The National Federation of Trade Unions of Workers in Public and Social Functions (FNSTFPS) said in a press conference that the strike was a measure requested by the workers, who have been pushed to their limits.
The strike notice “brought to the public information that was not being given, that AIMA is not responding, as the immigrants rightly say, because it does not have enough staff to work”, said Artur Sequeira, leader of the federation, explaining that workers are required to work 150 hours a year (overtime) but “they are doing much more, and are under pressure to do so”, are poorly paid and receive these hours many months after the work is done.
“This whole process is one of exhaustion, of discontent, and the workers had to give a signal for a change to take place”, added Artur Sequeira.
The discontent is also due to the “chaos” that, according to union leaders, AIMA is in, and it is not even known how many workers it has exactly.
In a document with 25 needs or constraints felt by workers, some of the complaints reveal confusion, such as difficulty in communicating about schedules or ways of justifying absences, lack of knowledge about team composition, lack of monitoring of workers or lack of communication with management.
Lack of specialized technical personnel, poor working conditions, workers being called to other functions, suddenly and without training, are other complaints, in addition to workers exceeding 150 hours of overtime that are not paid.
The FNSTFPS, which met with the Government at the beginning of the month and expects to hold a new meeting in September, demands political solutions to resolve the problems, that AIMA be provided with a staff map with jobs that respond to real needs, and that it include sociocultural mediators, ending protocols with private social solidarity institutions.
The mediators, the union leader warned, are not linked to the civil service and cannot perform certain tasks or access databases, such as creating reports to support decision-making, when they are doing so.
At AIMA “there are not enough workers, there is no management, there is no regulation to standardize the functioning of AIMA, there are many personnel difficulties in the various sectors and this whole process generates great fatigue among the workers”, Artur Sequeira summarized.
And regarding the mission structure, announced by the Government to solve the problem of the 400 thousand pending cases, the union leader regrets that the process is not yet working, that there are still no hires, and says that removing workers from AIMA to place them in the structure is “uncovering one side to cover the other”.
The problems now being felt, he advocated, should have been solved before AIMA started operating.
The problem is not AIMA but the unsustainable number of migrants in Portugal and no one seems to care.
By Diogo F. from Lisbon on 24 Aug 2024, 00:23
Humm,
This is when it’s starts getting tricky.
Diogo you have a point.. it’s not the grossly overworked and underpaid people who work at AIMA fault that there is a backlog of 410k cases .. it’s the system set up to fail.
Other European countries managed to process millions of migrants without to much of a problem.
And with a failing population PT needs migration..
I bought my house in central PT in a village with 30 houses and a population of 3!!!(average age 79) there are no schools, shops ,bus links, cafés within a 35min drive. Because there are no people!
But as a proud migrant’ I persevered and have employed 4 local builders , 1 plumber, 1 roofer, 2 gardeners… the local garage loves me and my classic camper$$ and run around car.(as does the nearest shop). I was going to have a large solar power system installed((15k) and start up a small brewery and a goat cheese business employing 3 and bring tourists/intrest/population to central PT.
But I can’t get a renewal on my residency card after nearly 5 years of being here…so it’s frustrating.
But mate!! thank you for kind words of support in this difficult time for so many people.
By Luc from Other on 24 Aug 2024, 11:45
My opinion is leave the aima for few months they will make Avery thing right
Give them time Avery thing will be normal
By Shafi from Lisbon on 25 Aug 2024, 01:51
I think Diogo is right in many ways. If a country is going to generously open their doors to migrants, it is good to have the technology, Human Resources, and money to process the applicants coming and renewing BEFORE they open their doors - and that includes ensuring the existing and/or planned housing stock can meet the projected influx of people. Regardless of how people feel about migration, it only becomes an issue when it is mishandled.
By Rui from Lisbon on 26 Aug 2024, 14:11
LUC, YOU ARE NEEDED! I hope that AIMA performs for you soon, and for all the others like you in waiting.
By Brian Sanders from Other on 26 Aug 2024, 16:18
It’s not just the 410,000 people who are waiting for their visas to be processed, it’s also the unknown hundreds of thousands who have not been able to get through to AIMA by phone or email to even schedule an appointment for renewal. We’ve been in Portugal legally for years but now that my visa has expired, I can’t leave Portugal or I will lose my residency. I can’t visit my family or go on vacation.
By Sindaxi from Lisbon on 02 Sep 2024, 20:06