site.btaTrade Unions Want Higher Pay for Night Work
107 ECONOMY - TRADE UNIONS - NIGHT WORK PAY - CAMPAIGN
 
 Trade Unions Want Higher 
 Pay for Night Work, Limiting of 
 Accumulated Calculation of Working Time
 
 
 Sofia, October 8 (BTA) - The industrial federations of the Podkrepa  Confederation of Labour and the Confederation of Independent Trade  Unions in Bulgaria (CITUB) are launching a national campaign entitled  "Let's Defend Our Work Together!". The campaign was presented by  Podkrepa President Dimiter Manolov and CITUB President Plamen Dimitrov  at a joint news conference here on Tuesday.
 
 The campaign's start launches a national petition for a significant  increase of the pay for night time work, which trade unions want to see  turned into a function of the minimum wage for the country, so that the  additional remuneration for night time work would have an objective unit  of measurement which will grow over the years. The current value of the  additional remuneration for night time work of 0.25 leva per hour was  introduced back in 2007.
 
 Podkrepa and CITUB also insist that the accumulated calculation of the  working time should be applied only to production facilities with a  constant technological regime of work, and should be limited by the  employer's decision to a maximum of four months, rather than the current  six months. This demand has been set in the International Labour  Organization convention on working time that Bulgaria has ratified and,  according to the trade unions, the non-observation of the convention has  led to a working week of 56 hours instead of up to 48 hours.
 
 The petition launched by the trade unions is also for guaranteeing the  actual reporting and payment of overtime work with an accumulated  calculation of the working time, and for increasing this pay by 75 per  cent on weekends and by 100 per cent on official holidays. 
 
 The trade unions hope to gather around 100,000 signatures by Christmas.
 
 Manolov cited data of the European Foundation for the Improvement of  Living and Working Conditions showing that Bulgaria is fifth in the EU  for the employees' working hours. 
 
 Dimitrov said that over 50 per cent of the violations established in all  sectors and sanctioned by the General Labour Inspectorate Executive  Agency, are directly or indirectly linked to violations of the working  hours. Most often, the reasons lie in vicious practices in the  application of the accumulated calculation of working time, shifts and  unjust payment of overtime work.  
 
 According to Podkrepa, a large number of studies into the impact of  night time work show it increases the risk of cardiovascular diseases  and of lung and bladder cancer by 40 per cent, of breast cancer by 30  per cent, and of prostate cancer three-fold. Night time workers also  face a greater risk of depression, diabetes, and metabolic problems. 
 
 The trade unions hope that their campaign will be supported with  legislative actions by the Government. If left unheard, Podkrepa and  CITUB are ready to stage ralliers and even protests, Manolov and  Dimitrov said.
 
 RY/DS
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