Germany: Strikes at airports extended to Friday
The Verdi trade union has said security staff at several German airports will walk out on Friday, posing major disruption for travelers. Five rounds of collective bargaining have failed to yield results.
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Airport strikes have been announced for yet another day |
Strikes by security personnel at several regional airports are set to cause flight cancellations and disruptions in Germany on Thursday and Friday.
Trade union Verdi announced that further labor action was planned for Friday, a day after it said personnel would strike at five airports on Thursday. What airports are affected?Trade union Verdi said that security staff would strike all day Thursday at Hamburg, Stuttgart, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden, Cologne and Berlin airports. Additional strikes on Friday will hit Hanover, Dortmund, Weeze, Dresden, Leipzig and Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden airports. At Munich Airport, staff in personnel and goods control as well as cargo control are also set to strike from 4 a.m. on Thursday until 6 a.m. on Friday Hanover Airport in north-central Germany announced that all Friday departures between midnight and noon were cancelled, but arrivals would not be affected. What is the union demanding?Verdi is calling for an hourly wage increase of €2.80 ($3.07), higher performance-based bonuses and better terms for overtime. It says the measures are necessary to counteract inflation in recent years. The union has been in collective bargaining talks with BDLS, the the federal association of aviation security companies, which presented a counteroffer of a €2.70 wage increase phased in over a longer period. "The employers did recently submit an admittedly improved, but far from satisfactory offer," Verdi's lead negotiator Wolfgang Pieper said earlier this week. "We will not come together this way." Negotiations are set to resume on March 20. Aviation and railway staff have gone on strike a number of times in the past 12 months — including simultaneous strikes on Tuesday — repeatedly grinding Germany to a halt as workers demand better pay and conditions. |