The Socialist

The Socialist 30 September 2009

Fight all council cuts

Fight all council cuts


Socialism 2009: ideas to change the world


New right wing government, but success for the Left Party in Germany

Kazakhstan: Socialist activist attacked by thugs


No to BNP TV platform


London postal workers: Big majority to stop funding Labour

Unison witch-hunt - Defend the Four!


Students ready to fight back


1949 - Chinese revolution


Honduras: Coup leaders step up repression

Nepal - mass rallies back Prachandra


Vestas workers fight on

Leeds council workers' strike solid

Management forced to retreat

Mass rally in support of South Yorkshire firefighters

Civil service compensation scheme: Thousands say no to cuts

 
 

PO Box 1398, Enfield EN1 9GT

020 8988 8777

[email protected]

Link to this page: https://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/595/8197

Seach this siteSearch the site

Printable versionPrintable version

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 30 September 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate  

Tower Hamlets college

Management forced to retreat

A month of all-out strike action has forced Michael Farley, the principal of Tower Hamlets College in the East End of London, to withdraw compulsory redundancy notices to 13 teachers. The threatened staff have either agreed to redeployment, won their appeals or have accepted improved voluntary redundancy terms.

Pete Dickenson, UCU member

The dispute began at the end of the summer-term when approximately 25 full-time equivalent jobs (about 40 part-time posts) were axed, mainly from the English as a Second Language (ESOL) area. 1,000 ESOL places were to be cut. Also, student places on a Skills for Life programme were to be halved.

UCU, the lecturers' union, backed an all-out indefinite strike in August to defend 13 staff who were resisting the compulsory redundancy notices served on them by the college. The UCU members on strike remained determined and solid throughout the dispute, which was the first indefinite all-out action in the further education sector since the 1990s.

Maintaining unity and forcing the principal to withdraw the redundancy notices was a great achievement in the circumstances, since the strikers had to overcome personal hardship as well as worrying about their students, whose future was potentially put at risk by the management provoked dispute.

As well as getting the compulsory notices withdrawn, the voluntary redundancy terms were doubled, 300 places on ESOL courses were saved and a mentoring scheme for 700 young people was saved.

As a by-product of the dispute Unison won a no-compulsory redundancy pledge, which Farley was forced to offer to head off a strike by admin staff.

Pressure must be kept up to make sure the principal honours the agreement and to make sure existing terms and conditions are maintained. This dispute will undoubtedly be the first of many as education is threatened with further cuts.

Future actions will need to be linked and generalised across the FE sector and beyond.


In this issue

Fight all council cuts


Socialism 2009

Socialism 2009: ideas to change the world


International socialist news and analysis

New right wing government, but success for the Left Party in Germany

Kazakhstan: Socialist activist attacked by thugs


Socialist Party news and analysis

No to BNP TV platform


Socialist Party workplace feature

London postal workers: Big majority to stop funding Labour

Unison witch-hunt - Defend the Four!


Socialist Students

Students ready to fight back


Marxist analysis: history

1949 - Chinese revolution


International socialist news and analysis

Honduras: Coup leaders step up repression

Nepal - mass rallies back Prachandra


Socialist Party workplace news

Vestas workers fight on

Leeds council workers' strike solid

Management forced to retreat

Mass rally in support of South Yorkshire firefighters

Civil service compensation scheme: Thousands say no to cuts


 

Home   |   The Socialist 30 September 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate