News

Home

Join us

Darling's prescription... It's spend, spend, spend on the banks... but cuts, cuts, cuts for the NHS

Manchester: No redundancies at IMI!

Campaigning to save post offices

'We're not taking these job cuts'

U-turn over post office card account

Drop the witch-hunt in Unison fight to Defend trade union democracy

Student democracy under attack

'Students in the Red' day of action

Prescott: the class system and me

Striking against low pay

Worlds apart... in 'them and us' society

Postal workers march for their jobs

Defeat NUS' undemocratic plans

'Why not save our jobs?'

NHS props up the private profiteers

Search...

Policies...

Marxism...

 

Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/480/2216

Print this articlePrint this article

email to friendemail to friend

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Home   |   The Socialist 29 March 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Council workers fight pay cut scandal

Defend public services

TUC rally in Westminster against cuts in public spending, photo Paul Mattsson

TUC rally in Westminster against cuts in public spending, photo Paul Mattsson

COUNCIL WORKERS across the country are facing yet another onslaught of attacks on jobs, services, pay and conditions. Budget proposals are promoting a continuation of Blair's 'death by a thousand cuts' policy for council services.

Onay Kasab, branch secretary Greenwich UNISON, personal capacity

Now, in a savage fresh onslaught, local councils are threatening to impose new contracts with less pay and inferior conditions.

This follows the single status 'agreement' recommended to trade union members and signed by the union leaders in 1997. Then, Socialist Party members in UNISON warned that without funding, the agreement would be used by the employers to attack pay and conditions.

Now the chickens have truly come home to roost. In council after council, workers are being told to accept pay cuts as no other choice exists.

TUC rally in Westminster against cuts in public spending, photo Paul Mattsson

TUC rally in Westminster against cuts in public spending, photo Paul Mattsson

But another choice does exist. Workers are prepared to fight back and are preparing to take the employers on.

In Greenwich, over 600 workers attended a packed UNISON meeting to hear about the proposals. These include pay cuts of up to £130 per week for some manual workers. Bonus payments, allowances, unsocial hours payments and overtime rates all face the chop.

The council says it no longer recognises nine to five, Monday to Friday working as normal. It now expects workers to work evenings and weekends with little or no compensation. It wants to introduce a nine-day fortnight and four-day week, as well as cuts to leave and car allowances.

Laughably the council claims the cut to car allowances is because of its commitment to the 'green agenda'!

This ignores the fact that all councillors in Greenwich voted last year to award themselves free car parking passes. To paraphrase an old Martini ad, this allows them to park "any time, any place, any where".

The hypocrisy does not stop there however. Low-paid school workers, who receive a 'retainer' payment, face losing six weeks pay when this is removed.

The chief executive meanwhile received a £13,000 pay rise last year, taking her wages up to £178,000 a year. The heads of finance and childrens' services both received £20,000 pay rises, taking them up to £138,000.

In a move that emulates the city fat cats, these big earners are not shy in demanding cuts to council workers' pay and conditions.

The mass meeting in Greenwich unanimously rejected the demands of these hypocrites and agreed a campaign of action.

Now the council, a Labour council, are threatening to conduct their own ballot of the workforce as part of a move to impose the proposals. In a startling demonstration of arrogance they have said that if the ballot does not go their way, they will impose new contracts regardless! So democracy is fine as long as you get your own way.

Workers in Greenwich have agreed to fight, as have workers across the country.

We also agreed that not a penny more should go from the unions to this vicious anti-working class, pro-big business Labour Party, which attacks public service workers day in, day out.


Campaign for a New Workers' Party - Conference

We need a party for the millions, not the millionaires!

Saturday 12 May 12-5pm

University College London

To register or find out more, visit www.cnwp.org.uk


Also in The Socialist 29 March 2007:

Council workers fight pay cut scandal

The 'Single Status' scandal

Council unions reject 2% pay offer

Fighting cuts and privatisation

Stop council's sell-off plans


Socialist Party NHS campaign

PUSH for mass demo


What we think

A simple conclusion from a 'simplification' budget


Socialist Party news and analysis

Tenants defeat housing sell-off

Universities fail to accept state school pupils

Suffolk: Save our schools

London Olympics: Big business bonanza - and we pay

Fast News


Socialist Party election campaign

For the millions, not the millionaires


Socialist Party feature

Hands off our postal service!

Edinburgh postal workers fight back

Workers' fightback to defend postal services


Northern Ireland agreement

Will the new agreement last?

We Won't Pay anti-water charges demo 31 March


International socialist news and analysis

Italy: What future for Prc?

Turkish state attacks Kurdish protestors


Socialist Party workplace news

Airbus walkout - joint action needed across Europe

Reject regional pay

Determined campaigners win reprieve

Manchester Unity Stewards and activists group

Hants library workers fight cuts

Sacked electricians win tribunal ruling

Ealing workers fight pay cuts


 

Home   |   The Socialist 29 March 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Council:

Defend the Four meeting pledges to fight witch-hunt

Stroud post office saved!

Lewisham housing: Arguments against privatisation win

Scotland: Victory for the Vale of Leven Four

Victory over Tory school closure plan

Pay:

Rover's ex-workers wage cut scandal

Activists discuss how to reclaim Unison

Alistair Darling's pre Budget Report: Pain now, pay later

Council workers:

Council workers striking back

Birmingham city council: Workers boo 'lead balloon' councillors

Greenwich:

Drop the witch-hunt in Unison fight to Defend trade union democracy

Turkish dockers fight workplace 'massacres'

Unison:

Unison leadership takeover Newham branch

Successful outcome for Suzanne Muna

TUC:

New Labour flounders in face of economic crisis

Workers' anger surfaces at TUC

Labour:

New Labour hypocrisy on racism

U-turn over post office card account