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German public workers strike
A discussion with Hamburg strikers: It is much more
serious than 14 years ago
By a WSWS reporting team
25 February 2006
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On February 6, German public service employees began strike
action affecting such services as sanitation, hospitals, kindergartens,
libraries and recreational facilities. The walkout began after
the public service union Verdi conducted a ballot of sections
of its membership, resulting in large majorities for a strike.
The strike is aimed first and foremost at preventing an
extension of the workweek from 38.5 to 40 hours for local council
employees. It is the first nationwide public sector strike in
14 years, and the first major industrial action since the installation
of a Grand Coalition government headed by Angela Merkel of the
Christian Democratic Union and including the Christian Social
Union and the Social Democratic Party.
The following interviews were conducted with striking workers
in the city of Hamburg on February 17.
The situation has changed here dramatically during the
past few years, Holger Linné told the World Socialist
Web Site. The 46-year-old has worked for the city sanitation
department in Hamburg for the past 11 years. He said that the
workload had increased considerably.
When he began working, Linné said, his garbage disposal
team consisted of five personsa driver and four colleagues
who retrieved, emptied and returned the garbage cans. Today,
he pointed out, there are only three personsone driver
and two colleagues, who fetch, empty and return.
Linné was standing with about 200 colleagues in front
of the sanitation office in Bullerdeich, an industrial area not
far from Hamburg city center. The citys 2,500 sanitation
workers had been on strike for one week.
On this particular morning Wolfgang Rose, the regional chairman
of the workers union, Verdi, was due to come and speak to
the strikers. It was cold and drizzling rain. Linné warmed
himself before a wood fire burning in an iron basket.
He said he had three children to look after, but did not hesitate
in deciding to support the vote to strike. I do not believe
anybody here voted against it. Quite the opposite, if we had our
way many more public service departments would have been called
out on strike.
He said that while the workload had increased, pay supplements
and social security benefits have continuously declined. It
is even worse for those who are younger. Any new jobs are only
with short-term contracts with far lower wage rates than those
with fixed contracts.
Sven Meyer is 42 years old and has worked for the sanitation
department for 15 years. Shortly after he started work the last
major public workers strike began in 1992.
When I look back and compare it with the strike today,
I become rather skeptical, he said. At that time hundreds
of thousands were on strike, and we still ended up with a lousy
compromise. Since then many jobs have been lost. I believe at
least one third of all jobs have gone in our department.
Sven gave an example of the way in which the workload had increased.
Formerly, there were seven large street sweeping machines
and one small one. Now there are just two large machines and one
small machine. Along with the cutback in sweeping machines has
naturally come a loss of jobs. Instead of employing new people,
the department calls on us to work overtime, and the workloads
have increased substantially. Since the introduction of a new
shift system the few machines available have been worked to full
capacity.
He continued: I want to stress one thing. We are not
just striking here for ourselves. It is not just about the extra
18 minutes a day (which the employers seek to impose on public
service workers throughout Germany), referred to in the media.
It concerns much more. If the European Union (Bolkenstein) directives
on service regulations are implemented, the privatization of virtually
all aspects of public service will rapidly increase. Then anyone
can come along and offer rock-bottom wages with no industrial
protection or safety standards. Things will really get bad.
That not only applies to public service, but also to
many craftsmen who already have difficulties making ends meet.
Every plumber or electrician needs work, and there is already
enormous pressure today.
The strike has met with broad public support. Meyer spoke of
a delegation from a nearby engine works who came to express their
solidarity with the strikers. Workers have also experienced broad
support from acquaintances and friends.
There is a widespread feeling, he said, that
one can no longer tolerate what is going on. The situation
was different some years ago. Then skepticism and the fear for
ones own job outweighed everything else. Now the readiness
to strike is once again very widespread.
This support for the strike is bound up with the fact that
fresh rounds of redundancies and the dismantling of social gains
are everyday events. Formerly, most businessmen and the
big concerns reinvested a part of their profits in their companies
to develop production and establish reasonable working conditions
for those employed. Today is it completely different. Today money
is only extracted.
When just a few days ago Volkswagen announced the elimination
of 20,000 jobs, VW shares soaredthat is completely abnormal.
But it is the same thing at Telekom, Opel, AEG in Nuremberg. Who
will buy the cars or washing machines if ever more people are
unemployed and wages continued to drop?
When asked his opinion on the strike tactics adopted by the
union, which has called only 60,000 of the unions total
of 2 million members to ballot for a strike and has sought to
decentralize strike actions, Meyer answered: I do not want
to be pinned down to an opinion. I do not know exactly what tactics
are being pursued by the central strike committee, but it would
be naturally better to develop a very broad movement. If they
force us to give in, the repercussions will be bad. Not only will
work time be extended to well over 40 hours, it will also be much
more difficult for the union.
A Croatian worker joined in the discussion, saying loudly:
This is all far too weak and harmless! We should march on
the town hall with clubs in hand. When it was pointed out
that the police also had clubs and clubs were not enough to solve
the problems confronting workers, a discussion commenced over
political questions.
The government was watching the strike very carefully, Meyer
declared, but he was pretty sure it would not back down.
Speaking of all of the major political parties, he said, They
are not interested in our problems. They have completely different
interests and only listen to what the business executives have
to say. He added that this applied to the Social Democratic
Party (SPD).
When asked to explain the close links between the unions and
the SPD, Meyer and his colleagues did not answer. But there was
general agreement that the most important conclusion from the
fact that all of the political parties and the unions had made
a sharp turn to the right was the necessity to form a new party
which uncompromisingly represented workers interests.
Frank Fischer, 42, has worked for the sanitation department
for 24 years. He compared todays situation with the strike
14 years previously, and said: Today the situation is much
more serious. There is much more at stake this time. Perhaps one
can say we are standing here on behalf of many others.
Frank Jung, 39, said, If it goes on like this, in a year
there will be civil war! He noted that politicians continually
said that one had a responsibility to found a family and bring
children into the world. I have an 18-year-old son and a
15-year-old daughter. I can say only that if I had known 20 years
ago what was going to happen I would not have had children. It
is hardly possible to support a family, never mind higher education.
If you ask me about the government, then I have only
one word: criminals. And that applies to all of themirrespective
of which party. I can no longer listen to their speeches. Promises
that there will be more training places, better training and everything
else. And what does the government do? Exactly the opposite.
There is all this talk of responsibilityindividual
responsibility. But what the government is doing is completely
irresponsible. They can bring about the greatest misery, but take
responsibility for nothing, exactly like the employers. They look
out only for themselves, then there is generosity, if without
limits.
Margarete Hagemeister, 36, is the single parent of an 11-year-old
daughter. When I began working here at the end of 1999 I
worked four hours, now I work six. But whoever works part-time
usually has to carry the workload of a full-time job. Formerly
I was employed in the private sector and earned nearly twice as
much. Now we have to make do with a minimal income. There is no
possibility of making large-scale purchases or taking vacations.
We have not even taken daily showers for a long time.
I think everybody should strikeeverybody in public
services and also in the private sector. The government does not
understand any other language. They are on their own trip and
are just working to feather their own nests. And the SPD is no
exception. When I see Ole von Beust (the Christian Democratic
mayor of Hamburg) I see them all. He always turns up in his fine
suits, but does not have a clue about the problems and needs of
an ordinary family.
In addition to my work here I am also a teacher, because
the schools have no more money and an increasing number of school
hours are being lost. Recently at a parents evening it was
decided that parents should train themselves in certain teaching
subjects. Work folders were put together. Besides being a teacher
and a public worker, I am still a charwoman, washer woman, cook
and so on. Ole von Beust and the other politicians do not have
the slightest notion of such things.
See Also:
Verdi trade union expands labour dispute
German public service strike grows into confrontation with
the grand coalition
[18 February 2006]
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