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Trying Their Luck in Free Market Are Germany's Fabled Chimney Sweeps

by Rukmani Krishna on Jan 2 2013 11:09 PM

 Trying Their Luck in The Free Market Are Germany
Norbert Skrobek is a rosy-cheeked German in a brass-buttoned jacket and black top hat. The chimney sweep is the picture of good cheer on a blustery winter morning on a rooftop in Berlin.
But the new year will be bringing big changes to his tradition-steeped trade, as Germany overhauls the market after years of resistance against pressure from Brussels.

Germany has since 1935 maintained a rigid monopoly of sorts for the snappily attired men of the order -- and the vast majority are still male -- when the Nazi regime set up a national network of district "master" chimney sweeps.

They will from January 1 face competition from roving entrepreneurs who can negotiate their own prices.

"It's not all bad -- clients will be able to decide who they want as a chimney sweep, and we for the first time will also have a choice," said Skrobek, 52, who also employs his adult son and two apprentices.

"Clients who haven't paid for two years or three -- now I can say I don't need to work there anymore. That's a plus."

The change in policy brings Germany in line with an EU directive liberalising the services sector.

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Germany's around 8,000 chimney sweeps are hired not only to climb roofs and scrub away soot with their coiled-wire brushes, but also to inspect heating systems for fire hazards and poisonous carbon monoxide leaks.

They also monitor pollution levels and energy efficiency.

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Under the new rules, chimney cleaning and measuring of gas emissions can be carried out by licenced free contractors.

Hopes that competition will drive down prices, however, look dubious because contractors will likely have to travel greater distances to the job and advertise their services to stand out from the crowd, boosting their expenses.

Anticipating the changes, Skrobek moved his offices to a prominent spot in the lively Kreuzberg district and decorated his shop window with images of the iconic chimney sweep.

"We didn't have to make publicity for ourselves before -- our status is still like a civil servant's," he said.

Skrobek has been in the business since 1977, when he was just 17.

"It was always my dream job -- even as a boy in school I thought it was pretty romantic" working above the treetops with breathtaking views over the city, he said.

A friendly man with a distinct twinkle in his eye, he said he loved delighting children in his spiffing uniform and handing out chimney sweep soft toys in a time-honoured custom.

Sweeps are traditionally thought to bring good luck, in large part because before their trade was widespread in Europe, thousands died every year in house fires attributed to faulty chimneys, fireplaces or heating ovens.

The districts were established under the Third Reich and historical records show the Nazis pressured chimney sweeps to use their unique access to homes to spy on fellow Germans.

The practice continued in communist East Germany but Skrobek insists chimney sweeps are now trusted members of the community.

According to the Federal Association of Master Chimney Sweeps, Germany has the fewest number of injuries due to fire or carbon monoxide poisoning in the EU. It said its members uncover 1.5 million hazardous defects per year.

They also carry out energy checks to determine heat loss from flue gas, a component in government plans to reduce CO2 emissions.

Skrobek said many sweeps took a kind of holistic approach and addressed whatever problems they might come across under the flat rate they received.

With the smashing of the monopoly, he said, homeowners will have to be better informed about what needs to be done and what it should cost.

In addition, he warned, private companies will frequently be affiliated with specific manufacturers and thus less straightforward in advising clients.

"I hope we don't come under so much pressure that we lose our neutrality because that's our most valuable asset -- people trust us," he said.

Skrobek currently pulls down 150,000 euros ($198,000) per year for his district duties and pays his employees' wages and benefits out of that sum.

The market already opened a crack in 2009, when Germany was forced to allow in sweeps from other EU countries. But low statutory prices made the move unappealing to most foreign firms.

In addition, the wages of district chimney sweeps are generally set down in regional rates so that little flexibility is possible, despite complaints by consumer advocates.

"The chimney sweeps have no say in the fees for their statutory work because there is an official price list," the guild master for Berlin, Heiko Kirmis, explained.

"For these jobs, chimney sweeps will try to maintain the old prices for as long as possible."

Source-AFP


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