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German train drivers oppose contract deal
By Ludwig Niethammer
9 February 2008
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The leadership of the train drivers unionthe GDL
(Deutsche Lokomotivführer)was determined to end its
long drawn-out wage dispute with German Railways (Deutsche BahnDB)
by the end of January. GDL Chairman Manfred Schell repeatedly
made clear that this was the main objective of the union, and
DB management was also keen to terminate the labour dispute, which
began last summer.
Finally, on January 29, a jubilant Manfred Schell appeared
before the press and spoke of a historic day in the history
of the GDL. The contract was completed, he said,
apart from the personal and technical areas of coverage.
DB personnel head Margret Suckale concurred and announced, We
have an agreement.
But while Schell was enjoying himself before the press at the
Berlin Marriott hotel, he failed to notice that a number of angry
train drivers had infiltrated themselves among the journalists.
They then told Spiegel-Online and other media outlets of
their dissatisfaction with the negotiated compromise. The
mood amongst the rank and file is pretty bad, one of the
train drivers said. Many colleagues say: This is not what
I fought for. Another train driver summed up the sentiments
of the GDL membership: With a basic salary of 2,000
the agreed 11 percent increase is not even enough to fill up the
tank of my car.
The train drivers also deplored the way in which the GDL leadership
had conducted the negotiations and failed to keep the membership
properly informed. The GD executive committee had continually
returned for negotiations with the DB management while calling
upon the membership to remain calm. Any criticism from members
was stymied, one outraged driver reported, adding,
This is something we will not tolerate. Its similar
to the conditions which exist at Transnet.
Should it be implemented, the proposed deal represents a rotten
compromise that awards drivers only a fraction of their original
demand for a 31 percent wage increase. Drivers had pushed for
this increase to compensate for their miserably low level of basic
wages and to regain some of the decline in wages they have suffered
for many years.
It is useful to review the background of the dispute. In the
summer of 2002, the GDL quit its joint contract with the trade
union Transnet and the rail officials union, the GDBA. Train
drivers had concluded this was the only way to combat the drastic
wage cuts and attacks on social and working conditions that had
been agreed to by these organisations year after year.
This was the significance of the train drivers demand
for an independent contract agreement; the wage demand
of 31 percent was only possible on such a basis. Since then, the
DB executive committee has stubbornly refused to agree to a contract
with the GDL, which would allow train drivers to independently
negotiate their own wages and conditions. DB management was always
opposed to the GDLs attempts to break out of the contract
straitjacket imposed by Transnet and the GDBA. Transnet, in particular,
is regarded by DB as its house trade union and the
company finances the union through various channels.
According to the details that have so far emerged regarding
the latest deal, DB has agreed to a single payment of just 800
to compensate drivers for the past eight months, during which
time they have been in dispute. This corresponds to a real increase
of wages for this period of approximately 3 percent! An 8 percent
increase is envisaged for the start of March, with an additional
3 percent from September 1. The contract is due to run until February
2009, and during this period, the working week is to be reduced
from 41 to 40 hours. On average, most train drivers will receive
a salary increase of well under 10 percent. In addition, other
sections of rail personnel who were to be included in the deal
are now to be excluded. This applies to shunt drivers and presumably
new hires as well.
There is a simple explanation for the haste on the part of
both sides to reach a deal and GDLs readiness to accept
substantial concessions. The train drivers demand for a
decent income found support among broad layers of the population.
At the same time, strikes are currently taking place in branches
of the German public service, and millions of workers and clerical
employees in other industries have made clear they are demanding
increases and an end to a policy of stagnating wages and wage
cuts.
Nearly all of those trade unions in Germany that have accepted
contracts involving no wage increasesfrom the public service
union Verdi to the industrial workers union IG-Metallcurrently
feel under pressure to demand double-digit wage increases.
Under these conditions, it was necessary for management to
end the train drivers dispute as soon as possible in order
to prevent the emergence of a broad strike movement. Such a strike
movement would inevitably be directed against the German grand
coalition government and could lead to a political radicalisation
of the working class, which the social-democratic DGB (Federation
of German Trade Unions) and the Left Party would no longer be
able to control.
This is the significance of the current train drivers
deal. There is much to indicate that the GDL leadership has also
caved in with regard to the central demand for its own contract
agreementthereby restoring the former joint contract with
Transnet and the GDBA. The negotiations on this issue are being
carried out behind locked doors between DB Chairman Hartmut Mehdorn
with the three trade unions (Transnet, GDBA and GDL), and one
should fear the worst.
It appears that the GDL has accepted the framework of the so-called
Brandenburg Gate model. According to this model, the
GDL would accept an individual contract regulating working times
and payment. In return, the GDL would agree to cooperate with
the two trade unions, Transnet and the GDBA, in a comprehensive
contract pact. In other words, all issuesincluding the range
of wage demandswould have to be coordinated by the GDL with
the two other trade unions.
According to the Süddeutshe Zeitung, the GDL has
agreed to a fourth collective agreement, whereby the
GDL commits itself to negotiating only on behalf of train driversand
no other group of rail personneluntil the end of 2015. At
the same time, the current deal is linked to the pledge by the
GDL to work together with Transnet and the GDBA. Should the latter
unions find a pretext of their own to end the cooperation with
the GDL, then this would invalidate the contract deal struck by
the GDL. This means that Transnet and the GDBA would have an indirect
right of veto with regard to the contract that Manfred Schell
continues to describe as independent.
Schell opposes a ballot
The current situation demands a courageous and decisive intervention
by GDL membersin particular against any attempt to impose
the current deal on the membership. Despite the fact that German
industrial law demands that the union leadership hold a ballot
of members to decide whether or not the contract is to be accepted,
Manfred Schell has recently declared that a strike ballot is unnecessary.
This standpoint must be vigourously opposed.
It is a fundamental democratic right that a strike called by
a vote of the membership can only be terminated by the membership.
Schells opposition to a ballot is an indication of the union
leaderships fear that the current deal will be voted down.
GDL members must insist on and enforce a strike ballot, and the
dispute must be reorganised by the rank and file independently
of the union leadership.
See Also:
Berlin transport workers strike
[7 February 2008]
Germany: Train drivers union
submits to government and management
Drivers must reject the new contract!
[19 January 2008]
Rock-bottom wages for German
postal workers
[10 January 2008]
German train drivers
union announces new strikes
[22 December 2007]
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