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REDITER project Five national seminars Overall approach 20th December 2010. 1. General framework. Seminars held from mid-May 2010 (Spain) to the end of November (UK) Almost all the seminars were two or 1,5 days long but the UK one (lunch to lunch meeting to attract more participants)
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REDITER projectFive national seminarsOverall approach20th December 2010
1. General framework Seminars held from mid-May 2010 (Spain) to the end of November (UK) Almost all the seminars were two or 1,5 days long but the UK one (lunch to lunch meeting to attract more participants) Informations about seminars were published on each partner website in due time Publication of short reviews about participants, contents and results of each national seminar is still to be done (Frédéric Turlan, from january 2011 to april 2011) .
2. Participants • Overall, about 160 people (EWC delegates, unionists and managers) attended the seminars. In all the seminars, there was a mix between national and foreign participants (more or less, depending on the seminar) • In terms of sectors, all seminars but the German one, had a multisectoral approach. The German seminar was focused on the insurance sector. In the other seminars, most of the participants came from sectors covered by UNI EUROPA (Banks, insurance, cleaning, private security, commerce, telecommunication, media, etc.) but some of them (depending on the national seminar considered) also came from the industry (especially metalworking, energy, chemicals, automotive, etc.) • Most of the employee delegates were members of EWCs but some national trade union officials also attended the seminars due to the support provided by some national unions to the project (CARTEL ALFA, UNITE, UGT, VER.DI, CFDT). All EWC members were unionised • HR managers or employer representatives more or less participated in all the seminars. Most of them made presentations and were involved in discussions with employee delegates
3. Contents / Methods • All seminars dealt with issues related to the recast directive and its national transposition measures from a legal perspective. Presentations and discussions about it involved both project partners (Romania, Germany, France) and external experts from the EC (Evelyne Pichot in Spain and Germany), the European Trade union movement (ETUI in the UK) or labour lawyers (France) • All national unions supporting the project contributed to the seminars design. In one case, in Germany, UNI EUROPA Finance and VER.DI were the co organisers of the seminar. • Roughly speaking, restructuring issues as well as quality of information provided to EWCs, in link with globalization of companies, were major discussion topics in all the seminars. However, links between EWC members and employees as well as confidentiality were also significant issues for participants. • Almost all the seminars planned interactive activities (working groups, practical exercises), giving room for in depth exchanges of experiences between attendants. • In some countries (especially France and Romania) HR managers were also involved in such activities
4. Future prospects ? • General observations : Beyond the necessary training of EWC delegates on legal or technical aspects ,it seems clear that major problems EWC delegates face are related to the precise definition of their role : What is the specific mandate of EWC representatives? What is their duty and responsibility towards the trade union (in the case the union appoints them) and the workers (in their establishment, the undertaking they belong to, their country…) ? What is their work agenda, action programme ? What are their priorities? Are they planned, agreed with their trade unions, with the workers they represent? Such questions may be a basis for possible future projects. • Open questions • Should we work on future EU projects related to EWC training ? Which kind of projects ? • Would UNI EUROPA support some future projects ? Which kinds of projects ?