited trait while females are
asymptomatic carriers of the condition.
Hemophiliacs do not produce in which Factor VIII, a blood clotting
agent, so it must be acquired through intravenous supplementation.
“Why can’t you get
the missing H factor at the Seguro Social here at the border?” asked one of the
delegates, a registered nurse from Illinois. Amada obtained monthly supplies at
the central hospital for the Seguro Social, clinic for workers, in Monterrey,
which entailed a two-day journey. Amada’s daughter went to the refrigerator and
brought out the small bottles designed for injection. “It’s just not as good. The medicine I get in Monterrey is not
only better it is free to me as a worker.
If I had an emergency I could probably get it across the border in Del
Rio but it would be very expensive.
Also the medical staff in Monterrey seem to do a better job of examining
and treating him.”
Amada’s story was
one of frustration as she pointed to her son’s knees to demonstrate some of the
problems. One knee in fact looked
swollen. “I can tell when he needs the medicine because he plays and runs into
things and then he is swollen. I have
to watch him carefully.” Of course such
is the consequence of this disease in which a small cut will not heal, and the
blood simply turns into a fatal drain of life from the body.
“I can never catch up at work. If I work hard and earn credits or bonuses,
I just lose them because they penalize me for taking the time off to take him
to the hospital. The supervisors know that
I’m not just missing work, but I get docked anyway.” The delegates took in the
description of a system of employment in which workers’ needs are never
balanced against production demands.
Like many global factories today, the bottom line for the corporate
foreign investor is to lower the costs
of labor. That’s it. This may entail
making workers work extra long schedules, or using harsh methods of discipline
to instill punctuality and attendance.
In Ciudad Acuña, where unions are virtually non-existent, this
employment system thrives on fear of being marked up for lateness, losing a
work bonus or worse, losing a job for an accumulated bad attendance record.
“My biggest
complaint about what I face as a worker is being docked for my pay for taking
him to the doctors in Monterrey. I have
to play mother and father. I have no
one else who can help me.”
Maquiladora workers
who are also single mothers seem to suffer the most under a system bent on
turning the working class into cogs in the wheel of production. In the name of free trade the multinational
corporation is glutting the market shelves with a dizzying variety of products
to buy that were assembled or produced in an export processing zone. We know gender plays a critical role in the
global economy. That is, women are still a higher percentage of the global
factory workers, men are mainly the owners and supervisors, women’s pay is
significantly inferior, and women experience high levels of sexual harassment,
abuse and disregard for their needs as mothers and as women. The single mother/maquiladora worker has no
choice but to find some kind of balance between being a responsible worker and
a good parent. The mother with a chronically sick child is even more oppressed
by the industry’s constant demand for efficient and steady production.
The group sat in
silent shock after Amada’s story drove home the insensitivity of an employer
who allows a supervisor to dock a mother’s pay for taking time off to get the
medicine that will keep her child alive. In the U.S. employees who face similar
medical leave problems, and who work for an employer with at least fifty
employees, are entitled to the benefits of the Family Medical Leave Act. It is ironic that if Amada were working for
ALCOA in the U.S. her situation would probably clearly be covered under the
FMLA.
Yet sadly that’s the
whole point of globalization in today’s economy. Many a multinational
corporation started out as a U.S. domestic company that once paid its workers
union wages, who retired after 20-30 years with a nice pension plan. But, those
are now stories of the past. In the
nineties, ALCOA, the Aluminum Company of America, like many other corporations,
reorganized production and assembly under the privileges of the North American
Free Trade Agreement. Jobs once in the
American rust belt first left for Mexico, then India and today it is China, all
with the goal of avoiding unions and remaining competitive in the global market
economy with what activists refer to as the “race to the bottom of the wage
scale.”
We end our visit and
head out for a different kind of activity for this particular delegation. The CFO volunteers had suggested that we
trek over to the international bridge and find the activists who had organized
an historic demonstration against the building of a new and stronger border
wall to separate Mexico and the U.S. As we walk I am pensive, and admiring of
the activists who put together the protest.
On my mind are also thoughts of the rhetoric of free trade and
“liberation” of the investor who can avoid tariffs and has protections under
NAFTA. I compare that privilege to the
trials and tribulations of someone like Amada, whose life is not free. We
approach the border and see the dancers on the bridge on the Mexico side,
awaiting their American partners. We
see their colorful banners describing the wall as “El Muro de Muerte,”
literally a death wall.
How appropriate and
ironic. In the same period in which
foreign investors and wealthy Mexican businessmen opened up the border with
NAFTA to intensify new forms of international trade, the border was also
militarized with more guns, border cops, chain linked fences and night vision
telescopes. Yes, free trade law and policy
changed at the same time as immigration law and policy. As the stock market figures rose for the
NAFTA investors so did the number of migrant deaths because of a more
militarized border. The “free” in free trade is liberation for the investor,
not the worker.
Many argue, what’s
the big complaint? They have new jobs,
better than begging on the street. If
so, then why does the CFO chronicle a worsening of quality of life under NAFTA? Why do the labor activists complain of
non-living wages, of toxic chemicals in the workplace, of work-related injuries for lack of safety
equipment and training, of brutal work schedules and monotonous, repetitive
tasks that injure the body mind and spirit?
Yes, it may not be slavery, but can the life of a worker like Amada, who
can’t easily take a day off to keep her child from dying, be described as free?
It is ironic that
the promoters of free trade often speak of liberation from the tariffs and
protectionism that stifle positive economic growth. Except that nowhere is the
rhetoric of free trade ever concerned with the fairness of the deal to all of
those who are involved in or affected by globalization of the economy, meaning
not just the shareholder but also the workers whose labor is essential to the
production, export, sales and consumption. You can’t call it slavery but you
also can’t call it freedom to work in a maquiladora. The standard work schedule
is long, the pay is bad, the penalties for lateness are harsh, there are
horrible safety problems everywhere, supervisors harass workers, threaten them,
and some pressure women for sexual favors in return for lenience. In Acuña, the
town whose mayor promises foreign investors not to worry about unions, Amada’s
survival wages are at best 500 pesos per week, fifty U.S. dollars. With the
higher cost of living at the border it seems to be never enough.
I’m back now in
Austin. I wonder as I write, was Amada forced to stay longer to meet a
production deadline? Is her boy’s
medicine running out? Is she being
pressured by a supervisor not to miss again?
Did he move too close to the edge of the brick wall? Did the sister not
see him grab a sharp toy or instrument, or did he fall on a rock on the streets
of Acuña? Did his mother manage to
balance once again life or death while she produces one more day for a global
employer and stretches out her pesos until the next week’s pay? Is this the
world the promoters of free trade mean when they promise more freedom and
global democracy through an expanding global economy crafted along the values
of free trade? Ask the single mother
maquiladora worker what life is like under NAFTA. If she is a single mother and a worker and has a child with a
life-threatening illness, like hemophilia, don’t even bother to ask.