Highveld strike is effective

SOUTH AFRICA: Five-thousand workers employed at Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation began strike action on August 7 following their rejection of management’s latest offer of an 8 per cent wage rise. The National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa is demanding the following for its members at the steelmaker:
– 15 per cent wage hike;
– 500 rand (US$61) risk allowance;
– 60 per cent subsidy for medical aid;
– 200 rand (US$24) increase in housing subsidy;
– overtime payment as per the Basic Conditions of Employment Act;
– 20 days of leave for shop stewards to attend union activities.
With production halted at Highveld, the pressure on South Africa’s second biggest steel company is great to find a way out of the impasse; however, says Numsa, “we hope this will translate into real action by putting a revised settlement package. If this is not the case, the strike will continue for an unspecified period.”
Highveld makes steel vanadium products, ferro-alloys, carbonaceous products and metal containers and closures, and produces ore from its own mine. In 2000, the company manufactured 1 million tonnes of carbon steel, compared to 5.2 million tonnes at its larger rival in South Africa, Iscor, which managed to avoid a strike only the week before when it offered wage increases above inflation.