Trade Associations - Gov Garbage Strike in Greece Comes to an End by GTP editing team 29 June 2017 written by GTP editing team 29 June 2017 0 comments Share 0FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 18 POE-OTA, the union representing municipal sanitation collectors in Greece, on Thursday called off a garbage strike that had lasted nearly two weeks and left mounds of trash on city streets throughout the country. The nationwide garbage strike was launched last week by POE-OTA over a job dispute with the Greek government involving the rehiring of contract workers whose employment status has expired. Unionists had met with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Tuesday but were unsatisfied by his proposals, resulting to the garbage strike continuing. On Thursday, some 1,000 garbage collectors marched through central Athens and demanded an end to short-term labor contracts. Following the march, unionists decided to end the strike and hold meetings across Greece to evaluate proposals regarding further decisions on how to react to the government’s decisions on contract workers. The strike was coinciding with a heat wave in Greece and authorities warned that the industrial action was endangering public health and also damaging the country’s image. Before the strike ended on Thursday, Tourism Minister Elena Kountoura had said that tourism would suffer “bad consequences” if the strike continued. “All of this is at the expense of tourism, which is on a growth course with 90 percent of Greece booked for the summer. We have no cancellations, but if this continues we will have bad consequences,” she said during a radio interview. “With these temperatures the health issue is most important… All foreign media are reporting that there is a huge garbage problem in Greece, which is a great defamation,” she had said. According to reports, it will take up to five days of garbage collection for the situation to normalize. Follow GTP Headlines on Google News to keep up to date with all the latest on tourism and travel in Greece. Share 0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail GTP editing team This is the team byline for GTP. The copyrights for these articles are owned by GTP. They may not be redistributed without the permission of the owner. previous post Astypalea Makes Headlines in German, Austrian Media next post ATOR: Russian Tourists Prefer Crete, Rhodes, Corfu You may also like Greece’s Hotel Market Sees Major Investments Over Four Months 5 February 2025 Greek Tourism Ministry Monitors Santorini Situation as Seismic Activity Continues 5 February 2025 Global Air Passenger Demand Reaches Record High in 2024, IATA Reports 5 February 2025 Greek PM Reassures Public About Santorini’s Ongoing Seismic Activity 5 February 2025 Milos: Ministry Suspends 5-star Hotel Construction Near Sarakiniko Beach 5 February 2025 ELIME and HELMEPA Join Forces for Safer, More Sustainable Greek Ports 5 February 2025 Leave a Comment Cancel Reply Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ