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The agonizing five-month-old administrative deadlock at the Alliance Jute Mill in Jagaddal finally concluded on Wednesday as hundreds of relieved laborers returned to their assembly floors. The breakthrough was achieved within just a single week of prominent political leader Arjun Singh assuming office as the state’s newly appointed Labour Minister. Following a successful, high-stakes tripartite resolution meeting coordinated by the ministry on Tuesday, the industrial unit formally withdrew its lock-out notice, restoring immediate livelihood security and immense economic relief to over two thousand permanent and contractual mill workers.
The critical resolution meeting was convened at the New Secretariat building in Kolkata under the direct supervision of Labour Minister Arjun Singh. The table brought together top corporate representatives from the mill's ownership group, grassroots labor organization leaders, Special Labour Commissioner Ashish Sarkar, and senior bureaucrats from the state's industrial dispute cell. After hours of intense deliberation over operational costs, pending dues, and production guidelines, all participating factions signed a joint agreement to immediately resume factory floor operations, allowing full-scale commercial manufacturing to spin back into action over the next few days.
The management had abruptly shuttered the Alliance Jute Mill on December 26, pasting an emergency 'Suspension of Work' notification across its gates. This sudden closure pushed thousands of working-class families residing in the localized Coolie Line quarters into acute financial distress, forcing many to secure high-interest private loans, while others migrated back to ancestral villages. During the recent electoral campaigns, desperate labor unions had approached Arjun Singh for an intervention. Keeping his campaign promise, the newly minted minister fast-tracked the industrial dispute resolution immediately upon entering the secretariat.
A festive atmosphere swept across the entire factory complex on Wednesday morning as returning workers distributed traditional sweets and celebrated their return to stable employment. Union representatives, including Pintu Kumar Sau, Joint Secretary of the Jute Textile Workers Union, expressed deep gratitude for the swift governmental intervention, noting that five months of joblessness had pushed households to the brink of starvation. Labor Department officials confirmed that they will maintain a supervisory eye on the mill’s day-to-day operations to ensure long-term compliance and to prevent future labor disputes.