Employees at global fashion giant Inditex's 10 logistics centers in Spain – from where it sends garments to its stores worldwide – returned to work recently but only to less than half their normal levels of activity. Meanwhile, just three of Inditex's 13 Spanish factories are back at work, making medical supplies like scrubs to help fight Spain's Coronavirus crisis, with no garments being made for now for brands like Zara and Bershka.
Spain recently loosened the terms of a strict lockdown, brought into force to halt the spread of one of the deadliest outbreaks of the virus worldwide, allowing nonessential workers to return to their jobs after a two-week hiatus. Staff at the Inditex logistics centers returned to work but at reduced schedules – either working half days or just two or three shifts a week – to reduce contact between employees, a union representative and a worker said.
Rather than entering the facilities all at once, shift workers had staggered entries and exits and wore masks and gloves while maintaining 2-meter distances from colleagues. Just 15 per cent of normal activity was maintained at one of Inditex's 13 Spanish sewing factories, one worker said, focused on maintenance of machines rather than production of clothes.












