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Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

German Rail Workers Nix Open-Ended Strikes

Germany’s rail workers will not go on open-ended strikes after less than 50% of union members voted in favor, German news agency DPA reported. A vote of 75% in favor would have been necessary for all-out strike action, the Associated Press (AP) reported.

A majority of workers also voted in favor of a recommendation that emerged from arbitration between EVG and the rail operator, Deutsche Bahn.



The ballot was preceded by months of staged hours-long or one-day “warning strikes,” called by the EVG union, a common tactic in German wage negotiations.


A majority of workers also voted in favor of a recommendation that emerged from arbitration between EVG and the rail operator, Deutsche Bahn. The compromise deal includes a pay increase of 410 euros ($443) per month in two stages over a period of 25 months.



The first stage of 200 euros is to be paid from December, the second from August of next year, Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA) reported.


In addition, all employees will receive a tax- and duty-free inflation compensation bonus of 2,850 euros in October. This means that the incomes of around 70,000 employees will rise significantly, DPA said.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Another rail workers union, the GDL. is due to start negotiations for its members later this year.





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