Union of Locomotive Drivers explained

The Union of Locomotive Drivers (Finnish: Veturimiesten liitto, VML) was a trade union representing train drivers in Finland.

The union was founded in 1897 as the Finnish Drivers' and Stokers' Union, by drivers based in Lahti, Riihimäki, Hyvinkää, Hankoniemi, Helsinki, Toijala, Turku and Vyborg. The union affiliated to the Finnish Federation of Trade Unions (SAK) in 1943, and after the war also became a founding constituent of the Federation of Civil Servants (VY). It resigned from the SAK in 1960, disillusioned by its communist leadership.[1]

In 1969, the VY was reformed as the Joint Organisation of State Employees (VTY), and through it, the VML joined the SAK's successor, the Central Organisation of Finnish Trade Unions. The VTY declined in size as the Finnish government put through a programme of privatisation, and in 1995, the VML resigned from it, disillusioned by its reduced influence. The VML instead affiliated directly to the SAK.

In 2018, the VML merged with the Railway Officers' Union, to form the Railway Union.[2]

Presidents

1920: Heikki A. Pyhäluoto

1943: Kauko A. Lehtonen

1951: Gösta Widing

1965: Pekka Oivio

1974: Lasse Syrjänen

1984: Heikki Nurmi

1993: Markku Hannola

2001: Risto Elonen

2017: Tero Palomäki

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hakoköngäs . Eemeli . Yhteistyö, neuvottelu ja oma tahto . 2018 . Grano Helsinki . Helsinki . 978-952-94-1002-6 . 25 March 2020.
  2. Web site: The Union for Railways is the new SAK trade union . SAK . 18 March 2020.