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| Photo: Pattje shipyard |
A shipyard in Groningen province has given 40 of
its Polish and Romanian employees fixed contracts, ensuring that all its
workers receive equal pay.
The metalworkers at Pattje shipyard in Waterhuizen
will be put on the payroll with immediate effect and receive considerably
higher salaries, Albert Kuiper of the FNV metal workers union told the Financieele Dagblad on Monday.
The eastern Europeans work at the Pattje yard as welders,
steel fixers and pipe fitters. The Poles and Romanians make up more than half
of Pattje’s 70-strong workforce.
Earlier, another Waterhuizen-based yard,
Groningen Shipyard, made a similar deal with the FNV. Kuiper said the position
of the northern shipyards is stronger now that all employees are on equal
footing.
The eastern Europeans have all been employed at the yard for some time
on various types of contract. Most worked 56-hour weeks at lower pay and less
competitive conditions than their Dutch colleagues.
Kuiper said they will now
work 38 hours a week with a maximum of 10 hours of overtime. They will receive
an additional €50 a month as compensation and be on full pay if they are sick.
The FNV is in talks with Pattje management to establish a training school at
the yard. The union is continuing similar talks with other Dutch shipyards.
Pattje builds inland waterway tankers, coasters, bunkering vessels, work ships
and dredgers. The company is about to enter the river cruise ship market.

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