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: Germany
Berlin transit workers go on strike
By Franz Schobert
6 March 2008
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Transit workers employed by the Berlin Transport Company (BVG)
and its subsidiary, Berlin Transport (BT), launched an all-out
strike Wednesday morning.
Technical workers employed by the two companies had already
begun strike action Tuesday evening. The strike effectively brings
to a standstill the metro, street car and bus system in Berlin.
Only the suburban metro line (part of German Rail) is functioning,
while attempts are being made by the city to set up alternative
bus lines.
In a strike ballot last week, members of the public service
union Verdi voted by 96.9 percent for strike action. BVG employees
had largely paralysed transport in the German capital at the beginning
of February with a 39-hour strike.
Verdi has been negotiating since the beginning of January for
a 12 percent wage increase at least 250 euro per monthfor
all 11,500 BVG employees. In response, the local employers
association (KAV) offered a graduated salary increase amounting
to six percent by 2010. This increase, however, would apply only
to BVG workers employed since 2005 and the 900 employees of Berlin
Transport.
The Berlin transit strike is part of a growing public service
strike movement that is developing across the country. On Tuesday,
tens of thousands took part in warning strikes in a total of eleven
German states.
Verdi also carried out strike action at several airports on
Wednesday. Lufthansa was immediately forced to cancel 147 flights.
The train drivers union GDL has announced that beginning next
Monday it will launch an unlimited strike covering all forms of
rail trafficlong distance and local passenger service as
well as freight transport. Train drivers have been in dispute
with German Rail (DB) management for nearly a year and were recently
confronted with a package from DB which laid down harsh and provocative
conditions for a settlement.
The Berlin transit strike is directed against the Berlin Senate,
which is controlled by a coalition of the Social Democratic Party
(SPD) and the Left Party. In power for the past seven years, the
Red-Red coalition in Berlin has pushed through drastic
wage cuts and job cuts in the public services. Economics Senator
Harald Wolf (Left Party) and Finance Senator Thilo Sarrazin (SPD)
work hand in hand to slash wages and attack workers living
standards.
As a result, the mood amongst BVG workers has reached the boiling
point. Since the conclusion of the collective agreement agreed
by Verdi two years ago, their working conditions have worsened
drastically. Employees lost up to twelve percent of their wages
and Christmas bonuses and holiday pay were cut.
Verdi also agreed to a plan which divided staff according to
length of service. All BVG workers employed since 2005 received
just 1,650 euro per month (gross)the pay level of drivers
for Berlin Transport. Employees with more service received a safeguard
that resulted in a slightly less onerous loss of income. At the
same time, work schedules were intensified, bus lines were cut
and new regulations were introduced regarding breaks and turn-around
times.
Now the Senate and the BVG executive are trying to depress
the wages of veteran workers to the low level of low seniority
employees. SPD Finance Senator and BVG supervisory board boss
Sarrazin has spoken out against the high wages of
workers with longer service.
Demagogically employing the argument of solidarity,
Sarrazin even opposed the BVG chief executive, Andreas Sturmowski,
when he proposed a wage deal that would have included compensation
for inflation. In an effort to incite popular anger against BVG
employees, Sarrazin declared that any wage increase for veteran
workers would have to be offset by increased ticket prices. Sarrazin
thus employed the same tactic used by the head of German Rail,
Hartmut Mehdorn, against the train drivers.
Functionaries of the Left Party have also publicly opposed
the strike. In the Berliner Zeitung, the speaker on transport
affairs for the Left Party, Jutta Matuschek, attacked both Verdi
and the GDL. Verdi obviously wants to outdo the GDL,
Matuschek said. We can not accept that.
The deputy leader of the Left Party Senate fraction, Stefan
Liebich, pleaded in a press statement that Verdi end the strike
as soon as possible. The slogan must be negotiate instead
of escalate, he said, and added that the interests of both
sides had to be considered. In order to maintain the BVG as a
public enterprise, he continued, the reorganisation process had
to be continued, even if it caused hardships. According
to its budget for 2008/2009 and its financial plan through 2010,
the Senate wants to cut a further 10,000 public service jobs.
Verdi is playing an utterly cynical role in this conflict and
seeking to restrain the militancy of its members. A closer look
at the role of the union reveals a dense network of corporatist
relations between Verdi, the SPD, the Left Party and the local
employers association. One finds members of the same union
or party on both sides of the negotiating table.
Several union leaders sit on the six-person executive of the
local employers association. Norbert Schmidt, head of personnel
for the Berlin Water Company, was formerly a director of the ÖTV
public service union, which later merged with Verdi. Manfred Rompf,
head of personnel for Vivantes, was formerly a chairman of the
regional committee of Verdi in the state of Hesse. Lothar Zweiniger,
the head of personnel for BVG, was formerly deputy head of Verdi
in the state of Lower Saxony.
There are also close links between the Left Party and Verdi
in Berlin. A total of seventy Verdi functionaries took part in
the founding conference of the Left Part last summer, and the
union has representation at the highest levels inside the party.
In the committees responsible for contract bargaining it is quite
common for members of the Left Party to be seated on both sides
of the table. In addition, BVG personnel chief Zweiniger is a
close friend of the head of Verdi, Frank Bsirske who, like Zweiniger,
also comes from Lower Saxony.
Following the third round of talks with the local employers
association (KAV), Verdi Regional Chair Susanne Stumpenhusen complained
before television cameras that nobody from the KAV was prepared
to carry out serious negotiations with us. She suggested
that BVG supervisory head and Finance Senator Sarrazin had put
handcuffs on his representative. To which the KAV replied:
The employers side regrets that the union does not
give due consideration to the limited scope of action available
to the BVG and BT.
Verdi negotiator Franc Bläser threatened a tough and drawn-out
labour dispute. But all of these exchanges in front of the media
are just for show.
Verdi was forced into the present strike by mass resignations
from its organisation. Since the merger of all public service
unions to form Verdi in 2001, the union has lost a fifth of its
membership.
The loss of membership accelerated in the course of the train
drivers strike, which the Verdi leadership publicly opposed.
Since then, Verdi has struck a more radical stance.
Nevertheless, over a hundred Verdi members at the BVG and BT have
switched to the GDL.
See Also:
Germany: Union and works council
announce final shutdown of Nokia factory
[21 February 2008]
German train drivers oppose
contract deal
[9 February 2008]
Berlin transport workers strike
[7 February 2008]
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