BREITBART - The City of Light is losing its luster with tons of garbage piling up on Paris sidewalks as sanitation workers strike for a ninth day Tuesday. The creeping squalor is the most visible sign of widespread anger over a bill to raise the French retirement age by two years.
The malodorous perfume of rotting food has begun escaping from some rubbish bags and overflowing bins.
Neither the Left Bank palace housing the Senate nor, across town, a street steps from the Elysee Palace, where waste from the presidential residence is apparently being stocked, was spared by the strike.
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I was a Manager of an International Company, and was based in the USA and had some French people and learned their HR laws. The hardest thing in France compared to US in HR is that they have many unions but even the French Management can be in the unions and the company does not have any idea of the people in the company that belongs to the various unions. In France the unions operate more like political factions and the country forces the company to bargain with all unions. The French also work much less hours then the US, have many more holidays, and vacation days. The French also have the right to take these days off when they want with little notice, which makes it hard on the operations of a company.
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