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GARBAGE

‘The work is atrocious’: Paris garbage collectors vow lengthy strike

You might start to notice the rubbish piling up on the streets of Paris in the coming days because the garbage collectors are on strike. And they vow to continue.

'The work is atrocious': Paris garbage collectors vow lengthy strike
Archive Photo: AFP

While most of the attention in recent days has been on striking rail workers an Air France staff, the capital's garbage collectors are also staging industrial action.

What are the strikers calling for? 

The hardline CGT union has called all garbage disposal workers from street sweepers to collection centre workers out to strike for an “unlimited” time from Monday April 3rd onwards.

The union decries their poor working conditions and calls for “a decrease in working hours for the difficult work employees face”.

“On average a garbage disposal worker lives 15 years less than any other worker and we are 3 times more likely to die before reaching the age of 65”, said the CGT's Baptiste Talbot.

Another striker told the Huffington Post: “The work is frankly atrocious and difficult (…) because of it nobody really wants to become a garbage man in Paris.”

The union is also demanding that garbage collection be put in public hands.

“Garbage disposal is primarily a public service”, said Stéphane Cravero, a union spokesman “But more than half of the service is under the private sector now”.

He said this generates “social dumping”, which leads to lower wages and poorer “working conditions”. 

Unions also want a rise in wages.

Will this mean a national garbage crisis?

No, at least for the time being. The strikes have only happened in Paris and in the south of South of France in cities such as Montpellier and Marseille.

A striker named Felix has insisted their aim is not to have rubbish piling up on the streets of cities across the country.

“We don’t want to stop picking up garbage, it’s our job after all, we don’t want to spread trash everywhere, we just want to join the struggle with the French rail workers,” he said.

Will the strike continue?

The CGT union has called for “unlimited” strikes so at the moment we don't know when it will end. They are determined to make their voices heard.

“We will be here tomorrow and the next day and the day after that,” said one striking garbage collector.

 

RUBBISH

Plainclothes rubbish police blitz small Swiss town

Police in the town of Grenchen in canton Solothurn have hailed the results of the first-ever operation dedicated to catching people in the act of littering.

Plainclothes rubbish police blitz small Swiss town
File photo: Depositphotos

Four police officers handed out a total of 25 fines of 40 Swiss francs (€35.40) during the two-day blitz in early May, local police chief Christian Ambühl told the Grenchner Tagblatt newspaper.

“Almost everyone picked up their rubbish and paid the fine without objecting. In most cases, it was just thoughtlessness,” he said.

Read also: Swiss canton introduces 300-franc fine for littering

After the success of the recent operation, police are now looking at more deploying rubbish patrols in future – partly to raise public awareness of the problem but also to help clean up the town's image.

Grenchen already has measures in place to clean up its streets.

As in many Swiss towns, rubbish must be disposed of in official rubbish bags or by attaching municipal tax stickers to other non-standard bags to show the relevant charge has been paid.

Some people try and get around the associated costs by dumping their garbage bags illegally.

But in the case of notorious serial offenders, authorities go through rubbish bags left on the street looking for a name or an address. Around ten to 15 times a year, they are able to identify a rubbish offender. In these cases, the fine is 100 francs.

Read also: 20 telltale signs you have gone native in Switzerland

In what can be a game of cat and mouse, however, some people cut out addresses on envelopes before putting them in their rubbish bags.

One such offender in Grenchen was only caught after a special surveillance camera was set up by police.

An industrial centre with relatively high unemployment, Grenchen was last year the subject of a controversial documentary aired by Swiss public broadcaster SRF. 

The documentary called The Silent Majority saw the town depicted as centre of voter apathy and “the shadow side of globalization”.

Many locals felt the film was unfair and that the interviews it contained were unrepresentative.

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