Nov. 03, 2009

ArcelorMittal Vows Not To Shut European Plants

ArcelorMittal Promises European Workers That It Won't Shut Plants Or Make Forced Layoffs

(AP)  BRUSSELS (AP) - ArcelorMittal SA, the world's largest steel maker, told trade unions Tuesday that it does not plan to shut down any of its European plants or make forced layoffs, workers' representatives said.

The European Metalworkers Federation said they signed an agreement with ArcelorMittal on Monday that "confirms that all the plants will be restarted and that no compulsory redundancies will take place."

ArcelorMittal employs 115,000 people in Europe. It shuttered plants and temporarily laid off workers in France, Germany and Belgium earlier this year to reduce output by half while steel demand slumped. It is now starting to reopen facilities as steel orders increase.

French and Belgian workers, angered by the company's failure to say whether some plants had a future, attacked the company's Luxembourg headquarters during a shareholders' meeting in May.

In the agreement, ArcelorMittal committed to the upkeep of mothballed plants or tools and promised to put workers on shorter hours or provide training during the economic downturn.

It said it "intends not to resort to compulsory dismissals" and any redundancies would be negotiated with trade unions. The steel maker last week said a voluntary redundancy program had helped it shed some 40,000 workers since the start of the economic crisis.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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