US pushes Mexico to reopen border factories, even as more workers die from COVID-19

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TIJUANA, Mexico — Even as COVID-19 deaths mount at factories in Mexico, the United States is sending a clear message: It’s time for those that have stopped production to get back to work.

The U.S. government has mounted a campaign to persuade Mexico to reopen many factories that were closed because of the country’s social distancing guidelines, warning that the supply chain of the North American free-trade zone could be permanently crippled if factories don’t resume production soon.

“The destruction of the economy is also a health threat,” the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, Christopher Landau, tweeted last week. “There are risks everywhere, but we don’t all stay at home for fear we are going to get in a car accident.”

Pressure has also come from American CEOs, more than 300 of whom sent a letter to Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador saying they were “deeply concerned” about the shuttering of factories, and from the U.S. Department of Defense, which has asked Mexico to reopen plants that produce parts sold to defense contractors.

Mexican officials have begun to cave, despite warnings from health authorities here that reopening factories too soon could lead to widespread death.

Federal officials have agreed to allow automotive plants to reopen. And authorities in the border state of Baja California have lifted closure orders on about a dozen factories. Dozens of other plants that were supposed to close but never did have escaped severe sanctions from labor officials.

The debate underscores the increasingly global nature of modern manufacturing — materials might cross multiple borders before a final product is assembled and sold — as well as the different approaches governments have taken toward the economy in the face of the global pandemic.

So-called nonessential businesses have been ordered closed both in Mexico and in the U.S., yet the two countries have adopted different definitions of what is considered essential, with Mexico embracing a more restrictive set of criteria.

That has left some factories that are still churning in the U.S. without crucial components because the plants that make them in Mexico have been forced to close.

“For some companies, the border might as well be shut down,” said Paola Avila, vice president of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce.

Avila said 380 of the businesses that her organization represents have petitioned Mexican officials to deem the work of their suppliers in Mexico essential so that they can resume business. About a dozen of those factories, most of which provide parts that are exported to the U.S. for use in the manufacture of medical supplies, have been allowed to reopen.

But the push has sparked anger in Mexico, especially in large foreign-owned factories along the northern border known as “maquiladoras,” which avoid most tariffs because their finished products are for export only.

Workers at multiple plants have held walkouts in recent weeks protesting a rise in outbreaks and worker deaths.

“They are criminals who are only interested in their capital,” said a worker at a factory owned by Wisconsin-based Regal Beloit that has been closed since employees walked off the job on April 15 after several of their colleagues died.

An April 18 letter from the company to employees confirmed three suspected coronavirus deaths at the Juarez factory. Workers say five others have died since.

“They don’t care about us,” said the worker, who did not give his name because he was not authorized to speak to the media. The company, which produces motors for appliances, ignored signs of an outbreak for weeks, he said, and failed to provide even basic protective material such as anti-bacterial gel.

A spokesman for Regal Beloit lamented “the passing of our associates” but said the company does not believe any of them contracted the disease at its plant.

Other factories where outbreaks occurred are preparing to reopen, including European Schneider Electric, a factory in Tijuana where at least three people have died, according to Baja California government officials.

A spokesman for the company, Venancio Figueroa, said it is deemed an essential business because it provides electrical products for hospitals, among other industries. He emphasized that under new safety measures, work stations will be cleaned every two hours and employees will have their temperature taken before each shift.

Employees of an auto parts factory in Juarez where at least 14 workers have died say the plant is preparing to reopen, and has erected walls around sewing machine work stations to protect workers.

A spokesman for the company, Michigan-based Lear, said it is preparing “comprehensive health and safety measures” and said “any facility reopening date will be at the determination of government regulations.”

But health officials here have cautioned that it may be too much, too soon.

“No matter how much they need our maquiladoras, our industries, our businesses … we must avoid opening nonessential activities because we are in the most difficult part of the pandemic,” Arturo Valenzuela Zorrilla, a top Chihuahua state health official, said Thursday.

Mexico has 19,224 confirmed coronavirus cases and 1,859 deaths, according to federal officials, who predict that the most severe phase of the crisis is yet to come.

Across the world, governments have had to weigh the economic costs of keeping businesses shuttered against the risk of the coronavirus spreading.

But that question is more complicated in northern Mexico, where most products are ultimately exported. The production of medical supplies, for example, has been deemed critical by the Mexican government, even though most of the medical supplies the country produces are for U.S. consumers.

“It’s an interesting question,” said Christopher Wilson, an economist at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington. “Should Mexican workers be putting their lives on the line to save people in the United States?”

One worker, 39-year-old Gustavo Morales, said he recently quit his job at a Tijuana factory after dozens of co-workers started falling ill. At least four died, he said.

The company, ONTEX, which makes diapers and feminine hygiene products for export, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The factory is deemed essential by the Mexican government.

Morales said he was terrified that he would bring the virus home to his family.

“They keep selling even knowing … that they are causing people to die,” he said. “But they don’t want to stop profits.”

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(Linthicum, a Times staff writer, reported from Mexico City. Fry, a staff writer at the San Diego Union Tribune, reported from Tijuana, and Minjares, a special correspondent, from Juarez.)

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