-
French heat-reflecting paint firm in financial difficulty
Cool Roof enters administration while efforts are under way to secure a new investor
-
UK DWP considers digital life certificates to simplify pension checks in France
Many readers report problems with the current system
-
France’s main farming union threatens protests over fuel aid
‘We’ve no choice but to remobilise’ unless government increases support, says union head
Ryanair in court over work rights
Unions say workers based at Marseille are on Irish employment contracts and not paying French social charges
RYANAIR is being sued in a French court over claims that staff at its Marseille base are illegally working on Irish employment contracts.
The low-cost airline is accused by two pilots' unions of ignoring a government decree introduced in November 2006 requiring foreign airlines with staff based in France to comply with French employment law.
The unions say Ryanair is ignoring the code du travail and not paying French social charges.
Rival Easyjet faces a fine of €225,000 for a similar practice after it emerged that 170 staff working at Orly airport in Paris in 2006 were on British contracts.
