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The CESI@noon touched upon the following questions:

• What are the opportunities and threats regarding the European Defence Union, the European Defence Fund and the European Defence Industrial Development Programme?

• What are the challenges for the establishment of the military planning and conduct capability (MPCC) within the EU military staff (EUMS)?

• What role should military and civilian staff should play in establishing the European Security and Defence Union and what are the lessons learnt so far from past cooperation and joint missions?

Particular attention was given to the role of the military staff, to its rights and duties.

Captain Andreas Steinmetz from CESI’s member organisation DBwV demanded harmonised high standards of military staff at EU levels. “Military personnel is key for the European Defence Union. Why not open discussions on social rights of military staff?” asked Emmanuel Jacob, President of Euromil.

Brigadier Heinz Krieb from the European External Action Service (EEAS) Military Staff noted: “European Defence Union should focus on prevention & foreseeability. Prevention is better than conflict resolution!”

MEP Michael Gahler (EPP) emphasised that “the solution is cooperation. We cannot be efficient alone in the field of defence.” He suggested a more solidary European Defence Union, based on a common project and shared responsibilities.

CESI President Romain Wolff concluded: “It is important to keep track of what’s happening on the ground. EU military staff should enjoy the same rights & standards as civilians in uniform. Protect those who protect us!”

Background of the conference

During the course of 2015 – 2017, Europe has witnessed a rapid change of its security policies due to new external factors, new threats and a steady increase of its security needs. Trend changing measures are now being envisaged. In summer, the Commission has issued a reflection paper on the future of European defence as part of the white paper process. Common military assets and the will of the EU “to engage at an unprecedented level in defence to support Member States” are being discussed. In order to create a defence union, all EU instruments, including EU funding, as well as the full potential of the Treaties shall be exploited.

This CESI@noon gathered over 130 participants, practitioners from national armies, European stakeholders and representatives of the national delegations.

Coverage of the event on Twitter

Coverage of the event in foreign press

https://www.dbwv.de/aktuelle-themen/politik-verband/beitrag/news/cesi-berufsrat-verteidigung-tagt-in-bruessel/
https://www.dbwv.de/aktuelle-themen/politik-verband/beitrag/news/europaeische-verteidigungspolitik-die-menschen-in-den-streitkraeften-nicht-vergessen/

On October 18, CESI and the Hessen Land Representation to the European Union brought together key stakeholders from the national and European levels to discuss the future of the ‘European Defence Union: What next?’ at the 17th edition of CESI's lunchtime debate series 'CESI@noon'.

„Even if not all the demands raised by trade unions have been fulfilled, we are, by the end of the day, slowly moving towards the realisation of the notion of a ‘same pay for the same work at the same place’ and the reduction of inequalities within the Single Market. We got a little closer to our general aim to set social rights on equal footing with the markets freedoms.”

As the European Parliament agreed previously on a more ambitious negotiations position, it will now be up to the MEPs to hold their position firmly within the upcoming informal trilogues.”

On October 24, the Employment and Social Affairs Ministers of the Member States adopted a general approach regarding the revision of the Posting of Workers Directive. Among others, and differing from the views of the European Parliament, the Councils advocates an exclusion of the transport sector and remuneration standards of main contractors to subcontractors from the directive. While confirming the inclusion of temporary agency workers who shall be paid in accordance with the laws and practices of the host Member States, the ministers remained largely silent on a broad application of collective agreements as a basis for remuneration rules for posted workers. However, despite having expected more, CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger expressed a cautious optimism with the decision of the Council:

The proposal of the European Commission is generally welcome as a concrete step forward towards more gender equality in the Member States but the provisions it puts forward are considered a bottom line of improvements which should not be watered down during upcoming legislative negotiations.

In particular, the additions to leave rights stipulated in the proposed Directive -10 working days of paternity leave when a child is born, 4 months of non-transferable parental leave per parent with flexible take-up possibilities until the child reaches the age of 12, 5 days of carers’ leave per year per worker, and time off from work on grounds of force majeure- are preconditions to promote much-needed improvements in work-life balance for parents and carers.

Moreover, the proposed individual, non-transferable right to a paid parental leave of (no less than) four months is instrumental, as the proposed Directive should promote an equal sharing of domestic and caring responsibilities between men and women in order to counter long-standing stereotypes about traditional gender roles for women in caring and domestic responsibilities and narrow gender pension gaps.

The European Parliament and the Council should consider the following adjustments to the proposal:

• The scope of the Directive (recital 12) should be extended on the basis of a new, overarching and horizontal definition of the term ‘worker’, as considered by the European Commission in its first phase social partner consultation paper C(2017)2611 final on a possible revision of the Written statement directive 91/533/EEC,* in order to ensure that improved work-life balance also reaches those currently earning their living in (largely unregulated) forms of bogus self-employment and emerging (often equally unregulated) so-called new forms of employment;

• The provisions in the proposed directive on flexible working arrangements (Article 9) on a right to return to full time following a period of part-time in the context of parental leave are instrumental to prevent forced, long-term part-time work with inevitable reductions in pensions. However, the wording to enable part-time work in the first place is too vague (Articles 9 and 5.5). To prevent unjustified denials of requests for flexible/reduced working time by workers, there should be clearer conditions under which when employers can deny requests;

• Article 10 on the maintenance of employment rights is vital to provide security to the workers that no rights will be lost as a result of leave periods under the Directive. However, any negative repercussion of leave under the Directive and pension entitlements should be precluded. Private caring is also a service to the society as a whole since it replaces, to a certain extent, the need for the state to provide care services – In this context, and while it must remain clear that the state remains chiefly in charge to provide care services and facilities, there should be made no difference between work as occupation (with pension entitlements) and work as private carer (with no pension entitlement).

*„Any person who for a certain period of time performs services for and under the direction of another person in return for which he receives remuneration.“

Earlier this month in October, CESI's internal members' Commission on Women's Rights and Gender Equality deliberated, together with representatives from the European Commission and the European Women's Lobby (EWL), on the European Commission's recent legislative proposal for a Directive on work-life balance for parents and carers. Based on their debate as well as CESI's contributions to a two-stage social partner consultation preceding the publication of the proposal, a set of key priorities was put forward in advance of legislative negotiations on the file between the EU's two co-legislators, the European Parliament and the Council.

The conference was opened by the newly elected Europe Academy President, Jean-Claude Halter from CESI’s French member organisation CSEN. He underlined the importance of the topic of the conference: More awareness and more focus on a better reputation of VET is needed because research carried out by the EU VET agency, the European Centre for the Development of Vocational Education and Training (Cedefeop) in Thessaloniki, found that the majority of the citizens in many EU countries (still) consider VET as a generally second-best type of professional formation and inferior to a purely university-based academic tertiary education. According to Jean-Claude Halter, this is an unfortunate finding which needs to be addressed. “After all”, he said, “VET can play an important role in keeping youth unemployment at bay and in giving young people the opportunity to access quality jobs.”

Jean-Claude Halter and Klaus Dauderstädt: VET needs more political attention and more public investment

As the representative of the hosting dbb, Klaus Dauderstädt, Chairman of the dbb and Vice-President of CESI, added that the EU must play an important role in facilitating exchanges of best practices on how the reputation of VET can be improved across Europe and how high quality VET schemes can be developed and implemented at the national level. “The high youth unemployment rates in many EU Member States are not acceptable for trade unions. More public investments in the education of people are indispensable to change this. This is especially true for VET”, he stressed.

Expert input on the role and functioning of VET in Germany and across Europe

Expert input was given by Helen Hoffmann from the European Commission’s Directorate General for Emploment, Social Affairs and Inclusion (DG EMPL) and Erik Heß from the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF), who briefed the symposium participants in detail about the role and functioning of VET in Germany and on EU tools to help foster apprenticeships, such as a newly-proposed European Framework for Quality and Effective Apprenticeships and the European Alliance for European Alliance for Apprenticeships (EAfA), a stakeholder platform for the promotion of apprenticeships which CESI acceded to in September 2016.

Personal experiences of VET graduates

Two CESI affiliates showcased their past apprenticeship and VAT experiences. Karoline Hermann, President of the dbb Jugend, the dbb’s youth organisation, shared insights about the apprenticeship system in the German civil service. As a former apprentice in the German civil service, she emphasised the vast variety of different schemes that exist for young people with different kinds of academic and non-academic educational backgrounds. Arjen Gerretsen, Board Member of the CNV Jongeren, the youth organisation of CNV (the umbrella organisation of CNV-Connectief, a member or CESI), presented the merits of a management trainee programme for young policy advisers at the Dutch central government. With him, too, being a former graduate of the programme, he introduced the symposium participants to how high-profile management trainee programmes can be implemented in the public sector in a personalised and tailored manner to form future leaders in public authorities.

Challenges in VET from the teachers’ perspective

Stefan Nowatschin, headmaster at a German vocational school and affiliate of the dbb, and Anne-Marie le Gallo-Piteau, teacher at a vocational school in France and affiliate of CESI’s member organisation FGAF, explained in detail key challenges that VET systems can face. Stefan Nowatschin referred in particular about lacking financial support to hire additional teachers in order to cut down on course cancellations as a result of a shortage of teachers. Anne-Mariele Gallo-Piteau highlighted the merits that she found VET has for students, in particular in terms of an early full immersion in the workplace, which facilitates transitions to the labour market. However, she also warned that successful VET for an apprentice is conditioned by several factors, including a professional attitude of the apprentice, the provision of a ‘real job’ for the apprentice by the employer, and a continued presence of a dedicated adult employee or manager to mentor the apprentice.

Salvatore Piroscia from CESI’s Italian member organisation Confsal presented initiatives of his organisation to foster employment opportunities for young people in Italy aiming at an improved mobility of young people’s skills in Europe (New GEMS project), well-managed generational replacements within workforces (ScholarJobs project) and the creation of an integrated European system of competence validation for education, training and work experience.

Take home messages: VET central for quality employment – but more exchange of best practices and more public recognition necessary

In a final roundable discussion with Helen Hoffmann, Stefan Nowatschin, CESI Youth Representative Matthäus Fandrejewski and José M. Bachiller from CESI’s Spanish affiliate FASGA synthesised the findings of the symposium, stressing the importance of VET for quality employment and the role of the EU in facilitating more exchanges of best practices.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger, in his concluding remarks, referred in particular to a better valorisation of VET among young people, the workforce as well as political decision-makers and the general public.

Further details about the symposium as well as presentations and interventions of the speakers are available here.

For further information: Marcella Migliori, Policy Adviser for Education Policy, migliori@cesi.org.

Today, CESI's internal members' training centre, the Europe Academy, held its annual symposium, this year on 'Bridging education and the world of work: Vocational training and apprenticeships'. More than 100 participants came together at the premises of CESI's German member organisation dbb in Berlin to discuss best practices on how different types of vocational training and apprenticeship schemes can help young people access increasingly dynamic and globalising labour markets.

The report, which was adopted by a large majority of 474 to 109 votes (34 abstentions), underlines that “in many cases prison overcrowding has a serious impact on the safety of staff and prisoners”, which necessitates “a more secure environment for both prisoners and staff.”

The report is not legally binding but it stresses the importance of:

• “adequate remuneration” and “decent working conditions” which correspond to the “highly demanding job on behalf of the community” which prison staff perform (clause 51);

• a better social recognition and “systematic training” of prison staff to ensure secure and appropriate detention conditions in prisons (clause 52); and

• “the fundamental role of social dialogue with prison staff as well as the need to involve staff via information and consultation, especially when developing new detention concepts designed to improve prison systems and conditions” (clause 53). It specifically requests that the Member States “ensure regular dialogue between prisoners and prison staff” since “good working relationships between staff and prisoners are an essential element of dynamic security, in de-escalating potential incidents or in restoring good order through a process of dialogue” (clause 54).

The report has been transmitted for follow-up to the Council of the EU, the European Commission, the governments and parliaments of the Member States, and the Council of Europe.

Secretary General Klaus Heeger: Report reflects experiences of our prison staff affiliates

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “CESI highly appreciates this report, which reflects well the experiences and point of views of our prison staff affiliates. Ensuring decent employment and working conditions is a subject matter which has been close to the heart of CESI’s internal members’ Trade Council ‘Justice’ for long, especially since overcrowding and radicalisation have become major challenges. We are glad that the report was supported across almost all political the groups. It is now the European Commission and the Member States that need to pick up the messages, and as trade unionists we will make sure to remind them.”

The full text, as adopted, is available in all official languages of the EU on the website of the European Parliament.

On October 5, the European Parliament plenary adopted a report on prison systems and conditions which emphasises the need for better employment and working conditions for prison staff as a precondition for safer, more secure and less tense conditions in prisons. As a European confederation with national trade unions with prison employees among their membership, CESI welcomes this report with several clear recommendations for action for the European Commission and the governments of the Member States.

In unanimous votes, John Clinton and Gerrit van de Kamp, both from CESI’s member organisation Eurofedop, were elected President of the ‘Justice’ and ‘Security’ Trade Councils respectively.

John Clinton & Gerrit van de Kamp re-elected as Trade Council Presidents

Franz-Joseph Schäfer from the German Civil Service Association (dbb) and Donato Capece from the Italian Workers’ Autonomous Trade Unions Confederation (Confsal) as well as Stéphanie La Rosa from the French Union of Managerial Employees in Public Services (FP-CGC) and Hermann Benker (dbb) were elected vice-presidents of the two committees.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger congratulated all elected presidents and vice-presidents: “The old Boards of CESI’s two Trade Councils ‘Justice’ and ‘Security’ are also the new Boards. Both presidents and all vice-presidents were given a new mandate to continue their engagement for CESI. Stability and dedicated trade unionists are important preconditions for a consistent and strong interest representation. Our trade councils from the justice and security sectors have been vocal during the last years, and I am sure they will continue to do so.”

Exchange of views with Eurojust, Europol and eu-LISA

At the meetings, the trade council members welcomed representatives from the European Parliament, Eurojust, Europol and the European Agency for the operational managment of large-scale IT systems in the area of freedom, security and justice (eu-LISA) and challenged related European discourses, both to highlight possible limitations and to bring forward good practices from the workers’ point of view. Discussions covered in particular potentially negative consequences of radicalisation, (deteriorating) conditions in prisons and privatisations in the area of security and law enforcement for employees as well as a case study of the recent Irish Public Service Pay Deal, police and judicial cooperation at EU level, smart borders, and current security challenges.

Resolution on the situation in Catalonia and Spain

In view of the recent efforts by the Catalan separatist movement to achieve independence from Spain, the ‘Security’ Trade Council members adopted a resolution on the important role of law enforcement officers in maintaining security, democracy and respect for the law.
Resolution of CESI’s ‘Security’ Trade Councils on the situation in Catalonia and Spain in October and November 2017

Next meeting in 2018

The next meeting of the two trade councils will take place on March 22 and October 25 2018 in Brussels (Tbc).

On October 12, CESI’s Trade Councils on ‘Justice’ and ‘Security’ held their constitutive meetings after CESI’s Congress in December last year. Following elections of the presidency and vice-presidency for the term until 2020, the trade councils -as CESI’s internal members’ committees for deliberation and positioning on EU policies and politics in the fields of law enforcement, justice and security- debated on the latest European developments in police and judicial cooperation as well as border security which are impacting on their professional life.

Chaired by Javier Jordán of CESI’s Spanish member CSIF and Kirsten Lühmann, affiliate of CESI’s German member dbb, the meeting brought together representatives from CESI’s various member organisations in charge of horizontal employment and social policies as well as a number of presidents and vice-presidents of CESI’s sectoral members’ trade councils to talk about the European Pullar of Social Rights and the role of Trade Unions during Covid-19.

They all reported: Covid has led to a real crisis for workers and employees, with health and safety having been compromised on in many occasions and numerous jobs being lost or threatened, and with especially women being disproportionally on the losing front and in many ways, be it in terms of exposure to the virus (most health and care workers are women), violence (enduring lockdowns led to increase stress and agressions leves in confined homes and families) or reduced financial independence (women are overepresented in precarious types of jobs without adequate protection and social security, which have been cut first during the crisis).

They however also stressed: Correctly managed, the Covid fallout could provide the opportunity for an unprecenteded sustainable economic bounceback based on social justice, inclusive growth, digitalisation and climate and environmental protection.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “The European Commission has a central role to play in steering the resources of the EU’s unprecedented, almost €700 billion heavy Recovery and Resilience Facility in the right direction. The loans and grants that Member States will receive from the EU must not only serve big business but serve to implement the EU’s New Green Deal and the European Pillar of Social Rights on an equal footing. Citizens, workers and climate and the environment must come first.”

On October 14 CESI’s members’ Commissions on Employment and Social Affairs and on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality convened under the PULSER project to discuss the European Pillar of Social Rights, the impacts of the Covid pandemic on workers and gender equality in employment. In discussions with European Commission representatives, CESI members made clear that the maintenance of jobs and of health and safety has utmost priority for workers in Europe, and that the crisis must not lead to a backlash in gender equality in Europe.

The GEI acknowledges that the biggest boost for gender equality over the last ten years has been in the area of decision-making, especially in the private sector – while full gender equality has not yet become a reality even in this domain. At the same time, progress is much slower in other areas. Progress on gender equality even slipped backwards in 12 European countries in terms of a more equal sharing of domestic responsibilities between men and women in families.

Kirsten Lühmann said: “This edition of the Gender Equality Index is again a very useful and highly relevant contribution for policy debates and awareness about gender equality, even if many results do not come as a surprise. In CESI’s Commission on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality, member trade unions from various European countries have continued to report on problems and challenges that the EIGE index mirrors. In all areas of the society, economy, employment and personal life, inequalities that women face persist stubbornly, and improvements take place at snail pace. I strongly urge the European Commission and the governments of the Member States to carefully analyse the findings of the index and take more ambitious steps to move towards real and effective gender equality across the board. We, as trade unions, will make sure to continue to carry our messages to political decision-makers.”

The GEI 2017 notes, for instance, that:

  • in the area of ‘work’, participation in employment is still particularly limited for women with low qualifications and women with disabilities, and having children still means a financial penalty for women and an earnings boost for men. Also, women with children would benefit most from improved work-life balance policies and having children still tends to lead to a financial penalty for women and an earnings boost for men.
  • in the field of ‘money’, despite an increase in average income, poverty reduction among women and disadvantaged groups remains a challenge.
  • in the domain ‘knowledge’, gender segregation continues persists despite improving educational attainment.
  • in the area of ‘time’, only every third man engages daily in cooking and housework, and unpaid care burden is especially high among non-EU born women.
  • in the field of ‘power’, moves towards gender equality are most pronounced on corporate boards but are lagging behind in other areas of this field.
  • in the domain ‘health’, low education still means poorer health especially for women, and medical care needs of lone mothers and people with disabilities are still more often unmet.
  • generally, lifetime inequalities lead to acute gender gaps in old age.

The full report, including all statistics and detailed findings, is available on the website of the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE).

Yesterday, the EU’s agency for research on gender equality, the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) in Vienna, launched the 2017 edition of its Gender Equality Index (GEI). As the most comprehensive European comparative report of its kind, the GEI measures every two years how far the EU and its Member States are from realising a gender-equal society. The 2017 shows that progress towards gender equality in Europe is, generally, real, but also frustratingly slow. According to Kirsten Lühmann, President of CESI’s Commission on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality (FEMM), the EU Institutions as well as the governments of the EU Member States need to show more ambition to achieve real gender equality in all dimensions of society, work and life a lot faster that at present.

ABOUT THE PROJECT

  • Berlin seminar: 20 October 2017
  • Agenda of the Berlin seminar: EN/DE/FR/ES/IT

The theme of the Europe Academy’s 2017 project was ‘Bridging education and the world of work: Vocational training and apprenticeships’. During a seminar in Berlin, expert speakers from trade unions, politics and EU institutions discussed best practices on how to improve quality VET and apprenticeships schemes across the EU’s Member States and enhance the public recognition of VET as an instrument to secure quality employment for young people. A report about the Berlin seminar can be accessed here.

The project complemented CESI’s activities as a member of the European Alliance for Apprenticeships (EAfA).

PRESENTATIONS/SPEECHES :

  • HALTER Jean-Claude: FR
  • HOFFMANN Helen: EN
  • HEß, Erik: EN
  • NOWATSCHIN Stefan: DE
  • LE GALLO-PITEAU, Anne-Marie: EN/FR
  • PIROSCIA Salvatore: IT

The Representation of the State of Hessen to the EU and the
European Confederation of Independent Trade Unions (CESI)
cordially invite you to an CESI@noon event on the topic

‘European Defence Union: What next?’

Wednesday, 18 October 2017, 13:00 – 14:30 hrs
(Light lunch from 12:30, start of the event at 13:00)

Representation of the State of Hessen to the EU
(Rue Montoyer 21, B-1000 Brussels)

Simultaneous interpretation into English/German

Register here

During the course of 2015 – 2017, Europe has witnessed a rapid change of its security environment due to new factors, modern threats and a steady increase of its security needs.
Trend changing measures are being envisaged at EU level. The commission has issued a reflection paper on the future of European defence as part of the white paper process. Common military assets and the will of the EU “to engage at an unprecedented level in defence to support Member States” are being discussed. In order to create a defence union, all EU instruments, including EU funding, as well as the full potential of the Treaties shall be exploited.
What are the next steps? What are the opportunities and the threats regarding the European Defence Fund and the European Defence Industrial Development Programme? What are the views on the establishment of the military planning and conduct capability (MPCC) within the EU military staff (EUMS)?
These and other questions shall be raised and assessed from different perspectives, including from representatives of those mostly concerned: the military staff.

Welcome speech

Friedrich von Heusinger
Director, Representation of the State of Hessen to the European Union

Keynote

Brigadier General Heinz Krieb
EU Military Staff, Director Concepts & Capabilities, European External Action Service

Panel Discussion with the participation of

Captain Andreas Steinmetz
Deputy Chair, Deutscher BundeswehrVerband

Emmanuel Jacob
President, EUROMIL

Michael Gahler
Member, European Parliament

Moderation

Hajo Friedrich
Correspondent

Concluding remarks

Romain Wolff
President, CESI

On October 18, CESI will hold the 17th edition of its lunchtime event series "CESI@noon" - this time together with the Representation of the State of Hessen to the EU on "European Defence Union: What next?" Registration is now possible.

The EESC event was particularly relevant because it provided, in a nutshell, information but also examples of good practices of what actions civil society organisations could take in order to tackle radicalisation. From the SCOUT Movement in Belgium to the ConnectFutures in the United Kingdom, or the RAN (Radicalisation Awareness Network) European initiatives, it is clear that in preventing radicalisation there are already some good practices.

The most important take-aways from the meeting have already been reflected in the work of CESI: education, transmission of common European values and labour market integration. To begin with, a common point highlighted by all the speakers in the event was the importance of critical thinking and passing on the European values through education, citizenship engagement and community work. As mentioned in the reflection paper on the transmission of values, “both upbringing and education play a key role in the shaping of values, through the teaching of knowledge and know-how to young people, allowing them to actively participate in the construction of their individuality and identity. Today, human beings need an identity, because anyone who opens up to the outside world, must be sure of him/herself.” In addition to that, the CESI statement on the position paper about fighting radicalization highlights that the public servants working with youngsters at risk are key for ensuring the early detection, prevention and assistance in preventing radical acts. That is why more efforts, investments in the human capital and even funding should go into supporting these categories of servants.

“As a trade union confederation, CESI represents many public sector employees that get in touch on a daily basis with persons at a potential risk of radicalisation: Teachers in schools, security forces in prisons, police forces in their local communities. They have stressed understaffing and shortcomings with regards to equipment and training for a long time. Our position paper tries to bring this issue to the political agenda.”

As highlighted in the meeting by Mr Claude Heiser (President of CESI Education Trade Council and vice president of the Athenee de Luxembourg Highschool), teachers play a fundamental role in forming youngsters but their efforts should be more supported by the state through funding and by other social partners though extra-curricular/ after-school activities/ volunteering. Mr Heiser also mentioned that European institutions should put forward more strongly an agenda of promoting European values and democratic citizenship in member states’ schools.

In the same opinion on fighting radicalisation, “CESI is of the opinion that it is fundamental to set up a greater number of informal educational programmes, volunteering opportunities, sports activities and intercultural dialogue fora that actively include young people, enabling them to access a wide range of experiences and exchange with other cultures. It is also important to encourage cooperation with religious centres that can provide a counter-narrative to certain religious beliefs.”

Moreover, the topic of integration as a ‘two-way street’ has been another recurrent theme of the discussions. Panellists identified labour market integration as the most important way to tackle extremism. Lys Cylaerts, expert working in re-integrating former prisoners on the job market, emphasized the importance offering people more opportunities to work and to gain their financial independence in order to avoid the traps of illicit activities. In Belgium there are initiatives which encourage employers to hire people convicted of crimes, but it is not enough. CESI is very much aware of this topic. The CESI Trade Council on ‘Justice’, which is made up of representatives from various European trade unions in the field of justice and prisons, is also very much concerned by this reality and as part of its 2016 work it provided the following recommendations: “to Increase follow-up services and educational alternatives suggested to repeat offenders & to increase investments in rehabilitation programmes.” To follow the same line of arguments, in its position paper on labour market integration of refugees, CESI already acknowledged the fact that “more intensive interaction and cooperation between employers, trade unions and refugees could facilitate the transition into the labour market as trade unions and employers have precious experience and insight.”

The half-day event was a very good opportunity to raise vital question about how member states should deal with the threat of radicalization, it provided some examples of good practices and it enabled the social partners present to reflect on possible synergies for improving the work of prevention and how to cope better with the challenges of both religious and right wing extremism. All in all, as Mr Moos, the EESC rapporteur on the topic and CESI member, puts it into words, “radicalization is a dehumanizing phenomenon and prevention requires a long-term commitment from all societal actors.” CESI, as the confederation representing people working directly with youth at risk of radicalisation, believe it is important to highlight and value these workers and to support them accordingly so that they can achieve the highest degree of efficiency in their job.

The list of guest speakers of the event, who should be acknowledged and thanked for their contribution, included:

  • Marguerite Potard,

The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) held recently a public hearing on ‘The role of civil society in the prevention of radicalization of young people’. The event, which gathered policy makers, practitioners and experts in the field, was organised as a preparatory consultation for an own-initiative opinion on ‘Prevention of radicalisation’, an initiative driven by Mr Christian Moos, active member of CESI and the EESC and Divisional Director for European and International Affairs at the German Civil Servants Association (dbb). As such, both the opinion and the event aimed at addressing how civil society, supported by institutional bodies, could counteract the effects of political and religious radicalisation.

An obvious recent trend in the labour markets in Europe has been the emergence of new forms of employment and atypical work patterns, above all in the collaborative economy.

To direct these changes towards a sustainable and socially just direction, the following steps appear to be the most central:

Firstly, in order to subject this area as largely as possible to core labour law standards, a general definition of what constitutes ’employment’ is the most pressing. The European Commission´s opening a discussion on this as part of the ongoing social partner consultation on a possible review of the Written Statement Directive seems to point into the right direction.

In a second step, all types of work, particularly non-standard work and self-employment, must be tied to quality social protection. The European Commission’s recent initiative on social protection for all under the European Pillar of Social Rights must be welcomed as a way to launch in-depth reflections in this regard.

Thirdly, in joint efforts, policy makers, trade unions as well as companies should develop more and better further training and lifelong learning schemes for everyone. Workers need to adjust to new developments and technologies faster than ever before. Ensuring the life-long acquisition of digital competences– without neglecting the transmission of general knowledge, values and critical thinking– is key.

Finally, trade unions may have to go beyond their traditional roles in collective bargaining and social dialogue and find new ways to cater for the interests of people employed in the collaborative economy, i.e. gig and cloud workers. Those workers have a special need to be represented, but they may need different services than trade unions have traditionally offered.

During the Tallinn conference it was highlighted that new technologies can contribute to more meaningful and humane jobs and to a better work-life balance – And that jobs will be lost while others will be created.

In order to take fears away, it is especially up to the trade unions to shape these inevitable changes for the better. They must steer developments and keep (social) control of the digital age. Realising the importance of shaping digitalisation – instead of simply being shaped by it- is already a step forward on the way to proactively embracing new technologies.

Last week Wednesday and Thursday, the Estonian Presidency held its central employment conference on ‘Future of work: Making it e-easy’ in Tallinn – An occasion to outline some priorities to shape the future of employment in a sustainable way.

“To this end, the proper implementation of the principles of the the European Pillar of Social Rights will be key. For this, it will be up to all actors, governments, authorities, social partners and civil society organisations to seize the Pillar politically, administratively and legally and help put it into practice”, Klaus Heeger said.

He added that in addition to this, the new proposed EU legislation on work-life balance and the consultations on access to social protection for all and a possible revision of the Written statement directive are not only emblematic, but could lead to concretely tangible benefits for Europe’s workers.

According to Klaus Heeger, another vital prerequisite for a successful Pillar of Social Rights is (more) investment in human resources. “Without more investments in the people, the wind in Europe’s sails will certainly wane”, he said.

CESI welcomes the Mr. Juncker’s stated plans to establish a European labour authority which reflects CESI endeavor to guarantee a seamless representation of worker rights. CESI has previously suggested to the Commission to come forward with concrete and effective instruments to help ensuring that labour migrants are not being denied their rights and that equal treatment is ensured. A labour authority could be an instrument to help achieve this.

The announced work on a „European Social Standards Union“ to have a common understanding of what is socially fair should not only to be assessed in the context of fair Single Market, but also against the background of globalisation and a digitalisation of work.

Mr. Juncker’s full State of the Union speech is available on the European Commission’s website.

In the frame of a his yearly State of the Union address to the European Parliament plenary, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker today stated that “the wind is back in Europe’s sails.” In a first reaction, CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger reiterated CESI’s view that in order to secure Europe’s future it will be decisive to build on its social components.

Manfred Wiedner (FCG-Post, Eurofedop) from Austria and Horst Sayffaerth (DPVKOM/dbb) from Germany were elected unanimously President and Vice-President of the Trade Council. Both have been steering the Trade Council for many years already. CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “I am glad there will be again a very competent leadership in our ‘Post and Telecoms’ Trade Council. Manfred Wiedner and Horst Sayffaerth are all experienced and dedicated trade unionists that bring in a wealth of expertise from the postal and telecoms sector.” Swiss Robert Métrailler (Transfair, Eurofedop) and Dutch Johan Traets (BVPP, Eurofedop) were re-elected as chairs of the Trade Council’s two working groups on telecoms and postal services by unanimous show of hands.

Keynote addresses were given by the President of Eurofedop, Fritz Neugebauer, as well as by the CEO of the Austrian Telekom AG, Alejandro Plater, and Walter Hitziger, member of the Board of the Austrian Post AG.

Resolutions were adopted on the need for fair(er) working conditions for older workers, higher salaries for more work and a worker-friendly management of digitalisation processes in the telecoms and postal services sectors. All resolutions are available in the resources section.

At the meeting, Klaus Heeger also presented a Memorandum of Understanding on a participation of CESI in the European sectoral social dialogue committee ‘Postal services’ which was recently concluded with UNI Europa, so far the only recognised social partner in this policy field on the workers’ side. Legitimised by a recent representativeness study of the EU’s agency ‘European Foundation of the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions’ (Eurofound) which had found that CESI is a relevant potential actor in European social dialogue on postal services, Klaus Heeger noted the importance of the Memorandum to make the voice of CESI’s affiliates in the postal services sector via European social dialogue. Oliver Röthig, Regional Secretary of UNI Europa, who came to Vienna as a guest of the meeting, expressed his appreciation of the agreement as an instrument to join forces to meet various challenges of the postal services personnel across the EU.

The next meeting of the Trade Council will take place in December 2017 in Brussels (Tbc).

Today, CESI’s Trade Council ‘Post & Telecom’, reinstated by Presidium of CESI following its Congress in December last year, met for its re-constitutive meeting in Vienna. With a full agenda, ranging from the election of the Trade Council’s leadership to the adoption of new resolutions, the meeting was hosted by the Austrian postal services trade union section FCG-Post, an affiliate of CESI’s member organisation Eurofedop.

In reaffirming its previous judgment, which CESI has welcomed already, the Court pronounced itself on the three main points: the right to collective bargaining, the freedom of association and the right to participate in social elections.

The court estimated that “taking into account the evolutions of the labour world, in principle and excluding very particular cases, the right to collective bargaining with the employers had become an essential part of the right of association“ and that “the essence of collective bargaining is that it must ensure the possibility for a trade union, not recognized by an employer, to take actions including if necessary to launch strikes actions, so to persuade the employers to engage collective bargaining together on questions the trade union believe to be important for its members interests.”

The court concluded by reaffirming that “although it recognized the right to strike to have limits, the fact that the period of notice for strike and of concertation in social conflicts are reserved only to ‘representative’ and ‘recognized’ trade unions constituted a restriction which is not compatible with the freedom of association and the right of collective bargaining.”

Furthermore, and regarding the right to participate to social elections, the court held that “the attacked provision breaches the right to participate to the democratic process which allows workers to elect their representatives in the respect of trade union pluralism, because it purely and simply excludes the trade unions qualified as ‘approved’ to participate in social elections within the Belgian railway men.”

For CESI and its Belgian affiliates, the judgment is an important reference to underline the rights of independent trade unions in collective bargaining and social elections.

The full judgment is available in French, Dutch and German.

On July 26 the Constitutional Court of Belgium re-affirmed the annulation of the law of 3 August 2016 regarding railway matters, inserting article 114/1 within the law of July 23 1926 concerning the SNCB (Belgian railway) and the Belgians railway men. The initial request for annulation was introduced by the Syndicat indépendant pour Cheminots (SIC) and others, due to a distinction within the law between different trade unions, which resulted in discrimination, harming ‘approved’ trade unions such as SIC, an affiliate of CESI’s Belgian member UNSP.

In his intervention he said: “Many aims put forward as part of the Pillar can only be realised through action by Member State governments. Trade unions and civil society groups need to analyse the objectives of the Pillar, map them against the reality in their Member State and the problems their affiliates face, and then approach their governments and hold them accountable. It is vital that national governments understand that they need to take ownership of the Pillar. In this way, the Pillar can be instrumental in highlighting to governments the need for more social progress and equality.

Klaus Heeger added: “Article 9 of the TFEU clearly names the promotion of a high level of employment, the guarantee of adequate social protection, the fight against social exclusion, and a high level of education, training and protection of human health as social objectives in Europe. In the Pillar, the European Commission has laid out also what it expects from Member States in this regard. If Member States fail to deliver, it is now clear that they are acting against the spirit and the objectives of the EU. It is the role of trade unions and the civil society to uncover any shortcomings by national governments.”

He concluded: “Of course, this does not mean that the EU institutions are off the hook: They need to sign a joint proclamation to endorse the Pillar at the highest political level and give weight to it. The European Parliament and the Council of Ministers need to move forward swiftly with Pillar-related legislation proposed by the European Commission, most notably in the area of work-life balance. In turn, the European Commission must follow-up on its agenda on decent work and social protection for all during the next months and use the European Semester to keep pressure high on national governments to pursue the objectives of the Pillar. EU institutions, national governments, and civil society and trade unions – Everyone has a responsible role to play to make Europe more social.”

Next to Klaus Heeger, expert speakers included MEP Maria Joao Rodrigues, Gabriele Bischoff (Chair EESC Workers’ Group), Ragnar Horn (European Commission), Tom Bevers and Alexis Rinckenbach (Chair and Vice-Chair of the Council of Ministers’ advisory Employment Committee/EMCO and Social Protection Committee/SPC). The event was hosted by Eurodiaconia.

At a conference on the implementation of the European Pillar of Social Rights in the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) last week, CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger called on civil society organisations and trade unions to seize the new European Pillar of Social Rights and hold national governments accountable whenever they fail in delivering on a more social Europe.

The meeting brought together CESI, Social Platform and Eurodiaconia and a number of affiliates with experts and political representatives of the European Parliament, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) and the European Policy Centre (EPC) to exchange with decision-makers from several cabinets and Directorate-Generals (DGs) of the European Commission involved in the European Semester and the EU’s macroeconomic governance and fiscal coordination framework.

The specific objective was to establish:
• how more public social investments can be promoted in the European Semesters upcoming 2018 Annual Growth Survey (AGS), Country reports and Country-specific recommendations (CSRs), especially in fields such as early childhood education and care, education and training, health and social housing; and
• how the EU can develop a common framework (methodology) to measure economic returns of social investments – as a precondition to establish which social expenditure is future-oriented investment and could receive special consideration in the frame of the EU’s economic governance and budgetary surveillance rules.

According to CESI, Eurodiaconia and Social Platform, both is essential to counter growing social divergences in Europe.

The meeting followed a previous edition which took place in January and which saw the launch of a joint initiative by CESI, Social Platform and Eurodiaconia to nourish and structure emerging debates about a feasible and effective roadmap towards more public investments to counter social divergences in Europe.

For further information:
Hendrik Meerkamp
Policy Adviser
meerkamp@cesi.org
0032-(0)2 282 1860

On Tuesday last week CESI, Eurodiaconia and Social Platform held a high-level meeting with key stakeholders and decision-makers from the European institutions to discuss ways to promote more public social investments in the Member States.

The Written statement directive consultation had two main objectives: Firstly to analyse how to improve the protection of employees in all kinds of employment relationships against possible infringements of their rights under the directive, which may be extended in a revision of the directive, and secondly to establish how to reach a greater transparency on the labour market by ensuring an easy identification of the working conditions applicable to any specific categories of employees.

The Written statement directive

Changes to the directive proposed and mentioned by the Commission in the consultation document included:
• first, the broadening of the scope of the directive’s application, a clarification of its application on new and atypical forms of employment, and the removal or simplification of the exclusion provision under which Member States may exclude people from the scope of the directive;
• secondly, the extension of the information package, which would go hand in hand with the broadening of the application of the directive;
• thirdly, the inclusion of the notion of redresses and sanctions in cases of breaches of the proper application of rules; and
• finally, the reduction of the directive’s two-month notification deadline.

In its response, CESI agreed with the proposals of the Commission as a way to ensure a strong legal certainty and better rights and employment conditions for all people in de-facto dependent work relationships. The Written statement directive was also argued by CESI to be a tool to help bring down bogus self-employment. As precondition to achieve this, CESI mentioned and reiterated the need for a common definition of ‘worker’ which should also span to corresponding existing EU legislation or be addressed in a new, legally binding new framework on decent work for all.

Access to social protection for all

The European Commission wished to consult the social partners to request their views on the possible direction of the European Union action to address the challenges of access to social protection and related employment services for workers in non-standard forms of employment. The main challenges pointed out by the Commission were gaps in access to social protection due to the trend that more and more people are on non-standard contracts or enter new forms of (forced) self-employment; a lack of transferability of social protection rights when people leave the employment where they were acquired; and a lack of transparency of such rights, given the insufficient opportunities to access user-friendly information and regulatory complexity.

The Commission proposed to tackle those issues by ensuring similar social protection rights for similar work; tying social protection rights to individuals and making them transferable; and making social protection rights and related information transparent and by simplifying administrative requirements.

Endorsing those propositions, CESI insisted in its consultation contribution on the need to make clear that it can be dangerous to take social protection in standard form of employment as benchmark, as in many Member States there have been attempts to downgrade social protection in regular employment as well. Furthermore, CESI stressed that the need for a common-sense shared definition of the term ‘worker’, especially in the context of new form of employment is more than urgent. CESI argued that this common term is a precondition to regulate new forms of employment, making them subject to adequate minimum labour and social standards and social security entitlements.

Both consultation contributions can be accessed through the resources section.

On June 23, CESI delivered its responses to the European Commission's first phase social partner consultations on a possible revision of the Written statement directive and on new measures for a better access to social protection for all. The European Commission had launched these two consultations simultaneously as a consequence of the adoption of the European Pillar of Social Rights earlier this year in April.

The meeting started off with the election of the new president and two vice-presidents of the Trade Council. Dr Wilhelm Gloss (Eurofedop) continues in the role as President, Mr Massimo Battaglia (CONFSAL-UNSA, Italy) as well in the role as vice-President, however Mr Francisco Javier Camarillo (CSI-F, Spain) takes up the seat as vice-President for the first time. CESI now has a rejuvenated board of its ACF Trade Council ready to tackle issues of social rights and protection of public services in the field of central administration and finances.

The discussions of the day began with an overview of social dialogue on the national level and the European developments within the sectoral social dialogues committees where CESI is participating. Later on the Trade Council was joined by the Italian vice minister of Justice Mr Gennaro Migliore who spoke in detail of the last financial crisis and the impacts of austerity on public services and administrations. He also highlighted the need to understand the extent of the crisis which is not merely financial, but structural and social. The discussions continued in the same spirit throughout the day when speaking of topics such as austerity policies and the importance of functioning public services, the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion, and in-work poverty.

Florian Hauser from the European Commission, DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion (EMPL), in charge of coordinating the EU Toolbox for Quality of Public Administration, joined the Trade Council to introduce said Toolbox and related funding made through the European Social Fund. He noted the importance of investing in public administration but also stressed that the issue on EU level was one of subsidiarity and not having authority to create policy in that matter.

The Trade Council meeting also saw the presentation of a new position paper on the protection of whistleblowers following a public consultation on the same topic, which will be made available in the resources section.

The re-constitutive meeting of CESI's Trade Council 'Central Administration and Finances' (ACF) following the Congress in December last year took place on June 27 in Rome. With the help of the CESI member organisation CONSFAL-UNSA, the participants were able to focus on some of the most pressing European challenges for central government employees.

“It is not clear to which extent the new European policies and the Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) in the field of defence and security will manage to build the common European Defence Union but it is clear that more Europe is not only needed to ensure peace and security for its citizens, but will come.”

The European Council adopted conclusions on security and defence, the Paris Agreement on climate change, the economy, migration and digital Europe. More concretely, the conclusions on security and defence refer to the need for more Europe in the fields of:

• Internal security and the fight against terrorism
• External security and defence

In a nutshell, the Council agreed that more efforts are needed to strengthen cooperation between law enforcement authorities and industry for an early detection of online content linked to terrorism. The agreements on the Entry/Exit System together with the finalisation of the European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) are other efforts meant to increase the internal dimension of security. Anti-radicalisation is also high on European Agenda, linked to the works of RAN, the Radicalisation Awareness Network. The nexus between the internal and external dimensions of security is becoming more entangled and the Council Conclusions reinforce the idea of the two dimensions mutually strengthening EU security, through the implementation of the EU Global Strategy in the area of Security and Defence and the Joint EU-NATO Warsaw Declaration. The nature of security threats has changed in the last years and in order to address them better the European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats has been created. In addition to that, the forthcoming operationalisation of the European Defence Fund is expected to create positive externalities. Last but not least, the Council agreed to launch the already mentioned Permanent Structured Cooperation, aimed at strengthening Europe’s security and defence.

The conclusions of the meeting can be consulted more in depth here.

On the occasion of the latest European Council meeting which took place last week in Brussels, Member States discussed and took a stance on a number of important topics such as security and defence, migration and digital Europe (cybersecurity strategy). In response to the decisions taken in the field of a Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) in the European Union, Lieutenant- Colonel Thomas Sohst, Chairman of the West Regional Council of German Armed Forces Association, made the following comment.

For this occasion, CESI would like to highlight these key messages carried forward by the UN and reiterate the immense importance of public services in Europe. CESI has always and will always campaign for the importance of accessible, affordable and qualitative public services. We believe in a social Europe that guarantees the fulfilment of basic human rights and access to said rights.

Europe has seen a financial crisis spread from the private sector and having a massive influence over the public sector, with cuts to resources, staff and incidentally the image of public services. CESI has been following closely the measures taken on EU level to strengthen public services ever since and has highlighted the shortfalls that can and should be addressed.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger pointed out: “Many years of austerity have yet to yield desirable results, and have proven to be largely inefficient when combatting the current crisis. Not only does it plunge the moral amongst public servants to see their resources being cut right at a time when they need them the most to uphold necessary conditions for growth, employment and investment. But it also does not improve social cohesion and pushes European citizens towards populist movements and ideas”. Mr Heeger continued by stating that “The future of Europe lies in going after the real culprits, which are tax fraud and evasion, lack of social investment and unemployment”.

At its Congress in December last year, CESI members all adopted with unanimity a motion on the importance of public services and set out the guidelines for yet another four years of campaigning for the protection and value of public services. The text of the motion is available in the resources section.

Since the UN resolution 57/277 adopted by the General Assembly, that designated June 23 as Public Services Day, we have seen annual celebrations all over the world. The UN Public Service Day celebrates the value and virtue of public service to the community. It also aims to highlight the contribution of public service in the development process and recognises the work of public servants, and encourages young people to pursue careers in the public sector.

At its first meeting since the last Congress of CESI in December 2016, the Board elected a new leadership of the Europe Academy, CESI’s internal training centre, for the legislative term until 2020. Jean-Claude Halter from CESI’s member organisation CSEN (the French Trade Union Confederation of National Education) was elected to succeed Emilio Fatovic, who had announced his retirement from the post before. Mr Halter will be supported by 7 newly elected Europe Academy Vice-Presidents:

• José Miguel Bachiller f. de los Rios (FASGA, Spain)
• Juan Carlos de Castro Pita (CSI-F, Spain)
• Nicolas Fernandez Guisado (ANPE, Spain)
• Dietmar Knecht (dbb, Germany)
• Marcello Pacifico (CISAL, Italy)
• François Portzer (FGAF, France)
• Luc Viehé (SPELC, France)

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “The Europe Academy is an important body within CESI. It allows our members to build capacity and receive training in European politics and policies, which is central to their work as trade unionists in their home countries and their involvement in social dialogue and interest representation at the European level at CESI. I am glad there will be again a very competent and dedicated leadership during the legislative term until 2020 to built on the previous successful work of the Europe Academy.”

The Board voted to positively on the accession of the KSSH to CESI, the Confederation of Trade Unions of Albania, which is a new full member of the organisation with immediate effect. The Board also voted positively on an application for observer status for the All-Russia State and Public Service Employee’s Trade Union (PRGU). Klaus Heeger said: “I am glad CESI counts another Albanian trade union organisation among its affiliates, and I look forward to collaboration with our new Russian observer. Both organisations are important trade union organisations in their country.”

The Presidium also discussed recent EU political developments such as the European Pillar of Social Rights. It adopted a position paper on the role of trade unions in the collaborative economy. The objective of the paper is to help put into practice the motion ‘Digitalisation: Finding the balance’ that was adopted at CESI’s last Congress. The position paper argues that the collaborative economy offers opportunities as well as threats for workers, which gives rise to challenges for trade unions to exploit the former and mitigate the latter. The full position paper can be accessed in the resources section.

On June 21 and 22, CESI's Presidium and Board met to take decisions to steer CESI's continued successful evolution as a European trade union umbrella organisation in Brussels.

In a keynote presentation on ‘Social justice and needs for reform in the EU Member States’, Thorsten Hellmann, Project Manager at the Bertelsmann Stiftung, presented the findings of the 2016 edition of the Social Justice Index and Reform Barometer of the Bertelsmann Stiftung. His presentation made clear that there are significant social divergences and inequalities between and within the different Member States of the EU, and that there is an important role to play for the EU to help move towards what is called in EU jargon ‘upward social convergence’.

This set the stage for an expert discussion on the EU’s most recent initiative to achieve this – The European Pillar of Social Rights, delivered by the European Commission in April by means of 20 key principles (plus accompanying legislative and non-legislative measures) to support fair and well-functioning labour markets and welfare systems in Europe.

Ownership of the Pillar by all key to success

The panel -which was moderated by Pierre Baussand (Head of the Brussels office of Eurofound) and brought together Klaus Heeger (Secretary General of CESI) for the trade union side, Claire Dhéret (Senior Policy Analyst for Social Policy at the European Policy Centre/EPC) for the think tanks, Conny Reuter (Secretary General of Solidar) for the organised civil society, and Ragnar Horn from the European Commission’s Taskforce on the Pillar of Social Rights- quickly agreed that a key for a success of the European Pillar of Social Rights will be that European and national-level institutions, policy makers, authorities and social partners all take ownership of the European Commission’s 20 principles under the Pillar and show the political will to achieve their realisation.

The speakers expressed confidence that a joint interinstitutional proclamation by the European Parliament, the European Commission and the Council of Ministers (and thus the Member States) will be a first step in this regard. It was also noted that civil society organisations and social partners should take the European Commission’s background documents with detailed explanations of each of the 20 principles to push governments and authorities at the national level to tailor their policies and measures towards the objectives of the Pillar.

Klaus Heeger added that it would be “psychologically important” for the respect -and hence success- of the Pillar that the European Commission ensures that the objectives of the Pillar will be clearly reflected already in the next European Semester’s Annual Growth Survey (AGS), Country reports, and Country-specific recommendations (CSRs). “If the European Commission finds that a Member State is failing out on many of the Pillar’s principles, it should not shy away from issuing more than two or three CSRs”, he added. Hope was also expressed that, following a joint interinstitutional proclamantion on the Pillar and with new pressure from social partners and the civil society, Member States would find it harder than before to get away with ignoring CSRs.

Pillar is about principles, not rights – and financing remains an open issue

While political will was found to determine the overall success of the Pillar especially at the national level, it was positively noted that the European Commission has been looking into new EU legislation to put some individual principles into practice across the EU, namely in the fields of work-life balance, social protection and minimum labour rights for all. For areas outside the direct scope of competences of the EU, it was stressed that the Pillar is not about rights that are directly enforceable for individuals but rather about overarching principles that should, over time, lead to policies, practices and measures that will be to the benefit of disadvantages citizens and workers: The Pillar is “not a bible but a process”, it was said.

Concerns were raised about the financial resources to finance social progress inspired by the Pillar at the national, regional and local levels. Speakers regretted that the European Commission has found no tool to make additional money available and noted that this would be an issue that political debates might very likely return to.

Today, CESI and the Bertelsmann Stiftung jointly held the 16th edition of CESI's lunchtime debate series 'CESI@noon' on the topic of 'European Pillar of Social Rights: Phrase-mongering of real social progress?' Held with experts from the European Commission, think tanks, civil society and trade unions, the event made clear the Pillar can help make Europe more social, provided that there is a political will among the European and national-level institutions, policy makers, authorities and social partners to implement and enforce it.

CESI will join UNI Europa to represent the employee side; the recognised social partner on the employer’s side is, as before, PostEurope.

In the sectoral social dialogue committee, representatives from the social partners work to keep the postal services sector future-proof, addressing horizontal subject areas such as change management as well as specific topics like more comprehensive skills certifications and transferabilities, improved training schemes to improve employability, and adequate health and safety especially for older workers.

Klaus Heeger said: “We are very glad about the constructive talks with UNI Europa and the agreement to include CESI on the employee side in the European postal services social dialogue. CESI has had a very active internal sectoral trade council for a long time, and this week’s agreement with UNI Europa will give CESI’s trade unions in the sector a voice in social dialogue and enrich the social dialogue committee with additional expertise. CESI’s participation will also make the committee more representative and further reinforce its legitimacy.”

Further information about the EU sectoral social dialogue committee ‘Postal services’ can be accessed on the European Commission’s website and on www.postsocialdialog.eu.

For further information:
Hendrik Meerkamp
Policy Adviser
meerkamp@cesi.org
0032-(0)2 282 1860

On Monday this week, CESI’s Secretary General Klaus Heeger signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Regional Secretary of UNI Europa, Oliver Roethig, on a participation of CESI in the EU sectoral social dialogue committee ‘Postal services’ together with UNI Europa.

The EAN has already met once on April 27-28 2017 in Brussels to exchange experiences between members and to get to know the challenges and success stories of the various national apprenticeship systems in Europe. In Malta it was time to get started with setting the agenda for the rest of the mandate and the future meetings.

The EAN is all made up nine members of different profiles who all have one thing in common – they have all been apprentices or are mandated to represent apprentices. The genesis of the EAN lies originally with the European Youth Forum (EYF) and the Organising Bureau of European School Student Unions (OBESSU). It is supported by the European Commission, following several months of discussions regarding the concept and the mandate of such a network. The idea was to provide a European overreaching platform to discuss all matters concerning apprenticeships and represent them in the absence of any other representation at EU level.

In Malta, alongside the EAfA conference, the members of the EAN were able to put their heads together and discuss future priorities for the network, coming up with the following priorities: quality education and quality assurance; rights and protection; legally binding agreements; representation; promotion of apprenticeships; anti-discrimination; and accessible information.

The goal is eventually to assist in developing structures of representation on the national, regional and local level.

The four-year anniversary conference of the European Alliance for Apprenticeships (EAfA) on May 30-31 in Malta did not only focus on the gathering of various stakeholders but also saw the official launch of the new European Apprentices Network (EAN). CESI Youth Representative, Matthäus Fandrejewski, was invited to take part as a member. As member of the EAN, he will be sharing knowledge of his own inside information as a former apprentice himself.

Since its inception, the EAfA has been examining challenges and the way forward for positive developments within the sector of apprenticeships, by enhancing the quality, supply and the overall image of apprenticeships. It also does so by creating a platform where governments get together with other key stakeholders such as social partners, businesses, vocational education and training (VET) providers, regions, youth representatives and think tanks. The Alliance was formed in 2013 through a joint declaration by the European Social Partners, the European Commission and the Presidency of the Council of EU (Council of Ministers).

Topics on the agenda included:

• 4 years of EAfA: Highlights from stakeholders of the Alliance
• Welcoming newcomers to the Alliance
• Launching a new European Network of Apprentices
• Boosting mobility for apprentices
• Towards a European Quality Framework for Apprenticeships
• Developing apprenticeship support services
• The way forward for the European Alliance for Apprenticeships

At the conference, 3 new national commitments to the EAfA for quality apprenticeships were made along with 34 new apprenticeship pledges and 218,000 apprenticeship pledges offers. Since 2013 35 national commitments have been made, 208 pledges and 723,000 pledged offers. CESI officially joined the EAfA on September 2 2016 in the hope of better cooperation between the platform and CESI’s national member organisations that are active within the field of apprenticeships, VET and the education sector.

More information about CESI’s involvement in the Alliance can be accessed through CESI’s pledge as published on the European Commission’s EAfA website.

On May 30-31 a conference was held in Malta, celebrating the first four years of the European Alliance for Apprenticeships (EAfA). With an opening speech made by Silvio de Bono, the President Board of Governors of MCAST (Malta College of Arts Science and Technology) and Evarist Bartolo, the Maltese Minister for Education and Employment, and a video message by European Commissioner Marianne Thyssen, the conference got off to a great start. As a member of the EAfA, CESI and the CESI Youth also participated in the conference.

In a panel together with the S&D MEPs Maria Joao Rodrigues and Maria Arena, Gabriele Bischoff (President of the Workers’ Group of the European Economic and Social Committee), Istvan Vanyolos from the European Commission’s DG Employment, Claire Courteille (Director of the ILO’s Brussels Office) and Conny Reuter (Secretary General of Solidar), Mr Heeger generally welcomed the European Commission’s efforts to put in place a new European Pillar of Social Rights.

At the hearing, which was hosted by Solidar, he said: “The European Commission has put its cards on the table, and it is cards that can be the foundation of a more social Europe. It is now a task of the political actors in all EU institutions -especially the Parliament and Council- to endorse the new Pillar by means of a formal, joint Proclamation. Also, the governments of the Member States need to identify with the idea and take ownership of the achievement and realisation of the 20 rights and principles of the Pillar as well as its accompanying measures.”

Mr Heeger added: “Achieving the European Pillar of Social Rights also means better enforcing worker rights that already exist under EU law and need to be transposed or respected at the national-level. Shortcomings are abundant across many Member States. A key role will pertain to social partners and trade unions in particular. They need to take the new Pillar as a tool to further push for a better implementation of established rights.”

Mr Heeger concluded: “In certain fields, such as work-life balance, the European Commission has issued hard legislative proposals to accompany the Pillar and give flesh to single rights and principles under it. However, even if the European Commission has issued a Pillar that can bring substantial improvements for workers and citizens, there are still outstanding challenges that need to be addressed at the EU level as quickly as possible. For instance, in the context of a rapidly evolving digitalisation of work, EU legislation on rules for yet unregulated new forms of employment are urgently needed. CESI will highlight this in current consultations of social partners on a better access to social protection and a potential revision of the EU Written Statement Directive, and I am confident that the European Commission have an open ear.”

CESI’s position paper on the European Pillar of Social Rights, adopted in the context of a dedicated public consultation in 2016, can be downloaded here.

At a hearing in the European Parliament on last week Thursday, CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger drew positive conclusions about the European Commission's recent package delivering the European Pillar of Social Rights and called on Member States and social partners to work together for a successful implementation and enforcement of what could become a new, fuller social dimension for the EU.

The European Confederation of Independent Trade Unions (CESI) and

the Bertelsmann Stiftung hereby invite you to the next

CESI@noon

‘European Pillar of Social Rights: Phrase-mongering or real social progress?’

20 June 2017 – 12.00 to 2.00 pm
CESI (European Confederation of Independent Trade Unions)
Avenue de la Joyeuse Entrée 1-5, 1040 Brussels (Metro Schuman)

The event will take place in English / Sandwich lunch will be provided at

1:30 / Register for the event here

In April, the European Commission published a package to deliver the European Pillar of Social Rights, 20 key principles and rights to shape fair and well-functioning labour markets and welfare systems. The objective of the Pillar is to serve as a “compass for a renewed process of convergence towards better working and living conditions” in the Member States.

Is this phrase-mongering or may the Pillar drive actual social change and progress? During our lunchtime debate, we invite you to hear and discuss if, and how, the Pillar can be made a success for citizens and workers: How can the proposed rights, principles and accompanying measures be implemented effectively, what is legally possible for the EU and what is politically feasible in the Member States? Which actors are now in the focus, the European Commission, Member State governments or social partners and civil society? And how could the Pillar complement the EU’s economic governance and fiscal coordination framework with an upgraded social dimension?

Welcome:
Klaus Heeger, Secretary General, CESI

Keynote address ‘Social justice and social policy reforms in the EU – State of play’:
Thorsten Hellmann, Project Manager, Bertelsmann Stiftung

Discussion with the participation of:
Georg Fischer, Director ‘Social Affairs’, DG EMPL, European Commission
Claire Dhéret, Senior Policy Analyst for Social Policy, European Policy Centre (EPC)
Conny Reuter, Secretary General, Solidar

Moderator:
Pierre Baussand, Head of Brussels Office, Eurofound

Conclusions:
Henning vom Stein, Head of Brussels Office, Bertelsmann Stiftung

June 20 will see the next edition of CESI's event series 'CESI@noon' with a lunchtime panel debate on 'European Pillar of Social Rights: Phrase-mongering or real social progress?' Registration to the event, which will be held jointly together with the Bertelsmann Stiftung, is now open.

Today is a cause for celebration, and as we look back it is difficult to imagine that this year added significant challenges to an already difficult terrain. That which had been causing a lot of anxiety in the run up of June 2016, materialised when the British people narrowly voted to exit the European Union.

The refugee crisis continues to cause a rift between member states, and the threat to the rule of law is not subsiding in several parts of the Union. A string of terrorist attacks have rocked member states and citizens feel increasingly on edge. The constantly looming Greek financial crisis also serves as a symbolic reminder of the economically deprived Europeans that are not necessarily feeling the effects of economic recovery on the continent.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger stated: “Solidarity is what Europe needs right now and we will achieve it through putting the development of a real social dimension at the heart of a European future. What citizens want most and first and foremost is social and economic fairness”.

However, Europe remains defiant and the growing menace of populism has been defeated through the democratic exercise of elections. The recent victory of Emmanuel Macron in the French presidential elections will perhaps pave the way for a new Berlin-Paris agreement on further ambitions and needed reforms. Whether or not the president-elect Macron will be able to inject reforms that include a social approach with an adjusted macroeconomics and fiscal governance framework, giving room to investments in human capital, accessible and affordable quality public services and quality employment, remains to be seen.

“CESI has ever since called for an upwards social cohesion, not least through increased social investments. The economic costs of inequalities are too high. In order to create wealth, growth and resilience in times of crisis, we have to invest in people. The benefits of social investment clearly align with the Rome Declaration pledge for a social Europe that fights poverty, social exclusion, unemployment and discrimination”, Romain Wolff, President of CESI, underlined.

After a tumultuous year, that has proven to be challenging on many levels, CESI would like to take the opportunity to recall the many achievements that have been fulfilled throughout the European project on this day of Robert Schuman’s historic declaration. CESI has always and will continue to advocate for a stronger Europe, not only for its institutions, but for the benefit of its workers and citizens.

More concretely, at a joint press conference in Madrid, they presented a campaign with the objective to reform the Spanish maternity supplement in pensions for mothers with two or more children, a measure introduced on January 1 2016 by the government.

Based on data of the Spanish National Statistical Institute (INE), CSI-F estimates that the law discriminates against around 2 million women that only have one child. Ángeles Mur Nuño, Secretary for Equality and Social Responsibility at CSI-F, said that this perpetuates the traditional role of mothers and women caregivers. She added that the government scheme moreover discriminates against women who retire early and against those who retired before January 1 2016, when the measure entered into force.

According to CSI-F, the Spanish government needs to revise the law so thatCGFP all mothers regardless of the number of their children and their date of retirement benefit from a maternity supplement in pensions. They underlined that it is equally vital to take additional measures to encourage a more equal sharing of domestic and care responsibilities between fathers and mothers (who tend to take on a disproportionate share), which includes, for instance, a progressive matching of paternity and maternity leave provisions. Carmen Jaffke, who is an affiliate of CESI’s member trade union organisation CGFP from Luxembourg and has been a long-standing member of the Board of the EWL, said that this is clearly in line with the EWL’s priorities to end gender pension gaps in Europe. She assured full support for CSI-F’s efforts in Spain.

CSI-F will continue to promote a reform of the maternity supplement in pensions in the Spanish lower house parliament, the Congress of Deputies. More information the campaign can be accessed on the website of CSI-F, along with a promotional video on the fight against gender pension gaps by the EWL. A video with excerpts of the press conference is available here.

CSI-F, a long-standing member of CESI, is the most representative Spanish trade union organisation in public administrations and has a growing presence in the private sector. CESI has been a member of the EWL since 2006.

On May 12, CESI's Spanish member CSI-F (Central Independent and Public Employees' Trade Union) and CESI's Board member of the European Women's Lobby (EWL), Carmen Jaffke, called on the Spanish government to end the gender pensions gap in the country.

In an unanimous vote, Claude Heiser of the Luxembourgish General Confederation of Public Services (CGFP) and Salvatore Piroscia of the Italian General Confederation of Independent Trade Union (CONF.S.A.L.) were re-elected as President and Vice-President respectively.

Claude Heiser unanimously re-elected President of the Trade Council

Mario Gutiérrez of the Spanish Central Independent and Public Employees’ Trade Union (CSI-F) will join in as Vice-President and replace Horst-Günther Klitzing (German Civil Service Federation/dbb) who did not run again. CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “I am glad there will be again a very competent leadership in our Education Trade Council. Claude Heiser, Salvatore Piroscia and Mario Gutiérrez are all long-standing trade unionists that bring in a wealth of expertise from the education sector. They will be able build on CESI’s successful work on European education systems.”

On the agenda: Role of education in the integration of migrants, training support in digital skills and ethics for the teaching profession on the agenda

At the trade council meeting, some of CESI’s most pressing European priorities that concern the teachers and educators that CESI represents were discussed, many of them related to a much-needed further valorisation of the teaching profession.

In the presence of Kristina Cunningham from the European Commission’s DG for Education and Culture, the trade council members discussed the EU’s efforts to support schools, teachers and educators in the integration of migrants and refugees, which have been coming to Europe at elevated levels during the past years.

Education trade council Vice-president Salvatore Piroscia presented the ‘New Generation & Mobility of Skills’ (nGeMS) project carried out by CESI’s Italian member organisation Confsal, an initiative bringing young digital experts in touch with employers with the aim to help young people access the labour market and assist employers in managing and upgrading their digital skills. Together with Ana Maria Noguiera from the secretariat of the European Parliament’s Committee on Culture and Education, the trade council members debated how the EU can help CESI and its affiliates raise additional awareness about the project, expand it and find new partners.

Finally, Armindo Cancelinha of CESI’s Portuguese member ‘National Teachers Association’ (ANP) spoke on codes of ethics for the teaching profession. Given the importance of such codes, it was agreed to draft a memo to develop similar schemes in different Member States.

Today, CESI's Trade Council 'Education, Training and Research' (EDUC) held its constitutive meeting after CESI's Congress in December last year. Following the elections of the trade council presidency and vice-presidency for the legislative term until 2020, the trade council, as CESI's internal members' committee for deliberation and positioning on EU education policies, discussed some of CESI's most pressing European priorities that concern the teachers and educators that CESI represents.

The Constitutional Court delivered its judgment following the SIC’s contestation of certain provisions of Belgian legislation (“loi Bellot”) regarding the exclusion from social dialogue and the privation of the right to strike of independent trade unions. The application of the contested provisions had the consequence of depriving these organisations of prerogatives such as the ability to give provisional notices of strike action or the right to participate in social concertation.

CESI is delighted that the constitutional court of Belgium recognised that the application of this law caused severe and irreversible harm to independent trade unions such as the SIC. CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “The court recognised the importance of the right to strike as being a fundamental raison d’être of all trade unions and as one of their main tool of pressure. The court held that the current procedure of allowing trade unions identified as ‘recognised’ and ‘representative’ while excluding others defined as ‘approved’ from social conflict concertation is not justified and not compatible with the right to association and the right to collective bargaining. As a European umbrella organisation representing numerous independent trade unions, CESI warmly welcomes the judgment of the Belgian Constitutional Court and we congratulate our affiliates UNSP and SIC for their efforts.”

The court also held that the impossibility to put forward candidates to social elections and the exclusion of affiliated members from elections are not justified. These provisions had as a consequence the deprivation of many trade unions to participate in a democratic process which would enable workers to elect their representatives within the respect of trade union pluralism.

The judgment represents an important statement for the right of all trade unions to social bargaining and their right to strike as a whole. The paragraphs at issue within Belgian law were annulled by the court, and with this the right of independent trade unions to participate in social elections and their entitlement to give strike notices have been resorted.

On last week Thursday, May 18, the Belgian Syndicat Independant pour Cheminots (SIC), an affiliate of CESI's member organisation UNSP (Union Nationale des Services Publics), won a landmark case at the Belgian Constitutional Court which will strengthen the rights of independent trade unions in social dialogue and strike instances in Belgium.

The creation of the new Network of Legal Advisers takes its roots in an initiative proposed by CESI’s Italian member organisation CISAL at CESI’s last Congress in December 2016 to facilitate regular exchanges of information and discussions between member organisations about European jurisprudence in the area of labour law, with the aim to better learn from each other and jointly coordinate relevant action in the interest of affiliate members.

At the network’s first meeting, the participants addressed the application of the EU fixed-term work directive 1999/70/EC and the EU working time directive 2003/88/EC in their respective countries with reference to the existing jurisprudence before the European Court of Justice (CJEU). They also discussed about challenges related to precarious work in the context of the CJEU’s Mascolo judgment from November 26 2014 as well as about the implications of the Dansk Industri judgment of April 19 2016 on equal treatment.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “I am glad that our new Network for Legal Advisers has kicked off. Recent trends in the world of work related to, for instance, digitalisation and new forms of employment have led to increasing amounts of case law to interpret existing EU social and employment legislation. More than 50 judgments and orders of the CJEU have dealt with the Working time directive alone! It is an increasing challenge for trade unions to take in all resulting consequences and implications into the services they provide for their affiliates. I hope our new network will be a forum to help our members stay on top of new developments and act effectively in the interest of their affiliates.”

The next meeting of the Network is foreseen for October 2017.

On May 4, the first meeting of a newly created internal network of legal experts took place at CESI in Brussels, bringing together expert jurists from member organisations of CESI in five European countries: Italy, Spain, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Germany and Turkey.

Last week, the European Commission issued its long-awaited set of measures to improve the EU’s social dimension. Under the heading ‘European Pillar of Social Rights and accompanying initiatives’, the Commission presented its proposals to give flesh to 20 principles and rights in the areas of equal opportunities and access to the labour market, fair working conditions and social protection and inclusion, which should guide the EU’s and the Member States’ future on employment and social affairs policies.

Rightfully, the new Pillar has given rise to criticism also among trade unions at national and EU level especially due to uncertainty about and effective implementation and enforcement mechanisms. However, we should not forget is that it was the European Commission that triggered the Pillar based on President Juncker’s stated objective to achieve a ‘Social Triple A’ rating, a vision which was immediately countered by the many opponents of a more social EU who referred to restricted EU competences in that field and used this to try to put social concerns at second place.

The Pillar is accompanied by legislative proposals in the area of work-life balance. Of course, there could have been more teeth in the European Commission’s proposals, but if concrete EU legislation can have a positive impact on millions of workers in the EU, then this is worth fighting for. Moreover, if the European Commission puts a new focus on a better implementation and enforcement of existing EU social and employment legislation at the national level, and if a careful scrutiny on how the Member States work to fill the 20 principles and rights with life can be realised, then Europe may still become more social than it currently is. By building on the Pillar’s principles and rights, and by calling upon a “joint responsibility of the EU, Member States, social partners and other stakeholders” to deliver them, progress can be achieved.

The most important is that we all realise what is at stake. Social policy means solidarity, and solidarity means, to a certain extent, giving up self-centredness. This is a message which is not easy to convey in times of rising nationalism, but which, hopefully, reaches not least those going to the polls next Sunday in France.

Sometimes, conveying positive messages on the EU may not be the worst thing to do. The media attention given to the EU’s social ambitions especially at the national level last week shows that there is indeed room for positive EU news.

The Commission’s proposals may lack teeth, but for CESI it is now mainly up to the 27 remaining Member States or, as a last resort, a “coalition of the willing” to show that there is a willingness to bite. In the end, it is up to all of us to bite.

The current challenges for the EU are numerous - on today's Labour Day it is time to recall what is the essence of the EU that is meant to keep us all together. The gap between the EU and the citizens must at least be reduced, and the glue that may keep the EU going is solidarity - solidarity among workers, between workers and those excluded from the labour market, as well as within and between Member States. And: Solidarity also refers to investing in people! That is CESI's leitmotiv.

The theme set by the ILO for this year’s World Day is ‘Optimise the collection and use of occupational safety and health data’.

According to CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger, there is still lack of data in order to put in place good health and safety measures: “We especially need more information concerning new challenges, such as stress at work, discrimination, harassment, rising work intensities and increased job insecurities. We know that increasing levels of stress at work contribute to elevated levels of absenteeism among the workforce and that this has negative impacts for both the employers and the employees, but concrete data to back this up and to put in place effective preventative mechanisms is often still lacking. According to EU-OSHA, 50% of workers in Europe feel they are considerably stressed at the workplace and 80% of managers say they are aware of the problem, but only 30% of companies take measures about it.“

Mr Heeger added: “Health problems caused by stress at work are also prevalent among white collar workers and public sector employees, but this is an area where detailed research data is still largely missing. This is why CESI made occupational health and safety in public services a work priority. CESI has been a partner in EU-OSHA’s Healthy Workplaces Campaigns since 2012 and just completed a project on better health and safety in public services in Europe.”

Data, findings and existing best practices were compiled and synthesised in a study that was released earlier this year, with the objective to improve health and safety management in public services in Europe.

Today is World Day for Safety and Health at Work. Initiated by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) in 2003 as an annual day to commemorate the victims of occupational diseases and accidents, concerns over health and safety for workers remain to the day. CESI takes the occasion of this year's World Day to recall the fundamental importance of occupational heath and safety for all.

The European Pillar of Social Rights encompasses 20 principles and rights, structured in three categories: (1) equal opportunities and access to the labour market, (2) fair working conditions and (3) social protection and inclusion.

Pillar of Social Rights principles: Not binding, so close scrutiny will be necessary

The Pillar has been brought forward as a legally non-binding but immediately effective Commission Recommendation and as a proposal for a joint proclamation by the European Parliament, the Council of Ministers and the European Commission. A new social scoreboard shall in the future regularly track trends and performances and assess progress in relation to the 20 principles and rights under the Pillar. Findings will feed into country-specific recommendations (CSRs) of the European semester of economic policy coordination.

In the context of the Pillar of Social Rights, the European Commission also proposed legislation on an improved work-life balance – most notably regarding:

• the introduction of paternity leave. Fathers/second parents shall be able to take at least 10 working days of paternity leave around the time of birth of the child, compensated at least at the level of sick pay;
• the further strengthening of parental leave. The four 4 months period shall be compensated at least at sick pay level and be non-transferable from a parent to another. Parents will also have the right to request to take leave in a flexible way (part-time or in a piecemeal way) and the age of the child up to which parents can take leave will be increased from 8 to 12 years old;
• the introduction of carers’ leave for workers caring for seriously ill or dependent relatives. Working carers shall be able to take at least 5 days per year, compensated at least at sick pay level;
• the extension of the right to request flexible working arrangements (reduced working hours, flexible working hours and flexibility in place of work) to all working parents of children up to 12 and carers with dependent relatives.

In the frame of the Pillar of Social Rights, the European Commission moreover opened social partner consultations on social protection to define possible new rules in this area and on a possible revision of the Written statement directive 91/533/EEC (which gives employees starting a new job the right to be notified in writing of the essential aspects of their employment relationship). The Commission also issued an interpretative communication to provide guidance on how to interpret various aspects of the Working time directive 2003/88/EC in today’s world of work.

Work-life balance measures accompanying the Pillar: Overdue but a step forward

In a first reaction, CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “During the last year, CESI’s Presidium and internal Commission on Employment and Social Affairs have actively positioned CESI on the European Pillar of Social Rights and the initiatives around it. We mainstreamed issues around the future of work, including digitalisation and new forms of employment, at our last Congress in December 2016 and we held numerous exchanges of views with the European Commission and policy makers. It is unfortunate that the Pillar will only apply automatically to all euro countries – after all, social progress and quality employment matter to the people living and working in the entire EU, so I hope non-euro countries will opt-in voluntarily. However, the most important issue remains to create a real social dimension, if need be only among the euro zone members or a ‘coalition of the willing’, as laid out as a possible future scenario in a reflection paper on the social dimension of the EU that was also published today. CESI We would also have welcomed more teeth in the implementation and enforcement mechanism of the 20 principles and rights under the Pillar, but if we achieve a successful, careful scrutiny on how Member States go about in realising targets, then the Pillar may still make the EU more social than it currently is.”

He added: “Our internal Commission on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality worked in detail for a better work-life balance for employees and especially a more equal sharing of domestic responsibilities in working families. Today’s package is overdue but certainly a step forward. I am glad that our messages from a recent social partner consultation seem to have been picked up a considerable extent.”

Legislative proposals must not be watered down during EP-Council negotiations

Before coming to hasty detailed conclusions, CESI, together with its members and affiliates, will take stock of and thoroughly analyse all proposals and measures presented today so as to allow a conclusive assessment and a constructive dialogue with MEPs and the Council of Ministers. Klaus Heeger concluded: “The European Commission has put its cards on the table. It is now up to the co-legislators and social partners to deliver. It is last but not least also CESI’s responsibility to make sure that today’s package will bring real added value to Europe’s citizens and workers.”

CESI’s Congress motions, position paper on the Pillar of Social Rights, and consultation contributions on the various initiatives comprising today’s Social Pillar package can be accessed in the resources section on CESI’s website.

Today, the European Commission presented a long-awaited set of measures to improve the EU's social dimension. Under the heading 'European Pillar of Social Rights and accompanying initiatives', the European Commission issued 20 principles to guide the future of employment and social affairs. While these principles are not legally binding or directly enforceable targets, there are a number of accompanying legislative proposals, most notably in the area of work-life balance. In a first reaction, the CESI leadership expressed cautious optimism about the European Commission's proposals.

The Convention, which was opened and closed by the European Commissioners Marianne Thyssen and Valdis Dombrovskis, saw panel debates and presentations by a wide array of young people and witnesses of young people that have been meeting obstacles of various kinds in participating in societal life or finding employment.

Issues tackled in special workshops and side-events included ‘The right of young people to adequate income’, ‘Barriers and success factors to facilitate young people’s social and labour market participation’ and ‘Intergenerational fairness and combatting youth poverty: Making the European Social Model work for everyone today and tomorrow’. CESI Youth Representative Matthäus Fandrejewski acted as rapporteur for a workshop on ‘Opening up quality pathways for young people’ and presented conclusions to the conference’s plenary.

Reacting to the conference, he said: “As a young trade unionist, I see on a daily basis that Europe still has a long way to go towards a successful integration of disadvantaged young people. This year’s Annual Convention on Inclusive Growth showcased that the EU and the Member States must invest much more in early childhood education and care, primary and secondary education and training. Investing in young people’s future opportunities is not only a natural duty for governments but also the cheapest way to achieve and maintain thriving economies. Investments in people, especially disadvantaged ones, pay off socially and economically.”

Further information about the 2017 ACIG, including conclusions of workshops, will be made available on the European Commission’s website.

At the 2017 Annual Convention for Inclusive Growth (ACIG) on Monday this week, the European Commission discussed with civil society and trade union organisations how to create better opportunities for disadvantaged young people to participate in societal life and access the labour market. CESI Youth Representative Matthäus Fandrejewski spoke as a rapporteur on the outcomes of a workshop on 'Opening up quality pathways for young people'.

Emmanuel Macron is the winner of the first round of the French Presidential elections and is expected to become France’s next President. However, assuming (and, needless to say, hoping) that Mr Macron will beat Marine Le Pen in the second round on May 7, it still needs to be established what this means for worker rights, a more social Europe and, to this end, much needed additional investment in social infrastructure and public services – something CESI has been advocating for long.

As Mr Macron is a committed European, the French (and German) elections may open momentum for a new Berlin-Paris agreement for ambitious reforms in Europe.

At their Rome Summit in March, EU leaders already committed to a more social and inclusive Europe, something that CESI welcomed warmly. It will remain to be seen to what extent and in which way Mr Macron’s understanding of reforms in Europe spans to a more social Europe and an adjusted macroeconomic and fiscal governance framework which allows Member States to make much-needed investments in human capital, accessible and affordable quality public services and the workers providing them.

As CESI’s Presidium declared in a resolution in response to the European Commission’s recent White Paper on the Future of the EU, heads of state and government and national politicians in the Member States should close ranks with trade unions all over Europe in their call to put the development of a real social dimension at the heart of a successful future EU: Social and economic fairness and equality has become the most important concern of the EU’s citizens. They will only accept a European integration project which responds to their needs. If Emmanuel Macron internalises this paradigm, he could help make Europe a better place for citizens and workers – In any case, though, this is course requires in the first place a (hopefully clear) victory against Le Pen in the election’s second round two weeks’ time.

A commentary by Klaus Heeger, Secretary General of CESI, in response to the first round of the French presidential elections yesterday.

On March 29 2017, Brexit became a reality. Britain’s ambassador to the EU, Tim Barrow, handed the UK’s official letter of withdrawal from the EU over to European Council President Tusk.

On 24th of June 2016, the Brexit vote let the EU into a deep shock, and it seems, so did the official letter launching the exit procedure.

Personally, I welcome the decision to opt for a clear (and hard) Brexit.

Of course, the UK and the EU will face troubled times, of course the challenges of how to manage Britain’s exit from the EU will be enormous, of course the legal and administrative defiance of its completion within two years will be almost incommensurable, and of course the economic and political shockwaves of unknown magnitude are still to come.

But lavishing in uncertainty would have helped no one.

The leader of the EPP group in the European Parliament, Manfred Weber, tweeted: “From now on, only the interests of the remaining 440 million Europeans count for us!”

While the wording might appear slightly sulky, he is right: If the 27-member union does not want gamble away all its chances at a convincing new beginning with greater acceptance and support for European integration, it will have to clearly define its relations with and own interests towards Britain. And with such letter, the lines are clear.

Yes, the Brexit is certainly more than unfortunate. What is true also is that the Brexit negotiations will absorb a lot of resources of the EU during the next two years.

At the same time, in fields in which UK governments have often been difficult partners – such as in employment and social affairs- prospects for real progress may be improving. For the remaining EU-27 this requires a clear will to strive for further unity, and the will to clearly display that unity. CESI’s Presidium underlined in its latest statement that, while being aware that democratic legitimacy and mandating mainly occurs through traditional democratic channels at national levels, “it is also time for all political actors to be ready to put Europe first – not as a goal in itself but in the very interest of the citizens.”

For CESI, it most and foremost adds up to the completion of the EMU in terms of a real social dimension. If necessary, by the means of the European Commission’s recent White Paper’s scenario 3: ‘Those who want more do more’.

As Fabian Zuleeg and Janis Emmanouilidis from the European Policy Centre (EPC) state in a recent commentary, “a new reform momentum will require, first and foremost, an agreement between Berlin and Paris.”

Picture: CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger © CESI 2017

A personal commentary by Klaus Heeger, Secretary General of CESI, in response to the submission of the 'Brexit letter' by the UK government to the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, earlier this week.

The recent financial and economic crisis has resulted in a social crisis, with sharply rising socioeconomic inequalities in Member States across the European Union. The Rome Declaration commits Member States and institutions to a social Europe where addressing unemployment, poverty and social exclusion are priorities and where sustainable growth reduces inequalities. Social Platform, the European Confederation of Independent Trade Unions (CESI) and Eurodiaconia welcome this commitment to social Europe but warn Member States and the European institutions that this ambition can only be achieved if there is greater momentum and mechanisms for social investment in European Economic Governance.

There are inherent economic returns and advantages in social investment. Economies with more social investment have shown to be more resilient to shocks and perform better in crises. Adequately resourced social protection systems can work as automatic stabilisers and maintain positive effects on demand. Furthermore improved social cohesion prevents tremendous economic costs of inequalities in the long-run. It also generates social and economic returns as it enables people to be more socially and economically productive. The benefits of social investment clearly align with the Rome Declaration pledge for a social Europe that fights poverty, social exclusion, unemployment and discrimination.

However, there are limitations in the EU economic governance framework that will prevent such pledges being fulfilled. Levels of social investment have been persistently low across Member States; to date the EU has failed to facilitate substantive increases. EU-level initiatives such as the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI) do not deliver sufficiently on social investment projects, and the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) restricts, in many instances, Member States’ means of engaging in social investment themselves because necessary investment in human capital and essential services including housing, social, health, and education can quickly result in a breach of the SGP’s deficit rules. Accordingly, the so-called investment clause in the SGP has had limited use so far.

Heather Roy, Secretary General, Eurodiaconia stated: “The European Commission should encourage more social investments by a more systematic application of the investment clause 2.2 of the Stability and Growth Pact in relation to social investment. The Rome Declaration commits Members States and the European Institutions to upward social convergence. This cannot be realised if economic policies restrict social investment and where economic governance overlooks the long term social and economic returns of social investment. Otherwise leaders’ commitments in Rome stay in Rome and do not reach the people of the European Union.”

Klaus Heeger, Secretary General, CESI added that a “‘Silver Rule’ for public social investment could be introduced to European Economic Governance in order to effectively incentivise Member States to upscale social investment. The rule would allow for specific areas of social investment, which yield demonstrable economic and social returns, to be excluded from the SGP’s current deficit provisions. Public spending in fields such as health care, childcare, housing and education must be seen as an investment in both social and economic convergence and not merely treated as a burden or cost in national budgets.

Jana Hainsworth, President, Social Platform, commented: “The European Commission is increasingly supportive of social investment, stating that it is ‘a prerequisite for a successful and lasting recovery’. At a time of intensive scrutiny of the European project, it’s important that EU Member States follow the advice of the IMF and OECD, both of which have called for an end to austerity, favouring instead investment to promote growth and reduce inequalities.”

Press release as PDF

Press enquiries

Hendrik Meerkamp
Policy Adviser
CESI
+32 (0) 2 282 1870
Meerkamp@cesi.org

Helen Joseph
Communications & Media Officer, Social Platform
+32 (0) 489 77 26 94
helen.joseph@socialplatform.org

Stephan Burger
Policy and Membership Development Officer,
Eurodiaconia
+32 (0) 2 234 3860
Stephan.burger@eurodiaconia.org

European integration stands, again, at a crossroads. All actors must make a particular effort to make sure that the EU does not disintegrate. CESI has been voicing strong calls for a more social Europe for over 25 years.

Likely, time is now or never again for a constructive discussion on the future of European integration, based on the recent White Paper on the future of the EU, the European Commission’s contribution to the Rome Summit of March 25 2017, where the EU will discuss its future orientation.

Without explicitly opting for one of the 5 scenarios laid out in the White Paper[1], scenario 2 (the de-regulation agenda) may trigger a race to the bottom for social rights and employment conditions. Moreover, scenario 4 (the neo-liberal programme), may do away with an EU social agenda altogether, despite the fact that growing interconnections of economic, financial and social affairs require a certain cooperation and integration. Recent popular disappointment with the EU and stagnation in social and employment policies may justify scepticism that scenario 1 (carrying on) can be a long-term solution.

Bearing this is mind, EU leaders, heads of state and government and national politicians in the Member States should close ranks with trade unions all over Europe in their call to put the development of a real social dimension at the heart of a successful future EU: Social and economic fairness and equality has become the most important concern of the EU’s citizens. They will only accept a European integration project which responds to their needs.

Being aware that democratic legitimacy and mandating mainly occurs through traditional democratic channels at national levels, it is also time for all political actors to be ready to put Europe first – not as a goal in itself but in the very interest of the citizens.

Core components of a better social EU for European workers

  • The EU shall become a stronghold against job precariousness and negative impacts of digitalisation. Making use of its legislative competences, the EU shall define ambitious labour rights and standards for new, flexible and mobile forms of employment as well as for the digitalising world of work.
  • A more transparent and easy-to-use coordination of social security systems shall ensure that mobile workers do not lose out on social and employment-related benefits which they have accumulated during their work life.
  • European labour law shall guarantee adequate protection levels for all workers, especially in occupational health and safety and when it comes to new and emerging psychosocial risks at work.
  • The EU shall help guaranteeing minimum wages at national level, defined according to a minimum percentage of national median wages.
  • The EU shall credibly explain why there will be no lower social, labour, consumer and environmental protection standards via new free trade and investment agreements.
  • EU policies shall prioritise work-life balance, based on an equal sharing of domestic responsibilities and high-quality, affordable and accessible care facilities and responding to ageing societies and work-related gender inequalities.
  • The EU shall adjust its economic policy mindset and allows significantly more national investments especially in education and training, health and youth employment, all vital human capital investments that make societies more just and prosperous in the long-term. Likewise, the EU shall encourage Member States to step up investments to make public administrations and public services more accessible, better and affordable, which benefit vulnerable persons, especially women, the young, elderly and migrants. This shall also be financed by means of a serious and successful common fight against tax avoidance and evasion.
  • The right to information and consultation shall apply for all workers, including central administration employees. Effective social dialogue in all sectors shall help driving towards a fair and social Europe. All workers must count, and trade union pluralism must be a living principle of freedom and democracy.
  • The full implementation and enforcement of social and employment legislation must be a reality. Trade unions’ efforts to facilitate shall be fully support by authorities and institutions at all levels.

[1] https://ec.europa.eu/commission/sites/beta-political/files/white_paper_on_the_future_of_europe_en.pdf

CESI Presidium resolution on the future of the EU (PDF)

“Today, we think of the victims and their families – and we think of their lives which have brutally changed, if not ended”, CESI President Romain Wolff stated. “A year ago, innocent civilians were hit as random targets. And in the end we can only pay tribute to them by fiercely defending our fundamental and democratic values of our free society and by standing firmly and united against terrorism and radicalization!”

As a European trade union confederation representing public sector workers across Europe, CESI has for a long time worked on sustainable, holistic approaches solutions to address radicalist threats. CESI’s affiliates, among them teachers, police officers, prison guards and administration officials, were among the first to face new radicalist tendencies within society, and to bring this to the attention of politicians and the public.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger declared: “Anti-radicalisation cannot be reached by reinforced security measures alone. Multi-disciplinary and complementary, soft and hard, preventative and repressive policies are needed to integrate social, educational and security-related components, which can together yield an effective anti-radicalisation recipe.”

Heeger also underlined that the fight against terrorism requires a stronger policy coordination at the European level, as well as more support for all public sector workers in this field.

“Today it is the victims that we commemorate, and this should inspire our continued efforts in anti-radicalisation and counter-terrorism”, CESI President Romain Wolff concluded.

For further information about CESI’s work in this field, see a detailed position paper here.

Picture: © EurActiv 2017

In commemoration of the Brussels bombings today one year ago, CESI President Romain Wolff and Secretary General Klaus Heeger pay tribute to the victims of the attacks and insist on a continued and united fight against radicalisation and terrorism.

Opening the conference were Mr Hans-George Engelke, the Secretray of State at the Ministry of Interior and Mr Hans-Ulrich Benra vice-president of the dbb. A clear message was sent out take on the challenges of psychosocial risks by emphasising the rise of stress levels due to a number of factors and the increase in external violence against central administration employees, both in Germany and in other member states.

Mr Lionel Fulton, the project researcher from the Labour Research Department in the UK, attend the conference to present the guide on psychosocial risks, which he has authored, that will serve as the first European guide especially produced for all the stakeholders within central government.

The guide provides brief reminder of European legislation, overview of the social dialogue agreements that have been concluded on stress and third party violence as well as examples of real collective agreements or individual case studies that have already been implemented in different member states.

The seminar also held three theme-based workshops that focused on better risk assessment and deployment of responsibilities; better use of new technologies, and; better prevent and act against external violence at the work place. On the agenda were also conclusions and potential follow-up actions to the project. The conference was then closed by Mr Christian Moos of the dbb Europe-International Secretary and Mr Christian Maiwald of BMI Germany.

The conclusions of the Berlin conference go hand in hand with the conclusions made at Europe Academy’s Madrid symposium in October 2016 within the “Health and safety at work in the public sector: new challenges” project. In Madrid it quickly became clear that restructuring hit the public sector quite significantly and that public employees suffered higher levels of stress due to it and digitalisation significantly the work organisation. The common conclusions could not be any clearer.

The guide will be translated into 7 languages and will be accompanied by a short video. The project material will be adopted at the Social Dialogue Committee for Central Government Administrations plenary on 15 May in Brussels.

Picture: Hans Ulrich Benra © dbb 2017

Berlin hosted the final project conference on 14-15 March 2017 for the European social partners for central government, which includes CESI as a member of the employee delegation 'TUNED'. Participants were able to discuss the final products of a project on psychosocial risks at work, an European Commission-funded health and safety project.

The Presidium decided that the following Trade Councils and Commissions, made up of representatives from interested member organisations, will be CESI’s internal sectoral fora for policy deliberations and exchange of views during the next four years:

• Commission ‘Employment and Social Affairs’ (SOC)
• Commission ‘Women’s Rights and Gender Equality’ (FEMM)
• Trade Council ‘Central Administration and Finances’ (ACF)
• Trade Council ‘Local and Regional Administration’ (LRA)
• Trade Council ‘Security’ (SEC)
• Trade Council ‘Justice’ (JUS)
• Trade Council ‘Education, Training and Research’ (EDUC)
• Trade Council ‘Health Services’ (SAN)
• Trade Council ‘Post and Telecoms’ (P&T)
• Trade Council ‘Defence’ (DEF)

Internal sectoral Trade Councils and Commissions set up

The Commissions and Trade Councils, which usually meet one to two times per year, will elect their respective President and up to two Vice-Presidents during their constitutive meetings in the course of this year. Meeting dates will be published in CESI’s calendar.

The Presidium also addressed CESI’s take on important current political affairs.

Positioning on current political affairs, including the White Paper on the future of the EU

With regards to the recent White Paper on the future of the EU by the European Commission, the Presidium instructed the General Secretariat to draft a position statement on CESI’s expectations towards the further construction of a social dimension in the EU as a formal input in view of the Rome Summit on March 25 which is expected to see the adoption of a declaration on the future of the EU by the heads of state or government of the Member States.

The Presidium also held exchanges of views as regards the expected package on a European Pillar of Social Rights, the ongoing social and labour market integration of refugees, and the prospects for higher levels of public social investments in Europe to strengthen public administrations and the public services, all among CESI’s long-standing priorities.

The next meeting of the Presidium will take place on June 21 in Brussels.

Picture: CESI Presidium in session © CESI 2017

Today, CESI's new Presidium, elected at the last Congress in December 2016, met for the first time to re-constitute CESI's working structures for the legislative period until 2020. The Presidium also discussed on current political affairs, most notably the White Paper on the future of the EU recently issued by the European Commission.

This CESI@noon/EPC policy dialogue was the final event presenting the findings of a cycle of three previous joint expert workshops of an EPC-CESI cooperation on social investments:

• A workshop on measuring the efficiency of social investments in October 2015
• A seminar in February 2016 on the integration of a concept of social investment in the macro-economic and fiscal governance instruments of the EU

• An expert meeting on indicators for a better integration of the social investment concept and a move towards upwards social convergence in June 2016

Reflections on ‘Social investment: Time for a new narrative for Europe’ were given by Allan Larsson (Special Adviser on the European Pillar of Social Rights, European Commission), Lukas Vesely (Economic adviser to MEP Maria João Rodrigues), Conny Reuter (Secretary General, Solidar) and Gunnar Muent (Director for Innovation and Competitiveness, European Investment Bank). The session was chaired by Lieve Fransen, Senior Adviser at the European Policy Centre and former Director for Social Policy at the European Commission. There was a shared agreement on the continued need of additional public social investments alongside measures to make existing social expenditure more effective and forward-looking.

EPC in-depth study on ways towards more social investments in Europe

A study by the EPC summing up, evaluating and assessing the findings of the workshops was presented by Claire Dhéret, Senior Policy Analyst in charge of social investment at the EPC. The study also follows up on a recently launched advocacy campaign by CESI, Social Platform and Eurodiaconia on the feasibility of additional budgetary flexibility for certain public social investments by Member States without violating the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP).

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger, who also delivered the opening address at the CESI@noon/EPC policy dialogue, said: “Our advocacy campaign is a practical result of our cooperation with the EPC, with the aim to bring discussions from a technical and mostly academic to a political level with clear, broken-down messages. Our cooperation with the EPC is also an outcome of member organisations approaching us and reporting about continued cuts in public services and public administrations, which compromises on their capacity to deliver sufficient and high-quality services to the citizens.”

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger: Enable additional public social investments under the SGP

The CESI@noon/EPC policy dialogue formally closed the cooperation project between the EPC and CESI on social investment; nevertheless CESI and the EPC will continue to drive together the case for more public social investment in Europe. Klaus Heeger added: “Together with our partners we have already had several discussion sessions with experts and decision-makers, including with MEP Maria João Rodrigues and the cabinets of the Commissioners Dombrovskis and Thyssen. We are encouraged to see that the topic is gaining momentum on the political agenda. We hope the European Commission will soon work on a methodology to identify public social expenditure as investments with returns that should be exempted from the SGP’s budgetary deficit calculations.”

For further information: Hendrik Meerkamp, Policy adviser CESI, meerkamp@cesi.org.

Picture: Claire Dhéret, Lieve Fransen and Klaus Heeger © European Policy Centre (EPC) 2017

On last week Friday, March 3, CESI and the European Policy Centre (EPC) held a joint CESI@noon/EPC policy dialogue on 'Putting social investment first: Time for a new narrative for Europe'. The event not only saw the publication of an EPC study on ways towards more social investments in Europe but also continues CESI's engagement for more public social investments in Europe.

On the 12th of February 2017 the third reform of business taxation (RIE III) aimed at a tax relief of about 50% for companies was opposed by referendum by trade unions under the leadership of the organisation ZV Öffentliches Personal (Employees of the Public Sector Of Switzerland), a member of the CESI.

60% of eligible voters voted in favour of the referendum and thus against the third company tax reform (RIE III), which would have resulted in tax losses of CHF 4 billion in Switzerland and, consequently, enormous cuts in the public service and tax increases for the population.

CESI would like to highlight this result is a great success for our member union ZV Öffentliches Personal. It is a clear sign for the Swiss political circles that the electorate does not accept any reductions of the Public Service and that its financing must be guaranteed!

The Swiss Sovereign has clearly said NO to the reduction of the Public Service in Switzerland.

“On March 25, EU leaders will gather in Rome to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Rome Treaties. On this occasion they are expected to adopt a declaration on how they see the future of the EU and the European integration project as a whole. This is a much-needed opportunity to finally commit to a Europe which puts an end to gender-based discrimination. Last year, during extensive consultations on how to build such a Europe, CESI and its Commission on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality positioned themselves clearly vis-à-vis the European institutions and decision-makers.

We expect the European Commission to publish as soon as possible an ambitious European Pillar of Social Rights, which should incorporate an equally ambitious gender equality dimension. Above all, it should put into practice last year’s roadmap of the European Commission on work-life balance.

Encouraging a further equal sharing of domestic responsibilities between men and women and giving new opportunities for single parents to reconcile employment and running a household must be an absolute priority for policy makers. This ranges, for instance, from enhanced maternity leave rules, a better take-up of parental leave by fathers and the introduction of new carers’ leave schemes to more affordable and accessible child and elderly care services, a more equal access for women to managerial positions, less discriminatory promotion practices and further steps to reduce gender pay and pensions gaps.

National and EU leaders have a full agenda to deliver and I count on the Rome summit to deliver a strong pledge.”

Picture: Kirsten Lühmann © dbb 2017

March 8 is International Women’s Day. Celebrated under the auspices of the UN every year since 1977, the day recalls persisting and widespread gender inequalities around the world. This year’s theme is ‘Planet 50-50 by 2030: Women in the changing world of work’ – a UN initiative which asks governments and societies to close gender equality gaps within the next 13 years. Kirsten Lühmann, President of CESI’s Commission on Women’s Rights and Equality, translates this into the European context: For her, EU leaders must finally commit to a Europe of social fairness and full gender equality.

The study assesses the EU’s legislative and policy framework on occupational health and safety, reviews fundamental work-related stress and psychosocial risks, analyses new working patters which contribute to these, and describes good practices on how to tackle new and emerging risks for safety and health at work in four public administrations in Europe:

Spain: ‘Procedure n. 601’ for the determination of a risk assessment methodology, a check-list model for the early recognition of stressors in single work units, covering 250,000 public employees

Belgium: A decision-tree of the Federal Public Service (FPS) in the container fumigation procedure for first line verification officers to perform an administratively correct and safe physical checks of containers for toxic gases and vapours

Germany: A new Mental Stress Checklist of the Federal Agency for Family and Civil Society Tasks (BAFzA) to assess mental stress at the workplace

Italy: A national-level survey by the Italian Workers’ Compensation Authority (INAIL) to investigate the employer’s perception of working conditions, occupational risk exposure and their impact on health for workers

The full study can be accessed here. English, German, French, Spanish and Italian language versions are available.

The study was co-funded by the European Commission under budget heading 04 03 01 05 “Information and training measures for workers’ organisations”, Call VP/2016/002, and produced on behalf of CESI by Lorenzo Maria Pelusi and Michele Tiraboschi, ADAPT, Italy.

Picture: © CESI 2017

The European Sunday Alliance is a large network of national and European-level trade unions, civil society organizations and religious communities committed to raise awareness of the unique value of decent working hours in European societies. It joins forces with committed MEPs and offers a platform for exchange and discussion.

In particular, the Alliance:
• supports the protection of health and safety of workers and their right to a limit on maximum working hours and of a weekly rest period, including, in principle Sunday;

• advocates the respect for collective agreements covering work organisation, which are essential to the social contract of a modern European society;
• speaks up against the growing economic pressure undermining national regulations regarding working conditions
• fosters commitment to safeguard and promote work-free Sunday and decent working hours;
• pushes the EU institutions to safeguard Sunday, in principle, as the common weekly rest day in the EU;
• works to ensure that EU legislation and internal market rules guarantee the central place of health and safety, work- and life-balance and social cohesion by launching relevant initiatives to ensure work-free Sundays and decent working hours; and
• pushes governments of Member States to take their responsibility for improving, implementing and enforcing existing legislation and practices and respecting collective agreements.

More information can be accessed on the website of the European Sunday Alliance and in its Founding Statement.

Klaus Heeger: “Decent working hours a key challenge for workers today”

CESI joined the Alliance as a supporting member and encourages its member organisations to accede to the Alliance as full members.

CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “As highlighted in a main motion adopted at CESI’s last Congress, the EU Working Time Directive should apply as broadly as possible. CESI has for long recognised that decent working hours and adequate work-life balance are a key challenge for workers already today. Digitalisation and home-based work models are spreading along with emerging and unregulated so-called new forms of employment.”

He added: “It is vital that trade unions, social NGOs and churches join in a forceful coalition with decision-makers and politicians to make sure that employment remains regulated and fair for all. I am convinced that the European Sunday Alliance is a network that can make a difference.”

Logo: CESI / European Sunday Alliance Logo © CESI 2017 / © European Sunday Alliance 2017

The White Paper was presented as the European Commission’s contribution to the Rome Summit on March 25, when EU leaders will discuss about the future direction of the EU on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Treaties of Rome. It presents five scenarios on how the EU could evolve by 2015, “depending on how it chooses to respond”:

• Scenario 1: Carrying On. The EU27 focuses on delivering its positive reform agenda in the spirit of the Commission’s New Start for Europe from 2014 and of the Bratislava Declaration agreed by all 27 Member States in 2016

• Scenario 2: Nothing but the Single Market. The EU27 is gradually re-centred on the single market as the 27 Member States are not able to find common ground on an increasing number of policy areas.
• Scenario 3: Those Who Want More Do More. The EU27 proceeds as today but allows willing Member States to do more together in specific areas such as defence, internal security or social matters.
• Scenario 4: Doing Less More Efficiently. The EU27 focuses on delivering more and faster in selected policy areas, while doing less where it is perceived not to have an added value. Attention and limited resources are focused on selected policy areas.
• Scenario 5: Doing Much More Together. Member States decide to share more power, resources and decision-making across the board. Decisions are agreed faster at European level and rapidly enforced.

The European Commission has announced an accompanying special reflection paper on the development of the EU’s social dimension for the next months. CESI Secretary General Klaus Heeger said: “The White Paper and the forthcoming reflection paper on the EU’s social dimension certainly come at a crucial moment, as we await an ambitious European Pillar of Social Rights.”

He added: “Leaders in the EU institutions and the Member States must now reflect on what future they see for the EU, and then act with a clear vision. For Europe’s workers, it is critical that the EU will not be stripped of achievements in employment and social affairs. As stated in one of the main motions adopted at CESI’s last Congress, the growing interconnections of national economic, financial and social policies require a strong signal towards greater integration. Thanks to the EU, workers across Europe enjoy rights and working conditions they would not if it wasn’t for the EU.”

The full text of the White Paper can be accessed on the European Commission’s webpage.

Picutre: Logo ‘Future of Europe’ © European Commission 2017

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