The Socialist

The Socialist 26 September 2012

Action against austerity

The Socialist issue 735


Action against austerity

Teachers: march together, then strike together against austerity

Reasons to join the 20 October demo, reasons to build for a 24-hour strike

General strike, the biggest weapon

Model resolution for a 24-hour general strike


Labour Party conference: Can Labour give a lead in the fight against austerity?


Afghanistan war: end this 'pointless waste of life'

Spain: March on Madrid kicks off a hot autumn of struggle

South Africa: 'Lonmin settlement a victory - struggle pays!'


TUSC conference: A step forward for working class political representation

Murdoch empire: a whole barrel of bad apples

Action needed to save NHS from privatisation

Them & Us


Workers strike as Argos tightens the screws

Knowsley council fears anti-privatisation campaign

Solidarity with workers sacked from Crossrail

Workplace news in brief


No excuse! Thousands protest against victim blaming on London Slutwalk

Scrap student fees

Enthusiastic start to the year for Socialist Students

Why Hull council should defy the government's cuts to services

Tameside library closures - "Get used to it" says councillor

Opportunistic speeches at Hull march against NHS cuts

Cellist Alfia Nakipbekova speaks out about Kazakhstan

Opencast mining: "Protect us from Provectus"


Belfast Outdoor Relief Strike 1932

 
 
 
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Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Knowsley council fears anti-privatisation campaign

As recently reported in the Socialist, Knowsley's 100% Labour-run council plans to make the local authority a "commissioning council". Commissioning is privatisation!

"In the services amenable to commissioning, the principles of open public services will switch the default from one where the state commissions the service itself to one where the state commissions the service from a range of diverse providers" (Government White Paper July 2011).

The council report makes plans to outsource almost every service and job, whether 'backroom' or 'frontline' with funding cuts of up to 25% across the board.

Adult Social Care, employment and skills, and transport are earmarked for "fast track" privatisation. Other services are to follow by April next year.

Since the last report in the Socialist, Knowsley Unison branch has worked hard on making sure that its members know exactly what the plans are, after the council chief executive only distributed the report to employees two days before it went to the council cabinet!

This has involved distributing a union newsletter and briefing note, followed up by organising workplace meetings.

Members have met these proposals with a mixture of anger and disbelief, with one member stating: "I can't believe a Labour-run council would do this".

Lobbying the council

Unison then organised a lobby of the council meeting on 19th September. During the daytime before this lobby the council (clearly worried at the reaction to its privatisation plans) sent an email to all staff claiming that "Unison and the North West Socialist Party" were scaremongering! The briefing blamed cuts in funding on central government and claimed that they were not proposing to privatise council services or make any compulsory redundancies.

Unison members and members from other local trade unions showed who they trusted when over 100 people turned out for a lobby of the council.

They held placards stating "no to privatisation", "no to commissioning" and also gave out a response to the Chief Executive's email that explained how privatisation measures had already started in some areas and pointed out that the council explicitly said in its report: "it is increasingly difficult to reduce employee numbers without taking compulsory measures".


What does this mean if not the looming prospect of compulsory redundancies?

Following the lobby Unison has made a proposal to the council on producing an alternative budget with an invite to the Association of Public Service Excellence (APSE) to advise and assist this process.

APSE is a body lobbying for public provision of local authority services and is opposing commissioning/outsourcing. Among its membership are many Labour-led local authorities - including Knowsley!

Knowsley Unison is now going public in the next steps of the campaign, to include activities such as stalls in local town centres, petitions and doorstep campaigning.

Knowsley Unison will also consider calling a Special General Meeting in order to gain a mandate for industrial action if the council refuses to make a u-turn on its commissioning plans.

Knowsley Unison will continue to work with other local trade unions to defend jobs, pay and conditions of service and to tell union members and other staff the truth about what is planned.

Socialist Party members in Unison, Knowsley borough and Merseyside will continue to support the fight against commissioning/privatisation.


This version of this article was first posted on the Socialist Party website on 24 September 2012 and may vary slightly from the version subsequently printed in The Socialist.


In this issue


Fightback against austerity

Action against austerity

Teachers: march together, then strike together against austerity

Reasons to join the 20 October demo, reasons to build for a 24-hour strike

General strike, the biggest weapon

Model resolution for a 24-hour general strike


Socialist Party feature

Labour Party conference: Can Labour give a lead in the fight against austerity?


International socialist news and analysis

Afghanistan war: end this 'pointless waste of life'

Spain: March on Madrid kicks off a hot autumn of struggle

South Africa: 'Lonmin settlement a victory - struggle pays!'


Socialist Party news and analysis

TUSC conference: A step forward for working class political representation

Murdoch empire: a whole barrel of bad apples

Action needed to save NHS from privatisation

Them & Us


Socialist Party workplace news

Workers strike as Argos tightens the screws

Knowsley council fears anti-privatisation campaign

Solidarity with workers sacked from Crossrail

Workplace news in brief


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

No excuse! Thousands protest against victim blaming on London Slutwalk

Scrap student fees

Enthusiastic start to the year for Socialist Students

Why Hull council should defy the government's cuts to services

Tameside library closures - "Get used to it" says councillor

Opportunistic speeches at Hull march against NHS cuts

Cellist Alfia Nakipbekova speaks out about Kazakhstan

Opencast mining: "Protect us from Provectus"


Socialist history

Belfast Outdoor Relief Strike 1932


 

Home   |   The Socialist 26 September 2012   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Merseyside:

triangleAnti-bedroom tax federation launched in Merseyside

triangleEnd this 'evil bedroom tax'

trianglePeter Taaffe speaks on BBC radio

triangleIntroduction

triangleNorth West TUC fails to debate councillors and cuts

Council:

triangleFighting cuts in wales

triangleBedroom tax campaigning in Leytonstone, Birmingham and Newham

triangleProtesters demand councils reject blacklisting companies

triangleBrighton bin workers fight pay cuts - this time from the Greens

Knowsley:

triangleStriking against the 'fast track to the sack'

triangleSeeking TUSC candidates in Knowsley

triangleFight begins against massive outsourcing by Knowsley's Labour council

Privatisation:

trianglePCS members fight Land Registry privatisation

triangleNHS WARNING! Privatisation puts patients at risk

Unison:

triangleFighting back pays off: Thera East Midlands forced to make concessions