For the first time in ten days, trash cans were collected in the area visited by our team. Even though they wear City of Paris jackets, these people work for a private company, as they explain in the TF1 report at the beginning of this article. They intervene instead of the municipal garbage collectors who are still on strike. A few more streets we meet the garbage collectors of the city of Paris. They’re on strike, but they’ve been requisitioned.
difference in status
In Paris, garbage collectors from private companies and the municipality divide the 20 arrondissements equally. They do exactly the same job behind trucks. The difference lies in their statutes, as highlighted in the report of the regional Accounts Chamber. Starting from their working hours: 30 hours a week for municipal employees, 35 hours for the rest.
- VIDEO – From rue Poubelle to the very chic 8th: our photos of Paris under 7000 tons of garbage
For Bertrand Vincent, a trade unionist, there is nothing abnormal, because, in his opinion, civil servants would be more efficient. In terms of wages, including night bonuses and weekend bonuses, a municipal waste collector can earn an average of €2,000 gross per month, compared to €1,850 for a private worker.
All
TF1 news
-
1Ramadan 2023: Here is the start date and Eid date
-
2World Cup 2023: “Blue” as never the favorites of “their” World Cup
-
3VIDEO – “There is gas, I’m not afraid to get burned”: the story of the ambush that wounded 7 gendarmes in Allier
-
4REPORT – The ability to self-heal: the secrets of Roman concrete revealed by scientists
-
5LIVE – Pension reform: 4,000 demonstrators in Paris, 81 arrested
-
6A six-year-old French boy was attacked by a lemon shark in the Seychelles.
-
7LIVE – Six Nations Tournament: English winners (24-16), Irish crowned, France 2nd
-
8VIDEO – Help at home: the social center has found a recipe for retaining its employees
-
9Adulthood, deprivation, special regimes… What does the final version of the pension reform contain?
-
10Pension reform: CGT closes France’s largest refinery
-
1LIVE – Pension reform: Jean-Luc Mélenchon on the LCI Grand Jury
-
2VIDEO – Strategies against pension reform: between calm marches and sharp actions
-
3LIVE – Ukrainian authorities in Mariupol criticized the visit of “international criminal” Putin
-
4Road safety: why precinct speed cameras are a thing of the past
-
5VIDEO – Drought: a religious procession organized to ask for the return of the rain… which ended up falling (little)
-
6REPORT – Erosion and rising water levels: how Cyberville anticipates the inevitable
-
7Bac 2023: teachers strike, high school lockdown… what riots?
-
8Pension reform: office of Eric Ciotti smashed in Nice
-
9VIDEO – Energy: why are our gas reserves at a minimum?
-
10“The teacher told us that Russians are good and Ukrainians are bad”: children deported by Moscow testify
-
1Credit Suisse borrows €50.7bn after nightmare day to ‘strengthen’
-
2TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne could increase his salary by 10%.
-
3Fall of the Silicon Valley bank, the largest bank failure in the US since 2008.
-
4In the face of inflation, wages in the eurozone will rise “very strongly” in 2023.
-
5France is redeploying part of its military-industrial production
-
6Public debt: Accounts Chamber calls for “recovery”
-
7Inflation: Are supermarkets and manufacturers really playing this game?
-
8Bank failures in the US: “There is no reason for this to spread to Europe”
-
9Fuel shortage: which refineries are blocked by the strike?
-
10In 2030, pension funds will receive almost 18 billion euros thanks to the reform
Source: TF1