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The Committee notes the comments of the Union of Press Workers of Buenos Aires (UTPBA), dated 16 June 1998, concerning the possible repeal of the statutes on the conditions of service of professional journalists and on the conditions of service of administrative employees of newspaper companies, the repeal of which the UTPBA considers would adversely affect the application of the Convention. The Committee notes the Government's statement to the effect that the statutes on the conditions of service regulating journalistic activities continue to remain in force and that no text has been drafted to repeal them. Consequently, the Committee shall not pursue its examination of this question.
The Committee takes note of the comments of the Union of Press Workers of Buenos Aires (UTPBA) concerning the repeal on 16 June 1998 of the Conditions of Service of professional journalists and of the Conditions of Service of administrative employees of newspaper companies and requests the Government to send its comments on the matter to allow it to examine these comments at its next meeting.
The Committee also takes note of the recently adopted Act No. 25013 establishing amendments to certain provisions governing employment contracts and to certain laws and current rules governing collective labour agreements, and observes that sections 13 and 14 of the Act stipulate as follows.
Section 13. The Ministry of Labour and Social Security is to set up a mediation and arbitration service following consultations with the most representative employers' organizations and with the General Confederation of Labour; the service will intervene in collective disputes at the request of the parties concerned.
Section 14, paragraph 1. Representation of workers in negotiations on collective labour agreements of whatever type will be the responsibility of higher-level trade union associations which will be able to delegate their power to negotiate to their decentralized structures.
The Committee considers that some of these provisions may present problems in relation to the Conventions ratified by Argentina and proposes to examine them in greater depth next year as part of its examination of the application of Convention No. 98 within the regular reporting cycle.
The Committee notes the report made by the Government.
With reference to its previous direct request, the Committee notes that the Government states that the National Commission for Mediation and Collective Bargaining and the 1994 Framework Agreement on Employment, Productivity and Social Equity have ceased to operate, but that both have made a significant contribution in the general sphere of reconciliation between social partners which culminated in the collective bargaining project and the Law on Collective Bargaining in the Public Sector: Teachers and University Staff.
As regards the requirement for official approval of agreements going beyond enterprise level, the Committee refers to the comments it made in examining the application of Convention No. 98 by the Government of Argentina.
Finally, the Committee has also noted the comments made by the Union of United Maritime Workers (SOMU) relating to collective bargaining in the maritime sector, to which a response will be given within the framework of Convention No. 98.
The Committee notes the information supplied by the Government in its first report on the Convention and makes the following comments:
Article 7 of the Convention. The Committee notes that the consultations between the Government, employers and workers to encourage and promote collective bargaining were held through the National Commission for Mediation and Collective Bargaining set up under the "Framework Agreement for Employment, Productivity and Social Equity" of 25 June 1994. In this respect, the Committee asks the Government to inform it whether this National Commission continues to function in practice, what agreements it has concluded and what other measures have been adopted to strengthen the action of the Commission.
Article 8. In regard to this Article, the Committee refers to its comments concerning Convention No. 98 on the requirement that, to be valid, agreements concluded beyond the enterprise level are subject to approval under certain conditions, and on the possibility of derogation by decree to collective agreements, based on the criteria of productivity.