Barnier and his supporters have made much of their one good argument - the chaos scenario.
Unite has claimed restructuring will see about 50 workers lose £8,000 a year, and about 20 lose £2,000 a year.Mr Biset said he stood to lose £2,000 a year, but the workers facing an £8,000 cut would lose £650 a month, adding: "They could potentially become homeless."
The council has said, "No worker will lose the sums Unite are claiming."The binman, who is spending his days on the picket line where members of the public are dropping off food for strikers, said: "We're just trying to retain the little that we've got."The workers are getting paid by the union while the action is ongoing, he said, adding: "If it wasn't for the union, a lot of us would have been in a lot of trouble, especially those that have got mortgages to pay for and kids."
A council statement said there were now about 40 workers whose wages are impacted by changes to the service.It said they had been offered alternatives that included "highly valuable LGV driver training for career progression and pay, and other roles in the council equivalent to their former roles".
According to the authority, the planned changes are in line with national practice, because Birmingham's current arrangement is not "industry standard", and the restructure is crucial to the council's need to become financially sustainable.
The council said 17 people could lose the maximum amount of just over £6,000 a year, but would have pay protection for six months.The killing sparked a debate in Albania among parents, psychologists and educational institutions about the impact of social networks on young people.
"In China, TikTok promotes how students can take courses, how to protect nature, how to keep traditions, but on the TikTok outside China we see only scum and mud. Why do we need this?", Rama said.TikTok is already banned in India, which was one of the app's largest markets before it was outlawed in June 2020. It is also blocked in Iran, Nepal, Afghanistan and Somalia.
TikTok is also fighting against a law passed by the US Congress which would ban the app from 19 January unless it is sold by ByteDance - its Chinese parent company.as to why it should not be banned or sold with a hearing scheduled for 10 January - just days before the 19 January deadline imposed by Congress.