Saturday, November 24, 2007

La Greve (the strike)




Well, one of my French friends put it this way - the # 1 sport in France is the strike, followed by soccer, then rugby! This strike, primarily transit workers, came in 2 parts. Part 1 was in October and lasted a couple of days but, when it was voted on, the vote was for it to be reconductible, that is it could be resumed. Which it was about 2 weeks ago. At issue was an attempt by the government to bring the transit worker's retirement age (now 50) into line with some other sectors. It affected virtually all public transportation - in Paris the metro, bus, tramway and RER (suburban light rail), the SNCF (all the intercity trains including the highspeed TGV). Businesses rented hotel rooms in order to house employees who otherwise would be unable to get to work. A friend who was leaving for the US the next day got a hotel room near the airport (with some difficulty because of businesses snapping up rooms for their employees) to ensure that she could make her flight. One woman in my exercise class who lives in the suburbs got a ride from her husband who she 'jokingly' said threw her out at the very outskirts of Paris and she walked the remaining several kilometers from there. Another person got a ride from her mom, lots of folks rode bikes (motorized and non-motorized alike (the motorcycle accident rate doubled), etc.

For the first day or two, things were virtually at a standstill. After that, slowly, some workers came back to work. Many factors made this complex - the metro workers are organized into teams according to line. They each vote on the strike, so some lines resumed work relatively soon. Given that, these lines were packed - you could at least get closer to where you were going! Riders were fairly good humored about all this but by the end folks were getting tired of it! The other complicating factor is that, while there are 5 major labor unions involved in this, there are many others, so lots of moving parts which I don't understand beyond being able to give you this brief description. Then this past Tuesday, others joined in - schools and government workers among them. So then you had little transportation, schools were closed, the post office was open but only to pick up packages (government workers...), etc.

For me, the impacts were small but a bit surprising: Pariscope, a weekly listing of all the movies, plays, concerts in Paris, appears on Wednesdays, but apparently there are delivery problems when there's a strike (it's competitor Spectacle didn't seem to have this problem, go figure), I had to skip the trip I'd planned to the post office and, when I went to the opera Tuesday night, I discovered that it was being performed concert version instead of staged because the stage hands had joined in the strike!

Part of the cultural challenge of life in France, not understanding what's likely to be affected. For the moment, the strike is over (I can't seem to figure out what the settlement was) and public transit has come back to life very quickly! I'm hoping it will last - but I'm not putting away my hiking boots!
Photos are from the first strike. There was a large demonstration that first day that went virtually past my place. The weather was chilly but reasonably nice, the turnout was good and noisy but peaceful, lots of young people but not exclusively, banners, balloons, etc. By the time they arrived at this point it was maybe halfway into their march. All the cafes at the intersection were full as many people took a break for coffee!

1 comment:

Nursedude said...

Joan, La Greve is one of the aspects of life that can drive the expat in France to drink.(Although if your are going to be driven to drink, France is a GREAT place for that activity)It's a big difference between there and here in the U.S.A, where going to strike is decision that is kind of the "nuclear option-last resort" in negotiations. When employees strike here, they are ready for the duration untill their demands are met. You don't see these one or two day "pain in the ass" strikes, which to me are kind of the CGT (acronym for one of the big unions) equivilant to a toddler throwing a tantrum or a petulant teenager copping an attitude. It's temporary and unpleasant, but does not last too long.