
Belgium’s Flanders region faces widespread bus and tram disruption this week after the General Federation of Public Services confirmed rolling strike action at the state-owned operator De Lijn. According to security-risk firm SafeAbroad, drivers and depot staff will down tools by province—Flemish Brabant on 7 April, Limburg on 8 April, Antwerp on 9 April, and East & West Flanders on 10 April. The walkout is a direct response to the federal government’s plan to cut a further €5.5 million this year and trim De Lijn’s 2026 operating budget by €30 million. The staggered stoppages will significantly thin peak-hour frequencies on key commuter corridors into Brussels and the ports of Antwerp and Zeebrugge. Multinationals with shift crews or cross-border commuters should anticipate longer journey times and higher reliance on private vehicles, which could in turn trigger parking shortages around industrial parks.
For employees and business travelers who may need to renew residence cards, secure multi-country Schengen visas, or arrange last-minute travel documents while public transport is in flux, VisaHQ can handle the paperwork end-to-end online. The platform’s Belgium portal (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/) offers expedited processing, real-time tracking, and courier pickup—freeing companies from having to dispatch staff across disrupted networks to consulates or municipal offices.
Employers are being advised to activate home-working contingencies and communicate alternative travel options—such as NMBS/SNCB rail or car-sharing platforms—to mobile staff. Logistics operators should build at least a half-day margin into “just-in-time” deliveries that depend on last-mile urban shuttles. Past transport strikes in Flanders have occasionally attracted solidarity demonstrations at depots; while these gatherings are usually peaceful, travel-risk managers should monitor local media for flash-protest locations and advise travellers to avoid large crowd concentrations. The labour dispute highlights growing pressure on regional transport budgets at a time when Belgium is also investing heavily in the European Union’s new digital border systems. Prolonged industrial action could accelerate private-sector adoption of flexible work models, potentially reshaping commuter flows long after the strike ends.
For employees and business travelers who may need to renew residence cards, secure multi-country Schengen visas, or arrange last-minute travel documents while public transport is in flux, VisaHQ can handle the paperwork end-to-end online. The platform’s Belgium portal (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/) offers expedited processing, real-time tracking, and courier pickup—freeing companies from having to dispatch staff across disrupted networks to consulates or municipal offices.
Employers are being advised to activate home-working contingencies and communicate alternative travel options—such as NMBS/SNCB rail or car-sharing platforms—to mobile staff. Logistics operators should build at least a half-day margin into “just-in-time” deliveries that depend on last-mile urban shuttles. Past transport strikes in Flanders have occasionally attracted solidarity demonstrations at depots; while these gatherings are usually peaceful, travel-risk managers should monitor local media for flash-protest locations and advise travellers to avoid large crowd concentrations. The labour dispute highlights growing pressure on regional transport budgets at a time when Belgium is also investing heavily in the European Union’s new digital border systems. Prolonged industrial action could accelerate private-sector adoption of flexible work models, potentially reshaping commuter flows long after the strike ends.