SEASONAL FACTORIES.
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India the season is at its height between December and March.
Men and women are employed on ginning in about equal proportions.
Boys are engaged on sweeping and odd jobs, but girls are only occasionally
employed. The labour is predominatingly local ; it comes from surround-
ing villages, returning home at night, and is employed directly by the
owner or lessee of the ginnery. In some cases, however, particularly
in the Punjab, a labour contractor is employed who takes on workers
by the day. Many of these people move at will from ginnery to ginnery
or from press to press throughout the season, even in districts where
the wages are practically standardised. In other districts, notably
in Madras, sometimes as many as three-quarters of the workers are in the
employ, not of the owner or lessee, but of the ‘merchant or contractor
whose cotton is being ginned. This position has been known to cause
difficulties in the observance of the Act since factory owners, accused of
breaking the regulation in respect of hours, plead that the persons properly
responsible are the direct employers of the men,
Tea Factories.
In North India the work in the tea factories is seasonal ; the
factories do not work in the cold weather, and, even in the season when
they are open, the work is intermittent. In good weather the flush of
leaf usually necessitates a period of heavy pressure with resultant over-
time. In bad weather less leaf is plucked and manufacture accordingly
decreases. Men are employed on general maintenance work, as boiler
attendants, engine drivers, despatchers, etc., as well as on the manufac-
turing processes of withering, rolling, drying and fermenting. Women
are employed in small numbers, mostly in cleaning and picking over the
manufactured tea after it has been graded. These factories are exempt from
the rest period, the weekly holiday and adherence to specified hours, but,
in order to allow of irregular rest periods, the number of workers employed
must be 25 per cent. greater than the number necessary to do the work at
any given time. No one may be required to work for more than 14 days
at a time without a whole day’s leave. All workers are selected from the
ordinary plantation population, with the exception of skilled men
engaged on machinery. "In the case of the women, some plantations
employ many who are either pregnant or have just returned to work after
child-birth, or women who are convalescent after illness, in order to allow
of their heing employed temporarily in a sedentary occupation.
Rice Milling,
Rice milling is mainly carried on in Burma, Madras and Bengal,
In Burma it is the main factory industry and here the bulk of the mills
are strictly seasonal. The number of factories working in 1929 was 608
employing about 40,000 persons. In Madras and Bengal the number of
persons employed in 1929 wag 16,500 and 12,500 respectively. In both
Presidencies rice mills are not strictly seasonal, but they do not as a rule
remain open throughout the year, their working being regulated by the
demand for milled rice which varies according to trade fluctuations.
Both raw or ¢ sunned ’ and parboiled rice milling are carried on, but the