Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Tram station at Den Haag Central Station empty as HTM workers strike, 2 June 2022
Tram station at Den Haag Central Station empty as HTM workers strike, 2 June 2022 - Credit: Ramon van Flymen / ANP - License: All Rights Reserved
Business
The Hague
HTM
public transport
strike
CNV
FNV
traffic
ANWB
Thursday, 2 June 2022 - 08:32

Share this article:

No buses, trams in The Hague as public transit workers strike

Correction at 12:00 - The RandstadRail to and from Rotterdam is running, the one to and from Zoetermeer is not.

Many thousands of commuters, school pupils, and other people will have to find different ways to get to their destination in The Hague and the surrounding area on Thursday. The employees of public transit company HTM are on strike all day. No buses and no trams are running on Thursday. The RandstadRail to and from Zoetermeer will also remain in the depot throughout the day. The RandstadRail to and from Rotterdam is running.

Trade unions FNV and CNV organized the strike. They demand a wage increase of 5 percent and retention of purchasing power for HTM employees. The carrier doesn't want to go that far. The company says it is still feeling the financial blow of the coronavirus crisis when there were far fewer bus and tram travelers because people worked from home. Just before the unions announced the strike, HTM did say it would unilaterally raise wages by 3.1 percent this year.

The Hague public transit company employs over 2,000 people and transports approximately 425,000 travelers every day on 13 tram lines and ten bus lines. Besides The Hague, HTM is also responsible for public transport in surrounding places like Delft, Zoetermeer, Rijswijk, Nootdorp, Westland, Leidschendam, and Voorburg. The company said it would lose about a quarter of a million euros if all trams and buses were halted for a day.

NS trains are running to and from The Hague as usual. The regional buses by EBS are also on schedule. EBS employees held a strike on Wednesday.

Traffic was already building up around The Hague with the strike underway. A jam caused 10 minutes of extra travel time on the eastbound N211 heading towards Delft, and the A4 was backed up from that point going north to the A12, according to the ANWB. There was the equivalent of 22 kilometers of heavier jams further north on the A4 in both directions near Leidschendam.

Traffic jams were also developing at the start of the eastbound A12 along the Malieveld and on the N44 towards Wassenaar, where people could expect to sit in stop-and-go traffic for about ten minutes.

Reporting by ANP and NL Times

More like this

Image
Bicycle signs on open train door.
Train strike: Almost abandoned train stations as commuters take the car, stay home
Image
A notice warning passengers not to board a train at Amsterdam Centraal Station. 5 September 2024
ProRail strike: No trains running in Limburg, Noord-Brabant; National strike looming
Image
Metro Amsterdam Noord/Zuidlijn
Public transport strike: No metros, buses, trams in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague
Image
A labor action by trade union CNV
Strikes are coming: Trade unions after meeting with gov't on social assistance cuts
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Military reservist arrested in Netherlands over suspected firearms trafficking
  • GPS collars test “virtual fences” for cows in Netherlands, raising welfare questions
  • Dutch gambling regulator expects rise in betting during World Cup
  • Dutch gamers file €220 million claim against Valve, operator of game platform Steam
  • Minister scraps proposal for extensive screening of foreign researchers

Top stories

  • Four killed including three kids after car hits school camp cyclists in Zeeland; 3 hurt
  • Dutch worried about crumbling international legal order, Netherlands' resilience
  • Dutch State considering buying shares in shipbuilder Damen
  • Number of international students at Dutch universities falls for first time in 20 years
  • Backpacks on flagpoles: 182,000 secondary school students find out if they're graduating

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content