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PDS, unions impose wage cut on Berlin transit workers
By Lucas Adler
19 July 2005
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The recent alliance of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS)
and the Election Alternative (WASG) likes to present itself as
a new left party, and its programme talks a lot about
workers rights. However, in those regions where the PDS
has a controlling hand in political events, it tramples on the
interests of the working class. A good example of this is what
happened in the state-run Berlin Transit Corporation (Berliner
VerkehrsbetriebeBVG).
In mid-June, the Berlin Senate (state legislature), which consists
of a coalition between the Social Democratic Party and the PDS,
implemented a massive programme of cuts at the BVG with the support
of the public service workers trade union Verdi. The 13,000
employees at BVG, Germanys largest public transit operation,
who have already faced substantial attacks on their working conditions
under the SPD-PDS, now confront a massive cut in wages.
In January of this year, Verdi signed up to a wage agreement
containing an 8 percent reduction in salaries. At the time, the
media stressed that working time had also been cut from 38.5 to
36 hours a week. But this was cover-up of the real situation.
In reality, the slashing of break time, holidays and other time-off
meant a considerable increase in workloads. From the outset, the
Senates general agreement to forgo compulsory redundancies
over the next 10 years, brought in with the agreement of the union,
has proved worthless.
It only took six months before the Berlin Senate announced
that the savings package previously agreed no longer went far
enough. Finance Senator Thilo Sarrazin (SPD) now demanded a 12
percent wage reduction, combined with longer work times (an increase
from 38.5 to 42 hours a week) and the cutting of holiday bonuses.
At the same time, Sarrazin also declared that compulsory redundancies
could no longer be excluded.
To put the workforce under pressure, the SPD and PDS threatened
that, without further cutbacks, the continued existence of large
sections of the BVG were in danger. Sarrazin pointed out that
from 2008, the European Union was demanding more competition in
public transit, and stressed that the BVG would only be able to
continue if it operated like an economically well-run enterprise.
According to one official, without concessions the bus division
would be in acute danger from 2007.
However, the proposals to make further cuts encountered widespread
resistance in the workforce. Initially, Verdi signalled its opposition
to such far-reaching cuts and organised a seven-hour warning strike.
Since this appeared to have little effect on the Senate, the union
felt compelled to threaten an indefinite strike, and began to
organise a strike ballot.
In the meantime, the Berlin economics senator Harald Wolf (PDS)
had secretly begun to intervene to prevent a strike. He invited
Verdis national chairman Frank Bsirske to a personal
meeting. They both agreed that a strike in the capital at
the beginning of the vacation period would immediately make headlines,
and should be prevented under all circumstances. This was followed
by two further meetings behind closed doors, before Berlin Mayor
Klaus Wowereit (SPD) finally brought negotiations to a successful
conclusionjust before the strike ballot at BVG was
due to be held.
The strike ballot was swiftly abandoned, and instead of counting
the votes, the ballot boxes were sealed and taken away. Union
negotiators unanimously accepted the deal, which Verdi functionaries
then tried to justify to the workforce.
On average, the new contract agreed on by the union implemented
a wage cut of 10 percent, and those workers not covered by the
new contract faced a cut of 12 percent. The different work times
in east and west Berlin were lowered to a uniform 36.5 hours a
week, without any compensation in wages. Holiday pay was abolished
completely, and the Christmas bonus limited to a maximum of 1,000.
The Senate celebrated the wage cuts as a success and announced
that Berlin would save 38.5 million euros in staff costs
as a result. Wowereit thanked Verdi for its important contribution
to the reorganisation of the budget.
The union retrospectively justified signing the contract by
pointing to the agreement on special protection against dismissal,
valid until the year 2020. The fact that such a formal concession
offers the workforce little or no security was soon revealed at
BVG.
Previous concessions packages at BVG had also been justified
by Verdi with reference to supposed protection against dismissal.
This was more like a form of blackmaileither cuts are accepted
or jobs will go. But each time, the cuts that had been justified
using this argument were followed by further, even worse cuts,
pushed through with the same argumentation.
The new provision for special protection against dismissal
explicitly applies only to trade union members, which is a novelty.
In the past, collective wage agreements had always been declared
to be generally binding, which meant they were valid
for all employees. Verdi obviously hopes such measures might now
help it stem the loss of members. It should once again be
worth being a trade union member, is how a Verdi spokesman
summed up this agreement, stressing that in future bonus programmes
should only benefit union members.
But Verdis bonus programme, comprising cuts
in wages and benefits, provoked indignation among workers who
had been ready to launch an industrial struggle. The unions
capitulation will inevitably lead to an increase in union members
submitting their resignations.
At the same time, the pressure exerted by PDS Senator Harald
Wolf to push through the wage cuts confirms the key role of the
PDS in disciplining the working class in those regions where it
holds power. While the SPD-PDS Senate in Berlin has been avidly
implementing drastic cuts to the citys social fabric in
order to repay banks and investors hit by the citys recent
finance scandal, it has had no compunction about undermining the
wages and conditions of public sector workers. This is the real
face and practice of the PDS, which it will continue in its new
guise as the left party.
See Also:
Germany: North Rhine Westphalia government
adopts austerity programme
[15 July 2005]
Germany: Schröder calls
for early federal election after Social Democratic debacle in
North Rhine Westphalia
[24 May 2005]
For social equality. For the
United Socialist States of Europe. Vote PSG. Statement of the
Partei für Soziale Gleichheit (Socialist Equality Party)
on the 2005 German elections
[29 June 2005]
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