Saturday, August 28, 2010

Workers set upon over anathema on celebration at work

COPENHAGEN Thu Apr 8, 2010 1:02pm EDT Related News Carlsberg says talked India team-work with InBevThu, Apr 8 2010Starbucks goes upmarket with Seattle exam cafeMon, Apr 5 2010Starbucks goes upmarket with Seattle exam cafeSun, Apr 4 2010FEATURE-Starbucks goes upmarket with Seattle exam cafeSun, Apr 4 2010UPDATE 2-British decider blocks inhabitant rail strikeThu, Apr 1 2010 A Carlsberg splash trademark is seen at a splash hall in executive London Jan 10, 2008. REUTERS/Toby Melville

A Carlsberg splash trademark is seen at a splash hall in executive London Jan 10, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Toby Melville

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - A couple of hundred room workers and drivers at Danish brewer Carlsberg halted work for a second day on Thursday to criticism a association preference to extent splash celebration at work to lunch breaks.

Oddly Enough

The set upon in Denmark followed the company"s Apr 1 preference to deliver new manners for employees on splash celebration at work, pronounced Jens Bekke, orator at the universe no.4 brewer.

"There has been free beer, H2O and soft drinks everywhere," he said. "Yesterday, beers were private from all refrigerators. The usually place you can get a splash in destiny is in the canteen, at lunch."

Bekke pronounced drivers defended an old right to 3 beers per day outward lunch hours, and room workers claimed the same right.

"Because of that, the room staff went on set upon yesterday, with alternative staff distinguished in sympathy," he said.

Bekke pronounced as most as 800 had walked out on Wednesday, with 250 still on set upon on Thursday, and the Confederation of Danish Industry and traffic kinship 3F had concluded to see in to the dispute.

He pronounced there would be no shipments from Copenhagen on Thursday, and delays in the rest of the country, but pronounced he approaching the monetary outcome of the set upon to be minor.

He combined that Carlsberg"s trucks have ethanol thatch so drivers would not be means to splash as well most and drive.

(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom, modifying by Paul Casciato)

Oddly Enough

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