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Home   |   The Socialist 12 - 18 Jan 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Successful tube strike must be escalated

STRIKE ACTION by station members of RMT (Rail Maritime and Transport Workers' Union) closed 47 stations and led to severe disruption on the Northern Line, where train drivers refused to cross picket lines and also took unofficial action over the sacking of a driver on a separate issue.

Bill Johnson, RMT member

There was also widespread disruption on the Piccadilly Line as up to half of train drivers refused to cross picket lines or refused to take their trains out onto a system staffed by unqualified scab labour.

London Underground and the press have tried to portray the strike as a failure because most trains still ran. But it was never envisaged that a strike by station staff alone would shut the network down. The level of disruption caused has been serious for London Underground, who only kept key stations open and trains running by throwing away the rule book and ignoring safety regulations.

The strike action has been called because London Underground has gone back on a written agreement to introduce a shorter working week without any reduction in overall staff numbers. The agreement to introduce a shorter working week was won after RMT took strike action as part of its pay campaign two years ago.

London Underground is now trying to exclude 600 station staff positions from the agreement. The company has imposed new rosters and put the 600 positions into "displacement". Although individuals will not lose their jobs they can be transferred to a location with vacancies and the position they vacate is then abolished. Over a year or so all 600 positions could have disappeared.

Missing staff

The new rosters also leave insufficient "reserve" cover for staff who are on leave, training or off work for any reason. This means that even where London Underground accepts there should be two station assistants to help passengers at the ticket barrier, or someone to assist train operators to empty their train at the end of the line, these staff will not be there. With nine additional days off under the shorter working week and less reserve cover, missing staff will be a permanent feature at almost every station.

While the action taken by RMT members has been effective, it is now clear that more will be needed to win this key dispute.

Under direction from the mayor, Ken Livingstone, London Underground has been keen to cut staffing for several years. Livingstone and the US management team he has imported believe that London Underground is overstaffed and look with envy at the absence of station staff on the New York Subway or Paris Metro.

But staffing levels are high on the tube because it is a very old system, buried much deeper underground, and every staff position is there as part of a safety validation process. The legal framework for station safety was introduced after the Kings Cross fire in 1987. London Underground management are lobbying for these laws to be abolished.

Union leaders believe London Underground want to tame RMT before the run-up to the Olympics in 2012. The proposal to cut 600 jobs is only the start. If London Underground succeeds in cutting 600 they will be back for more. This is a dispute over the ability of RMT to resist Livingstone's anti-union agenda. A defeat for RMT would have consequences not only for staff in the stations but for every tubeworker. Safety rules would be re-written and pay and conditions eroded if management feel they have the upper hand.

Therefore it is now essential to respond with an escalation of the action. Management can keep stations open by using TSSA (Transport and Salaried Staff Association who last took strike action on the tube in 1926!) members and unqualified managers and admin workers. This dispute is too big to leave station staff to fight alone.

Bob Crow has said that drivers will now be balloted. This will probably be for action short of a strike, in effect to refuse to take trains out on strike days because the network is unsafe. This is a good step but it must be accompanied with a major campaign to explain the issues to the drivers. At the same time RMT should produce a leaflet for the public highlighting management's plans and showing how a defeat of the unions would also be a blow for passengers' safety and security.


On the Neasden picket line

I VISITED the picket at the Neasden depot and I spoke to a worker who is based at the Willesden Green station, which London Mayor Ken Livingstone uses every day.

Chris Newby

He told me that Livingstone is not popular with RMT members. RMT members helped get him elected, yet during the drivers' strike last year, Livingstone said that they might as well take the whole of the summer off!

An example of what LU proposals will mean is that Dollis Hill and Kilburn stations will not be staffed. Management say that staff at Willesden Green can cover these because it is the station in the middle. But what happens if someone falls over and is injured at these stations, how long will it be before station staff can get there?

During the strike, management tried to keep some stations open by using managers. They may have done all the necessary training originally and done some emergency training. But they haven't worked on a station for six or seven years and are not up to date with all the latest changes to regulations.


the NHS

back against far right

for work and pensions: Striking for jobs, services and rights


Party National congress 2006

National committee January 2006


Israel:


 

 

Home   |   The Socialist 12 - 18 Jan 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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In this issue

Defend the NHS

Fight back against far right

Stop the privatisation of council housing

Tuition fees repel poor students

Striking for jobs, services and rights

Successful tube strike must be escalated

Make your mind up time for Lib Dems?

For an alternative to New Labour

Democratic discussion, debate and decision-making

Priorities and opportunities in 2006

Fighting for socialist ideas world wide

£109,315 - a record year for the fighting fund!

Solidarity with Tehran bus workers

After Sharon, what next?


 


Socialist Party and CWI

Committee for a Workers' InternationalThe Socialist Party is part of the Committee for a Workers‘ International (CWI) which fights for socialism world wide. www.socialistworld.net.


Youth and student

Click here for our youth and student pages

- See also:

Youth Fight for Jobs

Youth Fight For Jobs website

Socialist Students website


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Socialism Today

Socialism Today 155 - February 2012

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- In this month's issue:

Dithering in Durban

Pensions: the fight continues

The year of all risks


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Marxist guides

Karl Marx Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels

Communism, grotesque caricature: see Soviet Union. See also What About Russia?

Cuba

Dialectical materialism

Genuine communism: see Marxism, What is it?

Historical materialism


How would a socialist economy work?

Lenin Lenin: On Marxism

Marxism: What is it?

Philosophy, Marxism

Russian Revolution

The State and Revolution


Socialism: What is it?

Socialist Countries?

Socialist Party manifesto

Soviet Union

State, The

Terrorism: Marxism Opposes Terrorism

Trotsky Trotsky: On the Russian Revolution

What about Russia?

What is Marxism?

What is Socialism?


How a fightback can stop the cuts

How a fightback can stop the cuts

Online: Lessons from how Thatcher was defeated. This pamphlet outlines how we can stop the cuts


Women and the Struggle for Socialism

Women and the Struggle for Socialism

It doesn't have to be like this - What consequences will the economic crisis and its aftermath have for women?


The Case for Socialism

The Case for Socialism by Hannah Sell

Online: The case for socialism in a period when capitalism is in deep crisis. By Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary


The Masses Arise

The Masses Arise, by Peter Taaffe

The Masses Arise: The Great French Revolution 1789-1815 by Peter Taaffe. New edition out now.


Socialism in the 21st Century

Socialism in the 21st century by Hannah Sell

Online: An essential read for anti-capitalists, trade union activists and socialists.


Videos:


N30 - Millions strike

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo  Socialist Party

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo Socialist Party


Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011: Crucial preparation for the fightback


Jarrow marchers march into history

Jarrow Marchers 2011

Jarrow marchers march into history


NSSN lobby of TUC 2011

NSSN lobby of TUC 2011: Open the floodgates of mass action

Successful NSSN lobby called for a one day public sector strike


TUC demo 26 March 2011

Half a million march through central London against the ConDem cuts on TUC demonstration, photo Socialist Party

Half a million trade unionists marched against the ConDem cuts in central London


Day X student demo against fee rises

Ian Pattison addresses 9 December Day X student demo against fee rises

9th December 2010: what the students said


London firefighters second strike day

Fire Brigades Union (FBU) in Poplar, London, on strike

Firefighters speak, as all firestations picketed


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