NEW REPORT
While the people of Puerto Rico endure the consequences of the climate emergency, pharma manufacturers continue polluting and exploiting the natural resources in the archipelago, making billions of dollars in the process.
You are one signature away from demanding Puerto Rican lawmakers to launch an official investigation on the labor conditions of workers in pharma plants all over Puerto Rico!
Puerto Rico deserves real investments in infrastructure and a future for its people. It’s time to hold La Junta and its pharma buddies accountable. Sign the petition below!
Big Pharma has dominated Puerto Rico's economy for decades: Puerto Rico is home to almost 50 pharmaceutical plants, which produce more than half of the world's leading medication for patients with arthritis, strokes, cancer, and other fatal conditions. Despite being an essential industry for Puerto Rico's economy and global health, workers across Puerto Rican factories receive unlivable wages, little or no benefits, and unsafe working conditions. To make matters worse, communities surrounding manufacturing plants continuously suffer the adverse health and environmental hazards of their unfettered toxic waste.
It's time to put an end to profits over people. Join us in demanding an official House of Representatives investigation so we can finally bring bad actors in big pharma and other industries to justice!
Securing a job in pharma has always been considered a source of stability and decent wages in Puerto Rico. With nearly fifty manufacturing plants all over the Island, corporations like Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly, and AstraZeneca employ tens of thousands in Puerto Rico. Yet, upon examining the real-life experiences of their workers, Big Pharma’s record-breaking profits and luxuries have yet to benefit the workers actually producing life-saving medications. “Pharma’s Failed Promise: How Big Pharma Hurts Workers, Dodges Taxes, and Extracts Billions in Puerto Rico,” in collaboration with Hedge Clippers, our latest report reveals how pharma has extracted wealth from Puerto Rico, keeping thousands of workers in low-wage jobs while exposing them to below standard health and safety issues–all while benefiting from billions of dollars in tax breaks. |