Cologne, Germany - German parents are voicing frustration as
kindergarten teachers stage running strikes for a sixth straight
week, demanding higher pay and increased personnel in pre-school
care.
Germany may have invented the kindergarten - the German word was
taken over into English - and its daycare has been the envy of the
world, but workers say all is not well among the sandpits, poster
paints and toys.
This week, 30,000 kindergarten staff from around Germany skipped
work to attend a noisy demonstration in the western city of Cologne,
protesting at conditions in municipally operated daycare centres.
Like their infant charges, the demonstrators blew whistles and
waved rattles, but trade union leaders called it one of the most
serious fights in the history of German education, aiming to end a
tradition of low pay at kindergartens.
Parents, and the children themselves, are starting to get fed up
with the long-running dispute. Support among parents for the teachers
is falling, and some lawyers have encouraged parents to sue for a
refund of fees.
The kindergartens employ qualified teachers, untrained assistants
and social workers who focus on children's social skills and
countering the harm from poverty and dysfunctional families.
The strikers are demanding better pay and better health care: work
in kindergartens can be unhealthy, and it's not only the germs.
'We know this is disrupting the parents' lives more and more,'
admitted a Cologne teacher, 41. 'But we have to fight this one to the
end. I've been working in a kindergarten for 20 years. Every night
it's the same: I'm exhausted and I can't relax with my own kids.
'If our hours and staffing don't improve, I'll collapse.'
Katja Brieske, who came from the central county of Giessen to
demonstrate in Cologne on Monday, said, 'The pay does not reflect the
fact that we are actually teachers. We are educating the next
generation who are the future of our country.
'Yet we are earning only a minimal wage.'
A teacher from Stuttgart wore a T-shirt to the demonstration
saying, 'I love my work, but I don't do it for love.'
She said she obtained her full-time job three months ago and
receives just 1,300 euros (1,800 dollars) per month after tax, far
less than a German mail deliverer for example would earn.
In the mid-town march, Gabriele Kopec from the central town of
Hattingen, said, 'The daily pressure and the demands of the job have
grown enormously. We need more staff and a healthy working
environment. That would benefit the kiddies as well.'
A 31-year-old teacher added, 'Our job demands a teacher's complete
emotional resources and skills. It's draining.'
Reducing numbers in each teacher's group of children, noise-
proofing and upgrading rooms, and providing modern equipment could
help too.
Banners at the rally declared, 'We're worth more than we're paid,'
'100% trained, 100% work, 0% respect.'
National politicians showed up and voiced support but they do not
administer kindergartens, which are operated within from municipal
budgets. Daycare fees are means-tested, meaning the poor pay little
or nothing for the service.
'Of course it makes us feel more important that Germany's family
minister and the leader of a political party come here and tell us we
are right, but they are just jumping on the bandwagon,' said Dorothea
Schneider, a Frankfurt teacher.
'There's a general election coming up and its promises time.'
Another teacher was even harsher: 'The politicians are just here
to get airtime. Do they think we're stupid or something?'
That explains why there were jeers as Family Affairs Minister
Ursula von der Leyen and Social Democratic Party leader Franz
Müntefering adressed the crowd.
Working parents who count on daycare are meanwhile at the end of
their tether, having used up leave and run out of time with backstops
such as grandparents and aunts. Small children are puzzled and
sometimes distressed by the stoppages.
'Parents feel betrayed,' said Eike Ostendorf-Servissoglou who
heads the Cologne Association of Working Mothers. Unions call the
intermittent stoppages in different regions with almost no warning.
For weeks, working parents have had to be geniuses at organizing
stopgap daycare of their own when kindergartens close suddenly.
They are also furious at having to spend their own money, for
example to pay hourly rates to babysitters.
Public anger has brought pressure on the unions to halt the
strikes and accept what they can get. In one state, Bremen, the union
succumbed Tuesday, declaring a moratorium on strikes till August 5.
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