By: Diario Vive Editorial Staff CABA
February 20, 2026
The usual calm of the industrial area of San Fernando was broken this week by a conflict that is escalating minute by minute. The plant Fatean emblem of the national industry with 80 years of experience, has become the epicenter of a workers’ struggle that resonates throughout the country. After the official announcement of the closure of their operations, the workers decided to start a peaceful stay within the facilities to avoid emptying and demand clear answers about their future.
A conflict that does not give truce
The company’s decision to lower the blinds left 922 workers on the street immediately. Management justifies the measure by the drop in demand and the opening of imports which, they allege, makes local tire production unviable. However, since SUTNA (Single Union of Argentine Tire Workers) denounce that it is a savage adjustment maneuver.
«We are not numbers on an Excel spreadsheet, we are people with years of experience, families who depend on this salary and a trade that we learned with pride,» said one of the delegates during the permanent assembly.
The shadow of eviction
Yesterday, the situation reached its peak of tension when a eviction order issued by the court. Despite the strong police presence in the surrounding area, the workers confirmed their willingness not to abandon the plant. The slogan is clear: peaceful stay. There are no incidents, just men and women sitting on the tires they made themselves, guarding the machines that are their life.
Impact on the community
The closure of Fate not only affects direct operators. San Fernando feels the blow:

- Local trade: A precipitous drop in sales is estimated for businesses near the plant.
- Industry: The domino effect could reach suppliers of inputs and logistics.
- Families: Many of the workers are lifelong neighbors who today face total uncertainty.
What’s next?
While waiting for a negotiation table at the Ministry of Labor, the atmosphere is one of vigil. Social organizations, neighbors and other unions have approached the factory door to bring donations and moral support.
The question that remains floating in the air of San Fernando is: Is this the end of an industrial era or the beginning of a resistance that will mark 2026? From Diario Vive we will closely follow every development in this plant that today, more than rubber, breathes struggle.
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