Source
Fellow Clerks!
The Reichstag forwarded the legislative bill that
sets the length of your work day at 14
hours to a commission. This
commission responded with recommendations that actually
represent
an improvement of the bill drafted by the government. These
recommendations had
hardly been made public when the employers’
syndicates responded with a storm of protest.
Their freedom to
exploit you had been slightly curtailed. These recommendations would
allow
you, irrespective of the mood of your bosses, to know when
your work day is over, [to know]
when you can devote yourselves to
your families, to your own well-being, and to your education.
The
government is threatening to give way to this outcry, this storm of
protest.
The protesting employers want to leave everything open to
a freely negotiated agreement! No
legal boundaries! We have only
scorn and contempt for this “freely negotiated agreement”!
What
does it mean to our employers, they, who calmly ignore both laws and
rights!
A law prohibiting work on Sundays has existed for years. As
feeble as it is, we
welcomed this law as a first step towards
improving our situation. But what has happened to it?
Today, after
scarcely ten years, your employers no longer pay attention to this
injunction; they
scorn the law and deceive labor
inspectors.
And why?
Because those rulings were only half
measures, and your work-free Sundays were
only partially
protected.
Fellow colleagues! There is the saying, “necessity
teaches us to pray,” but “necessity
also teaches us to
fight!”
Only a uniform prohibition of work on Sundays can serve us!
Only a shortening of
our work day can provide us with a humane
existence!
For this reason, fellow colleagues, take advantage of
every opportunity to demonstrate
for your rights. Show your
legislators your wishes.
Everyone come and attend:
The mass
public meeting of clerks
on Wednesday, September 20, at 8:30 in the
evening
at the Berlin Ressource, Kommandentenstrasse
57
Agenda
1) Lecture by the Reichstag delegate Pfannkuch on
“The Law Governing Closing Time.”
2) Lecture by our colleague
August Hintze: “The Law Prohibiting Work on Sundays
under
Consideration by the City Council”
3)
Discussion
Albert Kohn
Ombudsman of the Berlin Clerks
Association
Schliemannstrasse 11, II.
Source: bpk-Bildagentur, image number 20030056. For rights inquiries, please contact Art Resource at requests@artres.com (North America) or bpk-Bildagentur at kontakt@bpk-bildagentur.de (for all other countries).