Strike To Defend Pensions

PUBLIC SECTOR workers have been angrily responding to the
government’s attacks on their pensions.

A Kent nurse told the socialist:

"These plans mean that when we do finally get to retire we
will be living on much reduced pensions.

"I’ve worked for the NHS for seven years and the pensions cuts
will have a big effect on me. When you add on the effects of the new
pay and grading scheme, Agenda for Change, I’ll be even worse off.

"I’ll only end up with between £500 and £750 a month by
the time I’m 65, if I’m still alive by then!

"Our job is getting more and more stressful. We have to be
constantly updating our training.

"It’s got so that just getting up and going to work puts a
tremendous strain on our health. And come the end of our time in
service we are getting the arse end of the deal.

"Consultants and people in higher management will be much
better off than us but the ones at the coal face are going to have to
live hand to mouth as pensioners.

"The nurses I work with – from auxiliary to staff nurses –
think that this attack on our pensions, along with Agenda for Change,
is just a Labour government being Tories.

In fact they’re stabbing us in the back more than Thatcher did,
or Major."

HUGO SINCLAIR, a university admin worker, added:

"In the next few months New Labour is planning to force
public-sector staff, its employees, to work till they drop, for, in
some cases, an average pension of just £3,800 per year.

"The plain unfairness of a system which lets MPs set their
own pay, yet attacks our pensions and living standards, cannot be
allowed to continue.

We have reached the point where more pensioners in the UK die of
cold each year than in any other European country.

This system, where the greedy few exploit the rest of us, is not
only morally bankrupt – but will bankrupt us all unless we stand up to
it and stop it!"

The next few weeks could see thousands of public-sector workers
striking to defend their pensions. PCS and UNISON are already planning
action for 23 March and now lecturers’ union NATFHE are balloting for
action on 14 April

The task now is to use the 18 February day of action to show that the
trade unions can fight together on this issue, to involve as many
members as possible in the protests and to prepare for solid strike
action in the following weeks.

Blair and New Labour have declared war on our pensions but a united
battle can force a turnaround and signal the start of a trade union
fightback against all of the cuts and privatisations that public-sector
workers have had to endure.


Organising for action

I’VE BEEN speaking at loads of meetings of PCS members recently and
they’re absolutely furious, right across the age spectrum, that they’re
attacking our pensions now as well.

Marion Lloyd, PCS civil service union national executive

We’ve got meetings all round Yorkshire and Humberside on the TUC day
of action on pensions on 18 February.

In Sheffield we’ve got two marches, one from each side of the city,
meeting in the centre for a rally at 12.30pm. We asked all our local MPs
to come but none of them have even responded, apart from one, Labour of
course, who said ‘no’.

We’ve set up a public sector alliance to link up all the public
sector trade unions. So we’ll have speakers from those unions and the
pensioners’ organisations at the rally.

A lot of PCS members are saying that one of the reasons they joined
the civil service was the pensions. That partly makes up for the rubbish
pay we get.

People see the 18 February as a preparation for the strike on 23
March. It’s an opportunity to get wider layers of the union membership
involved in the defend pensions campaign, ready for the strike. I think
there’ll be good support for the strike from PCS members. Even the areas
of the civil service which are not hit by job cuts will be hit by these
cuts in pensions.