Published
Update
Video length: 2 min.
Article written by
The strike disrupted transport but also schools on Tuesday, March 7. The Ministry of National Education counted more than 35% of strikers in the primary. Workers and travelers had to organize themselves. How will they go about it if the movement were to last?
Eyes glued to their phones, suitcases on the ground, travelers wait in Nice (Alpes-Maritimes) for traffic forecasts to get to work on Wednesday March 8. On the line between Marseille (Bouches-du-Rhône) and Nice, only one in three trains should run. In Paris too, users organize themselves day by day. Some are quite understanding. “What else to do, except accept and manage?”relativizes a man.
“In the long term, this will not be possible”
In Clamart (Hauts-de-Seine), in front of the gates of a nursery school, parents find their children after a day of strike, without knowing if the leisure center will be operational the next day. “In the short term we can make sure to organize ourselves well at the work level, but in the long term, it will not be possible”, laments a mother. In the nearby park, a mother watches her children from a bench, while teleworking. Like her, parents will have to find day-to-day solutions.