Towing Company 6-Hour Strike Causes Delays in Ports of Amsterdam and Rotterdam
April 10: Dutch crews of towing company Svitzer Euromed went on strike for the second time last week, according to seafarer union Nautilus International.
The union explained that the workers decided to take action after negotiations on a new collective bargaining agreement between workers’ unions and Svitzer failed.
The company’s tugboats worked reduced hours and did not sail until midnight from their usual location on the ports of Amsterdam and Rotterdam.
Striking tug workers agreed to down tools for six hours on April 10, which led to delays in the port of Amsterdam and Rotterdam.
According to Nautilus, tug crews want Svitzer to pay for the hours actually worked in the past, 49 hours per week, which the crew had agreed to in 2014 as a stop-gap measure to help the company out of a financial slump.
The workers are supported in their ultimatum by FNV Havens union and Nautilus International, as well as the European Transport workers Federation (ETF) and colleagues from the Belgian Transport union ABVV BTB.
At the end of 2013, the towing company was reportedly in heavy financial difficulty. To help the company, Svitzer employees have been working on average 8.5 unpaid hours extra per week since 2014.
The key demand of the employees is that Svitzer pay them for the overtime worked retrospectively from January 1, 2019 – although long-term, they want the towing company to pay all the hours worked.
According to the unions, there is no economic reason to maintain the 2014 measure.
‘Svitzer is in good economic shape, so there is no reason to enforce the crisis measure,’ said Asmae Hajjari of FNV Havens.
After the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) 2013 -2018 expired, FNV Havens and Nautilus International had been negotiating with Svitzer Euromed on a new CBA until February 14, 2019. The union said that the biggest stumbling block has been getting the payment of the 49 weekly working hours.
Nautilus added that Svitzer said it wants ‘market-based pay and employment conditions’, but refused to pay for the 49 hours currently being worked per week.
Svitzer Euromed is a subsidiary of the Danish multinational Maersk and provides towage work in Amsterdam and in the port of Rotterdam. The collective agreement applies to 63 employees.
Source: World Maritime News