The Socialist

The Socialist 3 November 2009

Join the march for jobs

Join the march for jobs


'Modernisation' means cuts: Support the postal workers' fightback

Time to plan for all-out postal strike

Reports from the postal workers' picket lines

Postal workers - step up the action to win! Socialist Party leaflet pdf


Want to change the world? Join the Socialist Party!


Action needed to bring election coalition into shape


We want workers' MPs on a worker's wage

RBS/Lloyds - Yet more bailouts and job cuts

fast news


BA cabin crews come out fighting

Leeds bins strike against management attacks still solid

South Yorkshire firefighters and Sheffield First bus drivers

Victory at Crown Aerosols

Trade unionists must fight for decent benefits for all


Pakistan - New wave of terrorism as the guerrilla war escalates

 
 
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/600/8318

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 3 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

'Modernisation' means cuts: Support the postal workers' fightback

On the picket line at Bitterne in Southampton, photo Rob Emery

On the picket line at Bitterne in Southampton, photo Rob Emery   (Click to enlarge)

The roots of this dispute and the reasons for these strikes go all the way back to 2002 and the appointment of Allan Leighton and Adam Crozier as chairman and chief executive of Royal Mail. Since they took over, there have been 60,000 job losses. Or cuts to you and me. So the people who are left are working harder and harder. 'Modernisation' simply means cuts.

A Coventry postal worker

The second post was scrapped. So Royal Mail had to find other work for its delivery staff. It made redundant those people who sorted mail on the day shift for delivery the following day and got us to do it after finishing the first post. This was then changed to having us do the work in the morning, sorting that day's mail. And so began the later deliveries.

A feature of this management's cost-cutting policy was the constant removal of rounds from offices. Year on year, rounds have been getting larger, so as to make them 3½ hours long. And last week my manager told us Royal Mail want us to be on the streets for at least 4½ hours.

Then in 2007 the government announced it was seeking a 'strategic partner', confirming what everyone suspected. That costs were being reduced to make Royal Mail attractive for privatisation. We staff were even given 'shares' in the company. Even though Royal Mail is state owned! I now 'own' shares in Royal Mail, even though you and I (the public) own the company.

I call it a company because the public service ethos has been stripped out. Most staff still strive to maintain that but it is now a public service run by people with no experience of the business, only OF business. So it is run as if it was a private company.

Royal Mail is a bulk mail carrier and no other operator is able to deliver the amount of mail we do to the number of addresses we do - 28 million. When politicians and Royal Mail say that customers will leave Royal Mail they mean parcel senders. But parcels are a tiny fraction of our postbags.

Bulk mail

The bulk of our work is delivering catalogues, magazines and what most people regard as junk mail, in addition to mail from utility companies, banks, and of course the government. Some of these companies may now choose to have their mail sorted and processed by other operators like TNT or DHL, but Royal Mail then delivers it.

These companies, the Down Stream Access companies (DSAs) are now Royal Mail's customers, along with the bulk mailers. Not you and I, the people who buy stamps to send letters or bill payments. So when they talk about disrupting customers they don't mean you. This is not a public service any more.

Broken agreement

The current dispute is a direct result of Royal Mail's refusal to keep to the agreement made with the union in 2007. Once Royal Mail got what they wanted - job losses, cuts and imposed changes to working conditions, they walked away.

As part of that agreement, in October last year our delivery rounds got bigger. We accepted that. In April this year Royal Mail announced a profit of £321 million - during a global recession. They then announced a pay freeze and we reluctantly accepted this.

The same month, night sorting on each area ceased in Coventry and we on deliveries now do this work, sorting perhaps 50% of the mail we deliver.

Machines sort perhaps 80 to 90% of all letters but we sort everything else before getting our rounds ready and being allowed out of the door at 9.30am. And we do this for no extra pay. More work + pay freeze = pay cut. And deliveries get later.

There are so many issues affecting 120,000 post workers in many different roles but I hope this will help to explain our anger at the way we are treated.


In this issue

Join the march for jobs


Socialist Party workplace news

'Modernisation' means cuts: Support the postal workers' fightback

Time to plan for all-out postal strike

Reports from the postal workers' picket lines

Postal workers - step up the action to win! Socialist Party leaflet pdf


Socialism 2009

Want to change the world? Join the Socialist Party!


Socialist Party statement

Action needed to bring election coalition into shape


Socialist Party news and analysis

We want workers' MPs on a worker's wage

RBS/Lloyds - Yet more bailouts and job cuts

fast news


Socialist Party workplace news

BA cabin crews come out fighting

Leeds bins strike against management attacks still solid

South Yorkshire firefighters and Sheffield First bus drivers

Victory at Crown Aerosols

Trade unionists must fight for decent benefits for all


International socialist news and analysis

Pakistan - New wave of terrorism as the guerrilla war escalates


 

Home   |   The Socialist 3 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Postal workers:

triangleWorkplace news in brief

triangleLondon postal workers vote 'Yes' for strike action

triangleCameron 'thanks' postal workers by axing their jobs and pensions

triangleRoyal Mail not for sale

triangleSpelthorne: "The trade union candidate guy"

trianglePostal workers call for 'no' vote on deal

Royal Mail:

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleStrike action to defend Royal Mail jobs

triangleCWU conference - unanimous call for 24-hour general strike

triangleCWU conference: Support joint union action on 30 June

US:

triangleClegg's text message plans make us LOL!

triangleUS embassy protest remembers Trayvon Martin

triangleMillion Hoodies March against racist murders in the US

Pay:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

Coventry:

triangleCoventry: Socialist campaigner Dave Nellist narrowly loses

triangleMay 2012 local election reports

triangleTUSC: the electoral alternative to the parties of the rich