WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 1, 2022 - 13:02
€840 summer allowance for Schiphol workers
https://nltimes.nl/2022/06/01/eu840-summer-allowance-schiphol-workers
From
Thursday, June 2, Schiphol employees will get an extra allowance for working in
the summer. Each employee will get 5.25 euros per hour. That amounts to 840
euros gross per month for someone who works full-time, Schiphol agreed with
trade unions FNV and CNV. The agreement will cost Schiphol 40 to 50 million
euros, NOS reports.
Security
guards, cleaners, check-in workers, luggage handlers, platform workers, and
staff who help passengers with limited mobility, among others, qualify for the
summer allowance. It will also be backdated for the past May holiday. The
summer allowance runs until the start of September, after which some employees
will get an allowance of 1.40 euros per hour. That allowance will run for one
year.
The
agreement also includes deals on rosters, working hours, and reimbursement for
commuting to relieve the workload on exiting workers and make the airport a
more attractive place to work. Schiphol, CNV, and FNV hope that this and the
extra allowances will help attract additional staff, though the unions worry
that it won't fix the staff shortages that caused chaos at the airport since
end-April.
The unions
also demanded more permanent jobs, but no agreements were made on this front.
However, they did agree to meet again about the tendering of work at Schiphol
in the longer term.
CNV
director Erik Maas said that he sees a change at the airport. "We have
raised the problems numerous times, but usually, Schiphol shifted the
responsibility to other companies. Now it seems that the penny has finally
dropped."
The airport
and unions reached the agreement just hours before FNV's deadline of June 1,
preventing strikes during the summer period.
Chaos broke
out at Schiphol airport on April 23, the first weekend of the May vacation, and
has persisted ever since. Due to staff shortages in baggage handling and
security, the airport faced massive queues, passengers missing flights, and
even incidents of aggression. Last week, the fire department handed out cookies
and juice to people waiting in line because some were fainting from spending
too much time on their feet. Due to the chaos, the Cabinet asked Schiphol to
give it weekly updates on what it is doing to manage the situation.
Schiphol
CEO Dick Benschop also faced criticism for being absent on many chaotic days at
the airport, though he insisted that he was always available, even when he
wasn't physically at the airport.
According
to RTL Nieuws, Schiphol's Airport Operation Center (APOC), which monitors the
logistics processes at the airport, expects the crowds to continue throughout
the summer. The APOC forecast busy weekends through June, crowds throughout
July, and then slight improvements in August.
The
forecast did not include Schiphol's action plan to reduce crowds, which the
airport released last week. Among other things, Schiphol plans to reduce the
number of slots in which a plane can land or take off from about 126,000 to
90,000 from June 1 to August 28. Fewer flights mean fewer passengers
and, hopefully, fewer crowds.

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