HMR deal a win for workers
18 May 1998 00:00 [Source: ICB]
The five-year pact between Hoechst Marion Roussel (HMR)
Deutschland and employee representatives at the Frankfurt R&D
site is a victory for the workforce, works council president Arnold
Weber has said.
The agreement, in effect since 1 May, 'would not have happened
without employee protests over plans to cut 600 jobs', Weber
said.
HMR's German chief executive officer, Heinz-Werner Meier,
conceded that management had realised that cutting 600 jobs in
Frankfurt 'did not make sense' and that the annual cost reduction
target of DM85m ($47.17m) could be met 'in other ways'.
While Weber remarked that HMR Germany has shown more sensitivity
to employee concerns than global management, Ralf Sikorski of the
chemical union IG BCE suggested that the pact, scheduled to run to
the end 2002, could serve as a model for the rest of the group.
After 290 jobs are cut through natural wastage or transfers
within the company, there are to be no compulsory redundancies.
Exceptions can be made in financial emergencies, but Meier said
this is unlikely to happen, barring major changes in the structure
of the company.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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