The 39 dismissed operators correspond to the “10 or 12” subsidiaries that the company has in the country. “The Copagran adjustments to ‘shrink’ expenses- they told us- they made the dismissal of workers, some with more than 34 years of permanence there,” Gastón González, the staff’s union representative, told Eco.
“We met with the company’s directive and we will have a new meeting on October 6, because there are people who want to withdraw and did not fire it, and they did throw other workers who are in treatment in mutualists due Finish classes.
González marked that “in the Ministry of Labor they have treated us very well and they are collaborating. We do not know if Copagran will change the decision, because, in addition to the dismissals, the work that eight people have done four people, it is a tremendous overload.”

