Company: Tata Steel Ltd
Income 2005-2006 = Rs 14000 Cr (rounded off)
Net profit after tax (05-06) = Rs 3500 Cr (rounded off)
Karmayog CSR Rating-4/5
CSR activities:
The wealth generated by Jamsetji Tata and his sons in half a century of industrial pioneering formed but a minute fraction of the amount by which they enriched the nation. The whole of that wealth is held in trust for the people and used exclusively for their benefit. The cycle is thus complete: what came from the people has gone back to the people many times over.
Sharing Wealth to Diminish Disparities
For Jamsetji Tata, the progress of enterprise, welfare of people and the health of the enterprise were inextricably linked. Wealth and the generation of wealth have never “been ends in themselves, but a means to an end, for the increased prosperity of India,” The Times of India said in 1912 of the Tatas.
Successive generations of Tata Group leaders have always held the belief that no success in material terms is worthwhile unless it serves the interest of the nation and is achieved by fair and honest means.
Conscious that the task of social progress, especially in a country as diverse as India, cannot be undertaken by the Government alone, J R D Tata the Chairman of the Tata Group from 1938 to 1991, believed that, “to create good working conditions, to pay the best wages to its employees and provide decent housing to its employees are not enough for the industry, the aim of an industry should be to discharge its overall social responsibilities to the community and the society at large, where industry is located.”
At the vanguard of social commitment
Guided by this mandate, Tata Steel has for decades used its skills and resources, to the extent it can reasonably afford, to give back to the community a fair share of the product of its efforts.
It was the first to establish labour welfare practices, even before these were made statutory laws across the world. In 1912 it invited Sidney and Beatrice Webb, the Founders of the London School of Economics, to prepare a Memorandum of Health for the Steel City. The Company also instituted an eight-hour workday in 1912, free medical aid in 1915, a Welfare Department in 1917, leave with pay, Workers Provident Fund and Workmen�s Compensation in 1920 and Maternity Benefit for ladies in 1928.
With the understanding that the hunger for employment can never be satisfied despite its best efforts, the Company took an enlightened decision to address the needs of those who migrated to its vicinity in search for employment. It first stimulated entrepreneurship and economic development in the Steel City and then reached out to the rural poor, empowering them with the means to create better livelihoods within their own villages.
At the same time, Tata Steel also fulfilled their basic need for health care, food security, education and income generation through the development of rural infrastructure, empowerment and community outreach programmes.
By virtue of the extent of its demonstrated commitment for decades, through the beliefs and values it has acted upon, the resources it has deployed, the wealth it has shared as well as the many “firsts” it has achieved through socio-economic programmes, Tata Steel is India�s acknowledged Corporate Social Responsibility leader and is recognised as a most humane organisation. Every lesson learned, every piece of knowledge gathered, the Company offers to all those who wish to work alongside it to “improve the quality of life of the communities it serves.”
Education
Tata Steel has influenced the integration of tribals in the economy in a less obvious and immediate way by propping up the education of tribal children and youth of various ages and at various stages of their academic career.
Infants and toddlers are prepared for formal schooling in the informally run balwadis (cr�ches/nurseries). The drop out rate of tribal students in schools and colleges has been checked with financial assistance and sponsorships.
The TCS bears the entire expense of two tribal students who secure admissions for management education at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences. It also coaches students for entrance into administrative, technical and the public services.
An unusual project called Sahyog, implemented in five schools, helps tribal students to develop self-esteem and plan their future.
The Xavier Institute for Tribal Education near Jamshedpur has also been supported by Tata Steel to produce professionally trained personnel.
“Thank you Tata Steel and Tribal Cultural Society…”
Had it not been for this fellowship from Tribal Cultural Society, I was bound to be like many others, recycled into the family’s earning process at an age when I needed to be at school�, says Sunita Murmu.
And then came the announcement of Jyoti Fellowships. Sunita won the award not just for the year, but, for the next seven consecutive years as well. The fellowship saw her through matriculation and Intermediate. Relieved of the pressure, Sunita was able to concentrate and secure first division all through. At an award ceremony, when asked what she had to say about this assistance, �Thank you, Tata Steel and Tribal Cultural Society� were the words she uttered with extreme gratitude
Tribals �culture :Efforts to support tribals may well leave them at the doorstep of development without a sense of belongings and their cultural heritage.
With a view to helping the tribal population preserve its rich inheritance, Tata Steel has set up the Tribal Culture Centre (TCC) at a cost of Rs 35,00,000. This Centre showcases the tribal legacy of four major and five minor tribes of Jharkhand and Orissa and evokes a lot of interest amidst scholars, researchers and even laypersons. TCC not only documents relevant research but also enables the continuation of the tradition by sharing it with the youth and non-tribals.
Additionally, a Santhali Language Laboratory has also been initiated in the Centre since 2002-03.
The centre was instrumental in reviving the now almost forgotten ‘Kati’ – a game played between two teams that attempt to score points by hitting the opponent’s Kati – a semicircular piece of wood by a long wooden stick using their feet. Known to be a game that used to be played by youths in non agricultural season, it tests the team spirit, physical strength and concentration levels of the players.
“Hundreds of people joined…”
Adim Dastoor, a three day programme, was organized at Bari Maidan, Jamshedpur. This cultural extravaganza showcased the heritage and lifestyle of the indigenous people in Jharkhand. Lecture demonstration sessions on tribal heritage, exhibitions on historical advent of tribal movements, various forms of tribal dance and music, their relevance and specifics were dwelled upon at great length followed by actual performance by the experts.
The event also showcased a day-night Kati tournament between 25 teams from all over Jharkhand and tribal Orissa.
Tribal belief has it that within the ‘Akhara’ (common meeting place for men within the village), no one is an audience. Every step taken is dance, every word that is uttered is a song. The climax of the three-day event resounded this belief as hundreds of people in the ground joined in the performance accompanied by 25 drum beaters who lent a sparkling end to the festival.
Income generation for tribals :In order to help tribals address their basic needs in a self-reliant and sustainable way, Tata Steel has long been involved with increasing the agricultural productivity for them in the rural areas through assured irrigation.
Tata Steel, holding the belief that the tribals know best for themselves, has assisted in the formation of many Self Help Groups (SHGs).
These SHGs enable the tribals to arrange for credit and engage in micro-enterprises like making Dokra items, carpet weaving, terracotta, paper bag making, mat making, food processing, poultry, mushroom farming, piggery, pisciculture and floriculture. Tata Steel provides these groups with training, networking and assistance in marketing.
For making a long term impact on the prospects of the tribals, the Company has given them vocational training in areas like basic computer operation, software management, shorthand, typing, motor driving and handling pregnancies as birth attendants.
“There was will and that was what saw us through…”Opportunity from TCS came like a ray of hope. Not knowing what to expect from the workshop, I still dragged myself to participate in it. Simple techniques on packaging the candles we made, helped improve the presentation of the product… Deepawali, Christmas and Gram Shree Mela provided us with huge business prospects, which we were able to encash upon. Next we received an order from Tata Steel to supply 5000 candles in a week’s time. But there was will and that was what saw us through. My future plans are to improve our business extensively and also to enter the metropolitan market. And with TCS behind us, we will make it. If I have found meaning in my life, it is because of TCS. Without them, my desire to do something substantial would have remained intangible forever.
CC
Health care :Among the most active sponsors of the Lifeline Express � a hospital on wheels- Tata Steel has endeavored to take medical care far beyond those connected with its operations. This unique train travels at the behest of its sponsors to those parts of rural India, left untouched by modern medicine.
At Jamshedpur, the Company runs a 850-bed general hospital with a specialised Burn Centre, Dispensaries and Super Dispensaries to reach out to its employees as well as a large number of citizens across the steel city. The network of specialised medical care units it has created also fulfills the need for low cost, high quality medical care for the economically less privileged. It established the Jamshedpur Blood Bank to provide safe blood to those in need and has very successfully promoted a culture of voluntary blood donations. At its outlocations the Company has set up hospitals, which cater to the healthcare needs of people from the surrounding rural areas.
The doctors and para medical staff of its hospitals as well as the dedicated staff of its social welfare arms have also taken health care awareness including eye care, tuberculosis treatment, general health awareness, HIV/AIDS Awareness and Mother and Child survival programmes to a large number of villages and communities.
Through the efforts of the Tata Steel Rural Development Society (TSRDS) and the Tata Steel Family Initiatives Foundation (TSFIF), the Company covers the rural and peri-urban population through basic health care amenities. Both these social welfare arms of the Company have been building capacity through training programmes to create community based health care partners as well as grass-root volunteers.
The Company has successfully changed notions of millions of villagers on water and sanitation, created a demand for better health facilities, ensured immunisation for tens of thousands and been instrumental in bringing down infant mortality rates.
Ongoing Programmes
Mother and Infant Survival Programme Population Stabilisation
Operation Muskaan for cleft lips and palates “YARS” – Youth and Adolescent Reproductive Services
Specifically targeted programmes on HIV and AIDS.
Project “WATSAN” for Water and Sanitation Free Health Checkups for Women at Surya Clinics
Pioneer in Family Initiatives and HIV/AIDS Awareness Ringing the first alarm bell for Population Control
The first corporation in the country to launch a family welfare programme, Tata Steel has been promoting controlled family planning since the 1950s. Through the innovative use of communication media, motivational programmes have extremely successfully broken the barriers of prejudice and myths to bring about the participation of communities, in even those which do not readily accept family planning.
Jamshedpur today is a leader in demographic indices in the country. For the past 16 years, Tata Steel Family Initiatives Foundation (TSFIF) – formerly the Family Planning Department – has been reaching out to the Community in Jamshedpur with Family Planning and Reproductive Health Services. It covers a heterogenous population of over 10,00,000 including adolescents and youth, industrial workers, bustee dwellers and those from the indigenous tribes of the area. Now it is in the process of reauthoring its role, so as to extend both its capability and services into emerging sectors of need.
Health and AIDS AwarenessThe health and safety of the employees and the community is critically interlocked with productivity and is enshrined in Tata Steel�s Vision. The Company has thus taken proactive steps in AIDS prevention by spreading awareness not only amongst its employees, but also the community at large so that the inhabitants of Jamshedpur and at other locations, remain safe.
Tata Steel has evolved a corporate sector model to prevent the spread of STD/HIV/AIDS, globally and nationally. This model is being shared through forums like ILO, Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Global Compact Initiatives, WHO-SE Asia Regional Office, NACO (National AIDS Control Organisation) and JAPC (Jharkhand AIDS Prevention Consortium) and more recently through Global Reporting Initiatives. This programme extends to the rural and urban populace residing in and around Jamshedpur.
The Global Business Coalition, which is an alliance of over a hundred major international companies who are expected to lead by example, is dedicated to combating this disease. Tata Steel is one of its founding members. The prestigious “Global Business Coalition Award (GBC) for 2003 for Business Excellence” was conferred on Tata Steel for its response to the epidemic and its outstanding HIV/AIDS Awareness work in Jamshedpur. The award is conferred on companies who have evolved best practices on HIV/AIDS prevention, especially to reduce the stigma and discrimination. This award places Tata Steel�s initiatives at par with the best in the world, to be showcased globally.
Environment Tata Steel believes that environment management is integral to sustainable business. The company’s commitment in this area can be further gauged from the fact, that Tata Steel is the first company in the country to be conferred ISO-14001 Certification for its main steel works and utility services in Jamshedpur
All its mines and collieries are also ISO-14001 Certified for environmental management.Tata Steel’s collieries and mines which support the ‘Save Forests’ campaign are a benchmark in environment management, Further augmenting its commitment in this field, Tata Steel, has planted 1.5 million surviving trees as a part of the �Green Millennium� campaign. It may be worth mentioning that Jamshedpur has the best tree cover in the country.
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Contact details:Tata Steel Ltd
Bombay House
24 Homi Mody Street,
Mumbai 400 001
Telephone: (022) 6665 8282
Fax: (022) 6665 8113/ 6665 7725
Web address : http://www.tatasteel.com