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Politics

Security staff to strike at Berlin airports

January 5, 2019

Germany's largest trade union has called for industrial action following a failed round of wage negotiations. The affected airports have warned of "severe disruption" for passengers on Monday.

https://p.dw.com/p/3B4K8
Ryanair and EasyJet airplanes at Schönefeld airport in Berlin
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/B. Settnik

Security personnel at Berlin's Tegel and Schönefeld airports are to go on a nearly four-hour strike on Monday, following a fourth round of failed wage negotiations between Germany's largest trade union, Ver.di, and the Federal Association of Aviation Security Companies (BDLS).

Ver.di said the strike will begin at 5 a.m. local time (0400 UTC) and last until 8:45 a.m. (0745 UTC).

Tegel and Schönefeld have warned of "severe disruption" of air traffic and called on passengers expecting to travel on Monday to contact airlines to check the status of particular flights.

Read more: Ryanair German strike causes severe travel disruptions

Employers' offer "inadequate"

Ver.di's decision came after BDLS put forward what union officials said was a "completely inadequate offer" in talks over wage increases for 23,000 airport security personnel across Germany just before Christmas.

The union said the association proposed a wage increase of 2 percent instead of 1.8 percent per year for those on a two-year contract and a wage increase for personnel in East German states only after five years.

Ver.di union officials striking at an airport in western Germany
Ver.di is Germany's largest trade unionImage: DW/N. Steudel

The union is demanding an increase in the hourly wage to €20 ($22.79) for staff working in passenger, freight, personnel and goods control at all German airports. An employee working in passenger control at one of the two Berlin airports currently receives €17.12 per hour.

Employers hit back

"Ver.di doesn't seem to want to negotiate a collective agreement, but rather to strike," said the director of the employer's collective bargaining commission, Rainer Friebertshäuser. He said Ver.di's demands could mean an increase in individual wages of up to 55 percent at some airports.

The trade union has not ruled out possible strikes at other airports across the country, but it said it would take into account individual holiday periods in each federal state.

A fifth round of negotiations is scheduled to take place in Berlin on January 23.

Strikes in Germany

rh/amp (AP, dpa, AFP)

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