NSSN 700: March against the far-right this Saturday

We headline this week’s NSSN bulletin with the counter-protest to the far-right Tommy Robinson, called by Stand Up to Racism and supported by the TUC and unions, this coming Saturday 26th October in central London – assemble 11.30am Piccadilly (Regent Street/St James’s). There is a trade union bloc which will form up at the corner of Jermyn Street and St James Street at 11.30am.

For details of this and other protests, see the Stand Up To Racism website.

ASLEF: Join the 26 October demo against the far right

PCS: Unite against the far-right on 26 October

Workers Unity to stop the far-right

The NSSN stood with the rest of the union movement against the violent protests whipped up this summer by the racist far-right and the fascists. Our supporters have taken part in the many counter-protests that have been taking place that pushed the far-right back.

The far-right have been looking to exploit the horrific incident in Southport this summer for their own ends. We send support and solidarity to all those affected by that attack, especially the families of those killed and injured.

With absolutely no evidence and on the basis of deliberate misinformation, the far-right have targeted refugees, migrant workers and the Black and Asian and Muslim communities.

It is essential that the trade union movement plays the leading role in building a united movement against the far-right. This is especially the case as history has shown, the far-right and fascist forces have targeted unions and striking workers.  

With 6.5million members, across all working-class communities, the unions have the authority and power to unite workers against racist division which weakens our movement and only assists the bosses.

The strike wave over the last few years has shown that workers and their unions are prepared and able to fight to defend jobs and living standards, and when they do so, they become a pole of attraction for all those suffering from austerity.

Therefore, we believe that the TUC and the unions should call a national Saturday demonstration to bring together workers in a united response to the far-right.

And where the racists call local protests, the union movement should take the lead in organising counter-protests, linking up with migrants, refugees and any targeted communities as well as anti-racist and anti-fascist organisations. All protests must be well stewarded by trade unions to guard against any threat from far-right groups.

We welcomed the motion passed at TUC Congress in 2018 that launched a “Jobs, Homes, Not Racism campaign to unite the wider trade union movement and to campaign effectively against the far right” as it is vital that the labour and trade union movement takes on racist division by giving an alternative to the decades of austerity and anti-worker policies of successive governments.

The union movement has responded to the far-right protests with statements including the following – TUC, Unite, RMT, CWU, PCS, Unison, NIPSA, CSP, NEU, UCU, FBU, NUJ, Equity, BFAWU, ASLEF, GMB, RCN, CSP, UCU, NAPO, POA, Musicians Union, Community, USDAW, IWGB, Prospect, SOR, BMA, HCSA, INTO, UVW, POA

Unions must keep the pressure on for a real Workers’ New Deal

The NSSN headlined last week’s bulletin on the Labour Government’s unveiling of its Employment Rights Bill. We welcome any improvements in workers rights in this bill, which is due to come into effect in 2026.

We also welcome the commitment to repeal the most recent Tory anti-union legislation, namely the Minimum Service Levels Act and the Trade Union Act. The latter law enshrines the undemocratic 50% industrial action ballot voting thresholds. However, we call on the Government, with its overwhelming majority of nearly 160, to enact emergency legislation to immediately abolish these brutal laws.

But we also call for the bill to go much further. The POA should have the right to strike for its prison officer members restored. And, all the Tory anti-union laws going back to Thatcher and Major should be repealed.

These laws and their attack on the ability of unions to act collectively outline the main weakness of the Government’s bill.

As Professor Keith Ewing and Lord John Hendy KC have stated in their article in the Morning Star: “The bitter truth is that what working people (half the total population of Britain — with most of the rest dependent on them) need is not more individual rights, welcome as they may be, but greater power. Power to have a real say over the pay, terms and conditions on which they work. That means freeing the trade unions from the shackles imposed in six Acts of Parliament by Thatcher’s crew in the 1980s and ’90s. No-one else will represent workers. And to do that job unions need the power, when necessary, to organise industrial action and compel employers to bargain with them. What is also needed is a framework of laws which support collective bargaining and decent terms and conditions…Much of the Bill is thus about individual employment rights…There are welcome new employment rights and improvements of existing rights. But it does not do nearly enough to remove the restraints on trade unions or to give them the powers they need to make a significant difference to the lives of the millions of workers who are without a voice at work.”

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham has said: “This Bill is without doubt a significant step forward for workers but stops short of making work pay…Failure to end fire a rehire and zero hours contracts once and for all will leave more holes than Swiss cheese that hostile employers will use. The Bill also fails to give workers the sort of meaningful rights to access a union for pay bargaining that would put more money in their pockets and, in turn, would aid growth. Unite will continue to make the workers’ voice heard as we push for improvements to the legislation as the Bill goes through parliament.”

It is essential that the union movement scrutinises the proposed legislation in order to demand that it is strengthened.

The annual TUC Congress in September passed an EIS-led composite motion: ‘End of the hostile environment towards workers and unions’ which included an amendment from PCS – “Congress notes the Labour Party’s 2024 general election manifesto committed to implementing ‘Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering a New Deal for Working People’ in full – introducing legislation within 100 days. If the government has not legislated within the first hundred days, a special TUC congress will be called to discuss next steps.”

Such a congress would be an important tool for the unions and their members to draw a balance sheet about the bill and the plan of action needed to fight for a real Workers’ New Deal.

Budget Day protests on Wednesday 30th October

  • Wakefield NSSN Budget Day protest to: Save the Winter Fuel Allowance, End Arms Exports to Israel, No Privatisation of Our NHS, Repeal the Anti-Union Laws – 12.30pm on the Cathedral Precinct
  • WASPI – Women Against State Pension Inequality: ‘The WASPI Can’t Wait – Compensate Demonstration’ – 12noon onwards Parliament Square read more
  • People’s Assembly: ‘Austerity is a Political Choice: Tax the Rich’ – 3pm onwards Richmond Terrace, outside Parliament Facebook event

Public Meeting: ‘Save the Markhouse Centre for disabled adults’ – Thursday 24 October at 7pm at the William Morris Community Centre, Greenleaf Road, Walthamstow, E17 6QQ. Meeting hosted by Waltham Forest Trades Council

Southampton March & Anti-cuts Conference – Saturday 2nd November, assemble 12noon Bargate. Conference: 1pm Friends Meeting House SO15 2AZ

For more info – contact Declan Clune Secretary Southampton & South West Hampshire Trades Union Council. Tel: 07873 958510

From Strike Map: London book launch & social: A Manual of Industrial Unionism – Join the exciting launch of our reprint of A Manual of Industrial Unionism by William Z Foster 6.30pm on 29 November at Marx Memorial Library more details

Organise Now, are leading a campaign to organise the coffee shop and bakery chain, GAIL’s – they have just announced a week of action on 25 November- 1 December. Click here to join this campaign and sign up for one of the volunteer briefings later this month

NSSN news  

Get your trade union branch or trades council to affiliate to the NSSN – it only costs £50. Already affiliated? Please think about renewing it and/or making an additional donation to help our work. Also, many of our supporters pay a few pounds a month via a standing order.   

You can either pay online to ‘National Shop Stewards Network’, HSBC – sort code 40-06-41, account number 90143790.  

Or you can pay by cheque to ‘National Shop Stewards Network’ and post to NSSN, PO Box 54498, London E10 9DE.   

Feel free to use this affiliation letter.    

And if you can, come to one of our regional Conferences. If there is not one in your area, get in touch to either assist in organising or have a speaker at one of your meetings or events. Contact Rob or Katrine on [email protected]   

The NSSN is developing a campaign pack for social care, which we hope to make available in the not-too-distant future for supporters to use in their localities. As part of this, communications officer Dave Gorton is keen to hear from supporters who:  

(1) work in social care (either local authority, private or independently provided)  

(2) represent social care workers for a trade union  

(3) are in need of social care provision themselves or act as an (unpaid/underpaid) carer for a family member  

Dave can be contacted in the first instance via [email protected]    

  

Union News  

You can receive this bulletin via email or you can choose to unsubscribe and stop receiving them. Like everyone else, the NSSN has to adhere to new data protection regulations. Therefore you must click here to subscribe/unsubscribe. Reports from unions do not necessarily reflect NSSN’s views.  

  

RMT  

RMT National Dispute Fund  

Union leaders call on Mayor to bring Elizabeth Line and London Overground into public ownership (18 Oct) – In a joint letter to the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, the leaders of two major transport unions, RMT and ASLEF, have urged him to take immediate steps to bring the Elizabeth Line and London Overground into public ownership. The letter comes in the wake of the newly elected Labour government’s clear stance on the need to overhaul the UK’s railways, ending decades of privatisation read more.  Sign the petition – Restore ticket office hours and Oyster facilities at London Overground ticket offices

RMT responds to government energy announcement (17 Oct) – RMT welcomes government commitment. Offshore workers union, RMT today responded to the Energy Security and Net Zero department  promising action on jobs, investment and clean energy read more

London Underground workers to strike over pay offer (16 Oct) – RMT members on London Underground will take strike action after rejecting a pay offer deemed wholly inadequate. While some progress was made in negotiations, the current proposal leaves a large number of staff excluded from collective bargaining, which remains a core issue for the union read more

London cable car staff suspend strike action after new offer (4 Oct) – Transport union, RMT has called off strike action tomorrow following an improved offer by Doppelmayr Cable Car (DCC) management. The new offer includes a backdated pay offer, a 3-year deal and enhanced maternity, paternity and bank holiday benefits. The company has also offered to cut the working week in exchange for accepting the offer. RMT members working for DDC will now be balloted. All strike action from October 12 onwards remains on for the time being read more

RFA take two days strike action (3 Oct) – Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) seafarers are set to strike on Friday 4 October and Tuesday 8 October due to a long running dispute over pay. While discussions between the RMT union and the Ministry of Defence have been constructive, no satisfactory offer has been made. Further talks are scheduled to take place next week in an effort to resolve the dispute. During the strike, all RFA workers will be standing down from their duties, though essential safety measures—such as monitoring moorings and gangways—will remain in place read more

Heathrow Express 48-hour strike action begins on Monday (20 Sept) – Heathrow Express staff will take 48 hours of strike action, from Monday, in response to a pay offer that was overwhelmingly rejected by members. Despite mulitple attempts to resolve the dispute, members will take the action next week read more

Solid bus strike action at First South West (12 Aug) – RMT bus driver members working for First South West took further solid strike action against low pay today (Monday August 12) at depots across Cornwall and Somerset. Speaking from a picket line at Penzance, RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said that it was the fourth day of action in the dispute which had prevented buses from operating across the region. “This union has put forward three different proposals following local consultations to prevent further strike action, but the bus company has refused to negotiate to end to the dispute. First South West’s parent company is raking in profits of £204 million while bus drivers at First South West are some of the lowest paid in the country…” read more

Scotrail and Caledonian Sleeper staff vote for strike action (8 Aug) – RMT members working on key Scottish rail services have voted for strike action following a ballot. Scotrail and Caledonian Sleeper workers were separately balloted after rejecting pay offers from both companies. Workers at Scotrail returned an 85% ‘yes’ vote for strike action on a 64% turnout. And Caledonian Sleeper members produced a 90% yes vote on a 66% turnout. The union will be speaking to both employers in order to come to a negotiated settlement read more

ASLEF
London Tube drivers to strike over pay (16 Oct) –
London Underground train drivers are set to strike next month in a dispute over pay, the Aslef union has announced. As well as Tube drivers, instructors, management grade staff and those in the engineering section are to take action. The Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) has also announced industrial action by its members next month. Aslef said train operators and management grade staff would strike on 7 and 12 November, and those in the engineering section for 24 hours from 18:00 GMT on 1 November. Transport for London (TfL) said the action by Aslef and the RMT was “disappointing” but it remained engaged with the unions read more on BBC website

LNER strike action suspended (29 Aug) – Strike action due to take place at weekends between the end of August and mid November 2024 has been suspended. Drivers working at LNER were due to strike after a long dispute with the company which saw existing agreements broken by the employer. ASLEF members have consistently worked to negotiate with the company and explain why the breaking of agreements is unacceptable but the company continued to operate inappropriately, including paying driver managers a premium to drive trains, not recruiting enough drivers to run a full service, and trying to push drivers to work outside of agreed rostering systems. The railway is a safety critical environment and procedures are in place to ensure safe operation. ASLEF had raised safety concerns regarding driver managers ‘dual-rolling’ ie driving trains when they should have been available for on-call duties in the case of any incidents read more

TSSA

TSSA urges government clarity on HS2 (17 Oct) – TSSA – the union for staff employed directly by High Speed 2 (HS2) – is calling on the government to make it clear whether the line will now run from London Euston, beyond Birmingham, to Crewe. Media reports today suggest that senior Ministers were involved in discussions at the Labour Party conference, and plan to reverse the decision of the previous Conservative Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak read more

TSSA ballots for possible London Underground strike (7 Oct) – Transport and travel union TSSA is balloting members for industrial action, including a strike, across London Underground in a dispute over pay, and terms and conditions. TSSA, which represents hundreds of members working in a variety of jobs including Customer Service Assistants (advising/supporting passengers in stations), Customer Service Managers (running the station) and Service Control – is asking members to vote on strike action and action short of a strike. The ballot closes on 18th October (ballot papers were posted on Friday, 4 October). The union took the step after London Underground failed to meet the demands in the TSSA 2024 pay claim. LU has made an offer which would see most grades receive a below inflation pay offer based on February RPI inflation of 4.5 per cent. London Underground are also freezing most pay ranges – raising the possibility of long term, or indefinite, pay freezes read more

Unite  

West Midlands Citizen Housing strikes impact maintenance services for 30,000 homes (21 Oct) – 200 repair workers in Birmingham, Coventry, Hereford and Worcester walk out over pay. Citizen Housing’s gas engineers, electricians, construction workers and admin staff will begin strike action over pay this month, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. The workers are angry at a derisory four per cent pay offer from Citizen Housing, which had a turnover of £192.6 million and an operating surplus of £48.3 million for 2023/24. Even with the four per cent offer, some workers will still only be on the national minimum wage. Meanwhile, Citizen Housing’s tradespeople are furious that years of falling wages in real terms have left them being paid thousands of pounds below industry standards. The housing association is trying to justify keeping wages low because it enacted a long overdue reward review scheme in May over terms and conditions. But this is totally separate from annual pay negotiations…The workers will strike on 28 October and 1, 4, 8, 11, 15, 18, 22, 25 and 29 November. Industrial action will intensify if the dispute is not resolved read more

Unite members vote to approve Wales NHS pay deal (21 Oct) – Union emphasises this must be the beginning and not the end of pay restoration. Members of Unite, the UK’s leading union, have today approved the government’s proposal on NHS pay. Unite members working in NHS in Wales voted in favour the Welsh government’s decision to offer a 5.5 per cent pay increase for 2024/5. Unite is clear, however, that the pay increase needs to signal the start of pay restoration and the proper valuing of NHS staff. Above inflation pay rises are essential in all future pay rounds until pay restoration is achieved read more

Striking workers to march to Spalding town centre as Bakkavor dispute continues (21 Oct) – Hundreds of striking workers from the Bakkavor food production factory in Spalding, Lincolnshire, are to march to the town centre this week. Unite members who have been on strike for three weeks in their fight for fair pay will congregate in Spalding on Tuesday. They will be seeking to gather further support from their local community.

Where: West Marsh Road, Spalding, Lincs

When: 10:30am, Tuesday 22 October 2024

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham visited the picket line on Wednesday 16 October to give workers a morale boost in their dispute. She was greeted by hundreds of workers outside the factory who made their voices heard in their ongoing dispute read more.  Send messages of support to [email protected]

Edinburgh Tram workers win improvements following toilet breaks dispute (21 Oct) – Unite tram members finally relieved following improvements by employer. Unite can confirm today (Monday 21 October) that its Edinburgh Trams membership has won its dispute over rest periods and toilet breaks following negotiations with the company. The dispute arose due to late running times at Edinburgh airport which prevented workers from taking comfort breaks, leading to the wider health concerns that not going to the toilet for long periods, can have on workers. Unite represents drivers, ticket service assistants, controllers and vehicle maintenance workers on the tram network. Following a ballot, where workers overwhelmingly supported strike action, the company has now accepted Unite’s position and members will now get their agreed rest periods and comfort breaks. An increase in tram driver recruitment is now also expected in order to provide the level of service required to properly cover the route read more

Conference of migrant Health Care Assistants hears calls for family reunification (21 Oct) – Unite pledges support to HCA campaign for respect. October 21st: The first national conference of migrant health care assistants (HCAs) took place in Unite’s Dublin office over the weekend. The conference, which was organised by Migrant Nurses Ireland (MNI), heard from migrant HCAs who are unable to bring their families to live with them due to their low salary levels mandated by government work permit regulations, which are below the family reunification earnings thresholds. During Saturday’s conference, MNI formerly established a dedicated section for Health Care Assistants read more

Princes “in a pickle” product shortages predicted in pay dispute (18 Oct) – Unite members at the Princes food production factories across the country are balloting for industrial action over pay that could see popular household staples disappear from shop shelves including big supermarkets like Sainsbury, Tesco, Waitrose M&S, Asda, Lidl and Aldi. Over 800 workers at five sites (Long Sutton, Wisbech, Cardiff, Bradford and Glasgow) are being balloted after rejecting a pay deal from the company’s new owners that would leave them worse off than the offer promised by the previous owners. Princes produce tinned meats, fish, vegetables, sauces, soups and soft drinks for some of the most well-known household brands including Branston, Crosse & Blackwell, Napolina and Batchelors. If workers agree to take strike action, many of these products could quickly become unavailable in shops. Unite’s members who work as line operatives and engineers had been offered between a 4-7 per cent pay rise dependent on salary by the previous owner, Mitsubushi. The company was subsequently bought by Newlat S.p.A who withdrew that offer. Instead they are offering just a three per cent pay rise. Staff at the factories, are furious at this behaviour and after attempts to negotiate with the employer failed are now balloting for strike action. The ballot opens on 24 October and closes on 19 November read more

Valley Vets closures expose UK vet giant’s profiteering from animal lovers (17 Oct) – Closures a reaction to historic strike action in South Wales over poverty pay and overcharging of pet owners. VetPartners’ closure of four Valley Vets surgeries shows the damage the private equity giant is willing to do to a 40-year-old animal healthcare service so it can continue to overcharge and underpay workers, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. VetPartners said permanently closing four surgeries in Cardiff, Caerphilly, Pentyrch and Ystrad Mynach was necessary because of long term vet shortages. It has moved all services and workers to its animal hospital in Gwaelod y Garth. The company also announced a small number of redundancies, which Unite believes to be the equivalent of around six full time roles. The surgeries had been closed temporarily, in reaction to historic strike action by Valley Vets staff angry about poverty pay and the overcharging of pet owners. In the last two years alone, Valley Vets’ prices have increased by around 25 per cent read more

Unite leader to address striking Oscar Mayer workers in Wrexham (17 Oct) – Unite general secretary Sharon Graham will address Wrexham Oscar Mayer workers striking over fire and rehire on Friday (18 October). More than 500 Oscar Mayer workers began indefinite/all out-strike action in early September because they stand to lose up to £3,000 a year under the company’s fire and rehire plans. Oscar Mayer wants to fire and rehire the workers in order to remove some paid breaks, reduce other breaks and eradicate any enhanced payments and days off in lieu for working bank holidays read more. Send messages of support to [email protected]

Send messages of protest to [email protected]

Government Scottish energy jobs and skills boost: Unite reaction (16 Oct) – Responding to the Government’s announcement that energy secretary Ed Miliband is boosting investment and skills for renewable energy in Scotland, Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “This is a positive first step. However, the announcement today in no way offsets the impending jobs disaster that workers in Grangemouth are facing…” read more

Crisis in Haringey housing department leads to continuous strike action (14 Oct) – Housing maintenance and repair workers at Haringey council begin strike action tomorrow over the continued crisis within the council’s housing department.

Unite’s members haven’t had a pay rise in over a decade despite a cost-of-living crisis and inflation running rampant in recent years. The lack of pay increases for productivity is estimated to have left workers over £6000 out of pocket. Following previous industrial action this year, and with no sign of the council listening or negotiating, workers have been left with little choice but to escalate their industrial action to a continuous strike from 15 October. Unite has compiled a “dodgy dossier” following years of broken promises by management to meaningfully negotiate with union members on pay, terms and conditions read more. Send messages of support to [email protected] and messages of protest to: [email protected] Haringey Council CEO and Council Leader at [email protected]  

Newham ICT workers balloted on strike action over outsourcing plans (14 Oct) – Vital workers set to down tools this autumn over “catastrophic” privatisation scheme that could put resident’s data at risk. Unite members working for Newham council’s ICT department are being balloted over potential strike action this autumn after the council announced plans to outsource the department – putting jobs at risk and endangering residents’ data. Following the release of a previously withheld report documenting the council’s plans for the ICT department, workers reacted with dismay at Newham’s shortsighted plans. The main issue with Newham ICT is the lack of resources as no recruitment has taken place since 2012 to fill vacancies. There are currently around 45 full time staff and a number of posts being covered by contractors. The current business case clearly outlines a staffing capacity of around 130 to deliver the aspirations of Newham. While councils across the country have recognised the cost of outsourcing and have begun returning ICT departments in-house, Newham will now buck this trend because it claims to be unable to attract staff because its pay and conditions are “poorer than elsewhere” read more

MEBSCA dispute: pickets set for Pfizer site tomorrow (13 Oct) – Employers must come to table or risk prolonging dispute. Unite members working for employers who are members of the Mechanical Engineering & Building Services Contractors’ Association (MEBSCA) are set to down tools tomorrow as they continue fighting to secure the reversal of the austerity-era cut to ‘travel time’ read more

Stagecoach drivers in the Scottish Highlands balloted on strike action (10 Oct) – Around 120 Unite members based in Inverness reject unacceptable pay offer. Unite the union can confirm that Stagecoach bus drivers across the Highlands are being balloted for strike action in a dispute over pay. Around 120 Unite members will take part in the industrial action ballot following an empathetic 94.6 per cent rejection of a pay offer made by Stagecoach Highlands which is based in Inverness. The offer amounted to four per cent from July with a further 2.5 per cent increase from January 2025. This was then followed by a three per cent pay offer running from July 2025 for one year. The ballot will open today (10 October) and closes on 24 October. If the ballot is successful then strike action could take place from early November bringing bus services around the Inverness area to a halt read more

Knowsley housing workers announce strikes over low pay (7 Oct) – Residents living in Livv Housing are braced for serious disruption to housing services from later this month as over 200 workers begin industrial action in a dispute over pay. The dispute is a result of workers experiencing many years of below inflation pay rises. As a consequence, the workers have rejected a pay increase of five per cent because this does not reverse the real terms pay cuts they had previously experienced. The two initial days of strike action have been called for Wednesday 16 October and Wednesday 23 October. An overtime ban will also be in place on both 16 October and 23 October read more

Strikes to escalate at Fareham aerospace company with new dates announced (4 Oct) – Workers at Eaton Ltd manufacturing to stage further walks out over pay. Approximately 150 highly skilled aerospace workers in Fareham, Hants, are escalating their strike action after their employer, Eaton Ltd, continued to fail to make a pay offer that would bring them in line with industry averages. Unite members at the company voted overwhelmingly for strike action at the factory which produces essential parts and products for the aerospace sector. Fitters, technicians, supervisors and other staff will strike on the following dates: 16-19 October, 21-26 October, 29 October–1 November, 4-9 November, 11-16 November read more. Send messages of support to [email protected]

Doncaster First Bus cleaners join striking Sheffield colleagues in pay dispute (3 Oct) – First Bus real living wage employer but Bidvest Noonan contractors in Sheffield and Doncaster on poverty pay. Doncaster First Bus cleaning workers have joined striking Sheffield colleagues in their dispute over poverty pay. The Doncaster Bidvest Noonan workers voted overwhelmingly in a consultative ballot to join the dispute over their wealthy employer’s refusal to pay the real living wage of £12 an hour, despite First Bus contractors being obligated to do so. Cleaning and refuelling workers employed by Bidvest Noonan on behalf of First South Yorkshire at Sheffield’s Olive Grove depot began industrial action in September after being told their wages will not be increased above the legal minimum of £11.44 an hour. They are now ramping up strikes and will be joined in the coming weeks by their colleagues in Doncaster, who will soon begin a formal ballot for industrial action read more

Ealing parking free for all as traffic warden strikes intensify into November (3 Oct) – Council refusing to recognise traffic wardens’ union despite working with it to insource service. Strikes by Ealing traffic wardens will intensify from next week in a dispute over union recognition, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. Around 40 parking services workers employed by council-owned Greener Ealing Ltd have been on strike since late August over their employer’s refusal to recognise their long-term union Unite for pay and other matters. The workers were previously employed by Serco before being transferred to Greener Ealing Ltd earlier this year. Their roles are completely different to the rest of Greener Ealing’s waste management workforce. As a distinct group, they want Unite, which has represented the workers for a decade, recognised for collective bargaining on their behalf read more

Altrad workers at Sellafield to strike over broken pay promises (2 Oct) – Unite members offered four per cent less than previously promised by employer. Vital workers operating at Sellafield are to strike this month following a string of broken promises from their employer, Altrad Services. Unite members at the site, who are responsible for access and maintenance of the Fellside site which produces steam for the wider Sellafield site next door, are taking industrial action from 10-15 October, 17-22 October and 24-29 October 2024. Workers at the site are furious that their employer, Altrad Services, has reneged on previously agreed pay deals, potentially costing workers thousands of pounds. Members were originally advised and agreed to a 11.3 per cent rise in January 2024. Prior to that during the cost of living crisis, Altrad paid an additional four per cent salary increase which staff were told was permanent. However, Altrad have only now given members a 7.3 per cent rise, rather than the agreed 11.3 per cent – the reduction being the same as the cost of living increase. This broken promise and backtracking has caused outrage among staff who have been left with little choice but to take industrial action read more

Waterford City and Co Council: Stoppage by members at Dunmore Depot deferred pending engagement with management (1 Oct) – Dispute surrounds unilateral change to work practices. Unite, which represents members working for Waterford City and County Council, today (Tuesday) said that it has deferred a 24-hour work stoppage by Unite members at Dunmore Depot in Waterford, which had been scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday), as a gesture of good faith ahead of local engagement with management next week read more

Biomedical scientists in Yorkshire to strike over unsustainable workloads (26 Sept) – Unite members in York and Scarborough hospitals to walkout over fears about patient safety. Biomedical scientists at hospitals in York and Scarborough are to take strike action this autumn in protest over unsustainable workloads that are putting patient safety at risk. Microbiologists at York Hospital and blood scientists at Scarborough & Bridlington Hospital, both part of the York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals Foundation Trust, have been forced to continually deal with workloads far beyond safe levels.  Following a successful ballot, they will be taking strike action on 30 September, 7 October and 11 October 2024 read more

Llanelli Gestamp auto workers ballot for strike over poverty pay (19 Sept) – Industrial action would severely impact Nissan, BMW, JLR, Aston Martin and INEOS. Strikes by Llanelli Gestamp workers would severely impact the supply of critical parts to Nissan, BMW, JLR, Aston Martin and INEOS, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today. Around 200 workers on various grades are being balloted for strike action over unacceptably low pay offers by Gestamp. The Spanish-based company brought in revenues of €12.3 billion in 2023 and reported a profitability (EBITDA) of €1.4 billion. Despite Gestamp’s huge wealth, many of the workers at the Llanelli factory earn the national minimum wage and will only be taken slightly above it under the company’s current offer. Adding to the workers’ anger over poor pay is the fact that starter rates at Gestamp’s sister site in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, will rise to £13.77 in January 2025 read more

School staff to strike in Greenwich over job cuts and restructure, say unions (9 Sept) – Mulgrave School workers will walk out over threat to their livelihoods. Dozens of support staff at a London primary school are to strike on Wednesday (11 September) over a proposed restructure that would lead to 14 job cuts. Teaching assistants and other workers at Mulgrave School represented by Unite, GMB and Unison are walking out in response to Greenwich Council plans that involve scrapping flexible working arrangements, creating additional unpaid duties and cutting the pay of remaining workers. Staff represented by the three unions are furious at the plans and will be on the picket line to make their voices heard. The school and local authority have repeatedly failed to disclose the accounts to justify any restructuring and have called in neighbouring Hackney council to help support the restructure due to a lack of resource and expertise within Greenwich council read more

Unite will escalate ABC council dispute (5 Sept) – Bin workers based at Armagh depot suspend strikes but union members stand ready to defend reps. ABC council senior management have presided over a ‘hostile environment’ for union reps and their behaviour is ‘shameful’. Unite members employed in waste collection at the Armagh depot have voted to suspend a seven-week strike taken in response to the sacking of their union rep. Unite has vowed to continue to pursue justice for its sacked shop steward through all available avenues, including at employment tribunal where the council will have to justify its decision. The strike action will be suspended from midnight [Thursday] tonight with employees returning to work tomorrow. In a meeting notifying management of the decision to suspend, union officials demanded the council conduct an audit into its industrial practices, which they have agreed. The union has described the behaviour of senior council management at Armagh, Banbridge, Craigavon (ABC) council towards its team of workforce reps as ‘shameful’ and warned that any further aggression towards its reps or to the jobs, pay, terms and conditions of its members will be completely opposed by workers read more

Unite local government members prepare to ballot for autumn strikes as pay offer rejected (30 Aug) – Members of Unite, employed by local authorities in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, have overwhelmingly rejected, the local government employers’ pay offer for 2024/5. Members, who cover many frontline roles including refuse collection workers, housing workers and care staff, returned a 85 per cent rejection of the pay offer which is worth a £1,290 flat rate, plus 2.5 per cent on allowances. This offer fails to tackle poverty pay or reverse the years of real terms pay cuts experienced by local government workers…Unite is now undertaking a full industrial action ballot for its local authority members. Balloting will begin today (30 August) and if workers vote for industrial action then strikes could begin later this autumn. Local authority workers have endured over a decade of pay freezes and below inflation pay increases which has seen their pay decline by over a quarter in real terms read more

National Education Union staff to strike over unacceptable workloads (28 Aug) – Employer unwilling to meet with staff to address concerns. Nearly 30 workers at the National Education Union (NEU) headquarters in London are to take three days of strike action due to the attitudes of their employer and its failure to address concerns over workloads. Unite members working in administrative roles at the NEU will walk out on 11 September and 2-3 October after management refused to meet with them or engage in meaningful negotiations over their concerns. Staff have repeatedly raised the alarm over workloads that are causing high levels of stress and sickness among staff. Further issues over workplace bullying and how this is addressed by the NEU’s management have been ignored. Having exhausted internal procedures and with an intransigent management, staff have been left with no option but to take to the picket line read more

Glen Dimplex workers in Portadown to begin industrial action (12 Aug) – Dispute is a result of planned site closure, Unite has notified employer of work-to-rule, training and overtime ban. The workforce at Glen Dimplex will commence the first phase of industrial action including a work-to-rule from 00.01am on Friday 16 August. The industrial dispute is a result of plans by Glen Dimplex’s management to offshore work to Lithuania which will lead to redundancies and the potential closure of the site in Portadown… The work-to-rule will proceed indefinitely and will see workers refuse to undertake overtime, refuse to mentor or train new staff, and they will work to contractual terms and conditions and their job description only read more

Over 1,500 Ford white collar staff involved in nationwide industrial action (9 Aug) – Staff in Dunton, Stratford, Dagenham, Daventry and Halewood in dispute over pay and contract changes. Around 1,200 Ford office staff are joining hundreds of managers in taking industrial action over pay at sites across the country, Unite, the UK’s leading union, said today (Friday). Yesterday, the office staff voted in favour of strike action and will begin action short of strike action on 22 August. Ford managers already have a strike mandate and are currently engaging in industrial action short of strikes. Both sets of workers, who are based in Dunton, Stratford, Dagenham, Daventry and Halewood, are in dispute with Ford over unacceptable pay offers and contract changes. Coordinated strike action will be scheduled if the dispute is not resolved read more

Continuous strike action announced at by Unite members at UCU (7 Aug) – Unite the union staff working for the University and College Union (UCU) have today announced they will take all out continuous strike action in an escalation of industrial action. Around 200 members will indefinitely strike from 2 September if their employer doesn’t resolve their dispute over workplace racism, repeated breaches of their collective agreements, and broken industrial relations read more

Jiffy workers escalate strike action over “pathetic” pay offer (5 Aug) – Summer of discontent at north west packaging company. Over 50 workers at the Jiffy packaging plant in Winsford, Cheshire, are escalating their strike action this month following a pay offer from their employer that Unite general secretary Sharon Graham described as “pathetic”. Workers at the Cheshire factory are striking from today (5 Aug) until 17 August. They previously walked out  for two weeks in July but with Jiffy management still unwilling to come back to the negotiating table, staff have been left with little choice but to ramp up their industrial action campaign. Workers at the plant have been offered a mere 1.5 per cent pay increase despite a cost of living crisis and real rate of inflation (RPI) standing at 4.3 per cent, when the pay increase was due. Workers are therefore receiving a real-terms pay cut. Unite’s members are demanding an eight per cent pay increase backdated to the 1 April 2024. Additionally, workers are furious that they only receive eight weeks of sick pay and want to see an increase to 12 weeks alongside the reinstatement of breaks during the working day and changes to bank holiday working practices read more

Support the Sanctuary strikes – contact the Unite LE/1111 Housing Workers branch to offer support or if you are a housing worker wanting to get organised [email protected]

CWU

Capita’s ZERO pay offer risks industrial dispute (16 Oct) – Management refusal to offer a 2024 pay rise forces CWU to consider membership ballots. “Industrial action in is now a strong possibility, unless a serious pay offer is forthcoming,” CWU assistant secretary Andy Furey told CWU News today, after a meeting of one the union’s two industrial executives gave its formal approval to a ballot timetable in accordance with the law. Andy, who represents around 450 members working for the company’s BBC contract, explained that the decision to move forward with this plan had been “the last thing we wanted, but sadly, the failure of the business to make any pay offer at all in the seven months since the 2024 pay settlement date left us with no alternative…” read more

PCS  

You can show your support to the strikes by PCS members by:  

  • Making donations to the PCS Fighting Fund Levy account, sort code: 60-83-01, account no. 20331490  
  • Sending solidarity messages to [email protected]  

PCS rejects DWP pay offer (17 Oct) – The DWP has made its final 2024/2025 pay offer. Despite the Treasury remit of 5% seeing a headline figure above inflation (currently at 2.2%) for the first time in decades, the DWP group executive was clear that the department’s priorities and implementation failed to meet our aspirations for members and disadvantaged the lowest paid in particular. PCS has therefore formally rejected the DWP’s offer. We will now urgently move to consult members via pay meetings which will be held in every office, both face-to-face and on-line. Please attend the meeting for their workplace and let us know what you think of the offer and ensure you have your say about next steps in our campaign for fair pay in the DWP read more

Escalation of Facilities Management dispute (15 Oct) – PCS members working for G4S and ISS are set to strike in a dispute over pay, terms and conditions. PCS members employed by outsourcing giants ISS and G4S as security officers, receptionists, cleaners, caterers and porters are set to take 14 days of strike action in an escalation of their dispute over pay, terms and conditions. G4S members voted 100% for strike action and the ISS ballot was 97% in favour. The walkouts at the Department for Business and Trade, the Department for Science Innovation and Technology, and the Cabinet Office will take place from 28 October to 10 November read more

More strike action announced in ongoing OCS pay dispute (11 Oct) – The members working at the Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office in East Kilbride have announced another fifteen days’ strike action. PCS members working in cleaning and catering at Abercrombie House in East Kilbride have now taken nine days of strike action in their dispute with their employer OCS and the current period of walkouts will continue on 15, 17, 22 and 24 October. OCS are refusing to engage with PCS but we know that they are struggling to maintain cover on the days our members are taking industrial action and they are having to bring in cover from other regions. We met with the Government Property Agency last week to discuss the dispute and we continue to engage with the GPA. To keep up the pressure on the employer we have given notice of fifteen further days of strike action on 29, 30 and 31 October, 5, 6 and 7 November, 12, 13 and 14 November, 19, 20 and 21 November and 26, 27 and 28 November read more. There will be picket lines held on all dates between 7.30am and 10am at Abercrombie House, Eaglesham Rd, East Kilbride, G75 8EA. Messages of solidarity can be sent to [email protected]

New strike dates announced for G4S members in jobcentres (2 Oct) – The members will walk out for more dates in October and November in their long-running dispute over pay. The PCS members, employed by G4S as security guards in jobcentres, recently voted overwhelmingly to reject the pay offer made by G4S and to take further strike action. The pay offer made was just 32p per hour above the national living wage.  Members voted by 84% to reject the pay offer and by 89% for more strike action. The workers have already taken 41 days’ strike action in their dispute, resulting in jobcentres being closed and a reduced service being offered in others. The new strike dates are from 1pm on 18 October  to 11:59pm on 20 October, 1pm to 11.59pm on 21 October, from 1pm on 25 October to 11:59pm on 27th, 1pm to 11:59pm on 28 October and 1pm on 1 November to 11:59pm on 3 November, 1pm to 11:59pm on 4 November, 1pm on 8 November to 11.59pm on 10 November and 1pm to 11:59pm on 11 November read more

Trade unions support for sacked PCS reps (13 Sept) – Sacked PCS reps at HMRC Benton View Park are receiving widespread support from the trade union movement. At this week’s TUC Congress, over 100 signatures were collected from visitors to the PCS stall for the petition calling for them to be reinstated. This included TUC general secretary, Paul Nowak who signed to show his support read more. Email your local MP to ensure they add their support to the campaign

Enforced roster changes leave Heathrow Border Force members feeling suicidal (3 Sept) – PCS members working at passport control at Heathrow Airport have reported major adverse impacts to their family life, physical and mental wellbeing as a result of enforced roster changes. Amongst over 250 responses to our survey, PCS members were unequivocal in their condemnation of the changes to the roster, with several members reporting that not only were they finding it difficult to maintain a work life balance, but that several had lost access to their children completely…Members on the picket line at Heathrow airport during the four days of strike action that finish today have been holding signs with personal testimonies, including: “I’m so tired that I’m scared I’ll make a mistake” and “The shifts are so long that I just never feel like I have a break from work.” After a solidarity visit to the picket line from Hayes and Harlington MP John McDonnell, , members are more determined than ever. Plans are in place for more parliamentary work to help bring the dispute to the attention of the new government. The members will now follow a work-to-rule and overtime ban until 22 September read more

National campaign update for members (16 Aug) – Following the publication of the civil service pay remit guidance, the national executive committee (NEC) met on 12 August to consider the way forward for our national campaign read more

Cuts to jobcentre security staffing (14 Aug) – G4S, the private contractor that provides security to jobcentres, has announced plans to cut the number of security guards. PCS has written to the DWP permanent secretary to express serious concerns about plans by G4S to cut the number of security guards across the Jobcentre network. The letter asks the DWP to stop any planned reductions and to restore the number of security guards where they have already been removed. We believe that it is scandalous that the DWP are allowing G4S to reduce security staffing at a time when there are increasing numbers of serious incidents in Jobcentres and public safety is being threatened by the rise of violent activity by the far-right. DWP have allowed G4S to undertake “risk assessments” in sites where they are proposing that numbers of guards are reduced or removed, but have failed to consult with PCS health and safety representatives as is legally required. PCS has consulted with members in Sudbury and Mildenhall in Suffolk where the security guards have been removed entirely. Members in these sites have been subjected to serious incidents in the past and feel very vulnerable as a result of the closure of local police stations, meaning that members can no longer rely on a swift intervention by the police. Following the consultation, members have indicated that they are prepared to take industrial action in support of their security guard colleagues facing redundancy and for their own safety. PCS is hoping to meet with DWP officials to discuss the situation and find a solution that avoids the need to formally ballot members facing safety concerns. However, if a satisfactory outcome cannot be achieved, we will ballot members for industrial action read more

Use the e-action to fight de-recognition of PCS at the Imperial War Museum – The e-action sends an email to the director general asking her to halt plans to derecognise PCS, and preserve workers’ voices and rights. On 6 March, Imperial War Museum Director Francoise Harris wrote to PCS, FDA and Prospect unions confirming that they wish to derecognise PCS and FDA and move forward with only one union, Prospect. The three unions, Prospect, PCS, and FDA have a constructive and collaborative relationship and all three have appealed to management at the IWM not to derecognise PCS and FDA read more

Sign our petition for members in Hinduja Global Solutions to keep their jobs – Members in HGS in Liverpool have been told they will need to relocate 40 miles to keep their jobs. In November 2023 Hinduja Global Solutions announced a significant restructure on the Disclosure and Barring Service contract, which they planned to take effect from 1 April 2024. Staff were told that the restructure was a direct result of the new contract for services between HGS and DBS. The impact on PCS members in Liverpool has been damaging because the changes mean a 41% reduction in headcount (later reduced to a 26% cut) and withdrawal of all staff from the Tithebarn Street office, meaning HGS would no longer have a presence in the city read more

Prospect

Prospect agrees multi-year pay deal at MOLA in industry first (16 Oct) – Prospect trade union has agreed an industry first, multi-year deal with MOLA after constructive negotiations read more

GMB  

Ramadan headscarf workers vote to strike (17 Oct) – Ramadan headscarf workers have voted to strike over poor pay and punishing targets. Dozens of worker at Lappet Manufacturing, in Carlisle, will walk out on the following dates:-

30 and 31 October, 2 and 3 November, 6 and 7 November, 9 and 10 November, 13 and 14 November, 16 and 17 November. These skilled workers – who specialise in weaving high end headscarves for the Saudi Arabian market – need years of experience to meet required standards read more

Winter walk-out headache for British Gas over supplier strike (15 Oct) – Strike action by contractors in the energy giant’s supply chain could lead to delays, says GMB. GMB Union has announced today that workers at British Gas supplier TVS Supply Chain Solutions have voted overwhelmingly for strike action. More than 90 per cent of workers rejected the company’s pay offer and were willing to take industrial action, which comes after 10 months of talks and a three year pay-freeze for TVS staff. The company provides parts and maintenance support across British Gas home heating products, including home boilers and metering. Around 150 workers at the company’s Leicester and Coventry HQ are expected to take eight days of strike action between 18 – 21 and 25 -28 October 2024 read more

Tetley’s workers walk out again (9 Oct) – Tetley workers will walk out again today as GMB announce 12 more strike dates. Almost 150 GMB members working at Tata Consumer Products, which makes Tetley Tea in Teesside, will down tools in anger at ‘poverty pay’. Dates of further industrial action, likely to be during the next two months, will be announced in the coming days read more

Brighton & Hove Council refuses talks on multi-million pound equal pay claims (10 Oct) – Any hope that the employer would engage with GMB union early have been dashed – now staff must make legal claims. Brighton and Hove Council has refused to talk to workers about their multi million pound equal pay claim, GMB Union has said. GMB members at the council have submitted equal pay claims on the advice of their union. The claims relate to historic underpayment of roles within the council, predominantly carried out by women. In less than a week, the deadline to submit claims – potentially worth thousands of pounds each – will expire. As part of the equal pay process GMB has not only written to the council requesting talks but also asked the Government’s independent conciliation service Acas to facilitate talks. To date the council has refused to engage with GMB or Acas read more

‘Penny-pinching’ in store could lead to strike action if management don’t take action, says GMB (7 Oct) – Members of GMB, the union for Asda, are warning management at the Trowbridge store that they are prepared to take strike action unless conditions improve. In June 2024, a majority of staff in the store submitted a grievance about poor management at the store, and inadequate staffing levels. GMB then carried out a consultative ballot, which showed that members were in favour of taking action if matters do not improve. Complaints made by members include the music being played over the PA system ‘like being stuck in the lift at an undertakers’ and more generally that morale at the store is very low read more

Asda Skelton faces strike (18 Sept) – Asda Skelton faces strike action after workers voted to walk out. More than 110 staff at the store will talk industrial action in anger at health and safety issue, a loss of working hours in the store and the wider fight for equal pay. A protest will take place outside the store tomorrow [September 19] at 11.30am. The ballot saw a total of 575 per cent of GMB members vote to walk out. Strike dates will be announced in the coming days read more

Farmfoods faces frosty future as workers down tools (19 Sept) – Workers at fast growing food retailer will take strike action on Monday. GMB Union has today announced that Farmfoods workers at a Solihull distribution centre will take part in a two-day walkout in a dispute over pay, conditions and union rights. The campaign to improve conditions has already seen work rates fall by over 15%, but workers are furious after company managers have turned down requests for union recognition and fair pay. The strike action will take place on Tuesday 24 and Wednesday 25 September, with around 100 workers expected to take part read more

Consultative ballot open for Wexham Park Radiographers (17 Sept) – Stakes rise as radiographers at Wexham Park Hospital vote to protect NHS service provision. Members of GMB, the union at NHS Frimley Health Foundation Trust, are voting in a consultative ballot in a dispute against the outsourcing of radiology services. The proposed contractor, InHealth, already provide some Diagnostic and Imaging Services to the NHS and run contracts worth over £300 million per year. The union members are employed as Radiographers, Radiology Assistants and associated support staff at Wexham Park Hospital near Slough. A grievance has previously been submitted to the Trust’s Chief Executive Lance McCarthy and Chairman Bryan Ingleby, with a formal meeting date to discuss concerns yet to be scheduled. The ballot opened on Friday and remains open until Friday 27 September and may lead to a formal industrial action ballot, pending the result read more

Leicestershire faces waste chaos as strike action looms (11 Sept) – Workers in the County’s tips are balloting for industrial action. GMB Union has today announced that workers in Leicestershire waste and recycling centres will begin balloting for strike action. The news comes after Leicestershire County Council announced plans to slash wages by as much as £1300 for workers at the sites in a bid to cut spending. Around 50 workers are expected to take part in the vote read more

Concrete makers escalate strike as fat cat bosses wine and dine (6 Sept) –Dozens of GMB members at Acheson & Glover’s (A&G) Toome are escalating industrial action. Further strike action comes after ‘fat cat’ bosses were wined and dined and a swanky awards ceremony. The workers, who make up more than 70 per cent of the workforce at the plant producing pavers and flagstones, will begin their fifth week of strike action on Monday [9 September]. The dispute arose when staff were offered a 2.5 per cent pay increase for 2024/2025, representing a real terms pay cut with RPI inflation at 3.1 per cent. The company announced pre-tax profits of £3.4m, while this week bosses wined and dined each other at a lavish awards ceremony read more

Fifteen more Birmingham schools begin equal pay strike vote (22 Aug) – Second wave of Birmingham Equal Pay school strikes could be imminent. GMB union has today announced that fifteen additional Birmingham City Council schools are set to vote on joining industrial action, following the Council’s ongoing failure to resolve the City’s equal pay crisis. The escalation comes after support staff in thirty five schools across the city downed tools and took strike action earlier this year. Council bosses are facing criticism for the lack of meaningful progress towards a resolution. This week a body of accountants and researchers have called for an independent inquiry into the Council’s issuing of two Section 114 Notices, effectively declaring itself bankrupt. Over 250 school workers will take part in the new ballot which would bring the total number of Birmingham schools facing strike action to fifty. Balloting will begin today [Thursday 22 August] with a result expected mid-September read more

London City Airport faces first ever strike after workers shun pay deal (20 Aug) – GMB Union today (Wednesday) warns that London City Airport is facing the first major stoppage in its 37-year history following a 100 per cent rejection of the employer’s pay offer in July. Workers are demanding that management at Gatwick Ground Services (GGS), must offer pay parity with counterparts working at Gatwick Airport who are paid at least 17 per cent more, and enjoy other fringe benefits that the City Airport workers are denied. Management at GGS has delayed getting back to the negotiating table, giving rise to additional frustration and anger among GMB members working at the airport read more

Bathroom workers back strike action (20 Aug) – Ideal Standard’s Rugeley factory workers have backed strike action over years of real term pay cuts. Workers have been left disappointed by a suggested pay uplift that would not correct previous below inflation pay read more

Unison  

Donate to support striking workersAs UNISON members continue to take strike action, the union is asking for donations to its strike fund  

Stop the Council Cuts – Sign the petition: Save our Services – Nottingham City

Pay growth and joined-up approach to care are key to NHS plan (21 Oct) – Health staff to be consulted on NHS future. Commenting on the launch of the government consultation for its ten-year health plan, UNISON head of health Helga Pile said today (Monday): “The previous government mismanaged the NHS for years, leaving services in a perilous state and workers exhausted. Staff will welcome the chance to have their views considered. But it’s hard for health workers to think about the future of the NHS, when they’re worried about their growing workload and making their wages go far enough…” read more

Former Ofsted inspector wins unfair dismissal case after being sacked for brushing water off a child’s head (18 Oct) – A former Ofsted inspector was unfairly dismissed when bosses sacked him for brushing water off a child’s head, the Court of Appeal has found. Andrew Hewston was sacked for gross misconduct following the incident in October 2019. UNISON, who represented Andrew, said Ofsted was wrong to waste public funds pursuing its former inspector through the courts. Andrew Hewston should now receive compensation for his sacking, having won yesterday (17 October) and in the courts last year. In August 2023, the employment appeal tribunal overturned an original employment tribunal judgment and ruled Ofsted had been wrong to dismiss him read more

UNISON relaunches gold standard menopause policy for staff (17 Oct) – Menopause is not just a personal issue – it is a workplace issue that impacts productivity, retention, and employee wellbeing read more

Support Manchester EIS Strike – Mental Health workers in Early Intervention in Psychosis will be on strike. It’s not over pay, which is not enough, but over serious concerns for the service, it’s users, & the community. Show your support. @MancStrikeNHS. Picket line: Wed 16th October, 8am -11am outside Prestwich Hospital, M25 3BL

Support the East Suffolk and North Essex NHS support staff strikes – Cleaners, caterers, porters, housekeepers and other East Suffolk and North Essex support staff are striking to stay in the NHS. They want to defend the quality of services they provide to the public as well as their own pay and conditions read more

Plans by Essex trust for mass outsourcing of NHS services are out of order (18 Sept)

Strikes will close schools for two weeks in first minister John Swinney’s constituency (8 Oct) – UNISON, the largest local government union, has notified Perth and Kinross Council that schools and early years centres will close for two weeks from 21 October, in a pay dispute that affects all council staff in Scotland, the union says today (Tuesday) read more

Workers at Livv Housing to strike as pay and conditions row heightens (7 Oct) – HUNDREDS of workers at a housing association are set to go on strike next week as a dispute of pay and conditions intensifies read more on website of St Helens Star

Local government strike ballot could be extended to more workers (10 Sept) – Scotland’s largest local government union is considering widening its strike ballot to more than 90,000 staff in councils and associated services over pay. The move comes after all council workers in the union overwhelmingly rejected Cosla’s latest pay offer in a consultative ballot a week ago read more

Council workers vote overwhelmingly to reject latest pay offer (3 Sept) – Council staff in Scotland belonging to UNISON have voted overwhelmingly to reject the latest pay offer from local government employers, says the union today (Tuesday) read more

Strike ballots to be issued to staff working in social care charity (6 Sept) – Hundreds of staff working for Enable, one of Scotland’s largest charitable social care providers, are to be asked if they’re prepared to strike over pay, UNISON says today (Friday). UNISON has written to the charity to say that if its workers back industrial action there could be mass walkouts by Enable Scotland’s social care staff later in the autumn. The union says this is the first strike ballot for over a decade in Scotland’s charitable social care sector and shows the deep dissatisfaction that exists over pay read more

Lancashire County Council – Social Care Support Worker Strikes (16 Aug) – The Chair of the Social Work Forum has sent a message of support to staff in social work teams across Lancashire who are taking a second round of strike action over salary grades and working cover read more

NIPSA

NIPSA Announces Strike Action In Children’s Social Work Teams Over Unsafe Staffing Levels (21 Oct) – NIPSA (Northern Ireland Public Service Alliance) has announced three days of strike involving members working in Children’s Social Work across Gateway and Family Support & Intervention Teams (FSIT) within the Northern Health and Social Care Trust. The strike will take place from Wednesday 25 October to Friday 27 October 2024 in response to a growing crisis in the sector caused by serious workforce shortages and unmanageable workloads read more

Statement From HSC Trade Unions Northern Ireland (4 Oct) – Health Trade Unions in Northern Ireland have met with Health Minister Mike Nesbitt in our first engagement regarding pay for 2024/25. We pressed for this engagement as time is ticking on and there is still no clarity or certainty about our pay uplift for AFC staff working in health and social care in NI, an uplift that was due from April 2024. We clearly set out our frustration with the continuing time lag for health pay movement. We continue to be almost a year behind other parts of the UK NHS read more

Royal College of Nursing  

Nursing must be at heart of plan to fix NHS, says RCN, as public consultation begins (21 Oct) – Members urged to share expert views to shape 10-year vision for the NHS in England read more

Nursing must be at heart of plan to fix NHS, says RCN, as public consultation begins (21 Oct) – Members urged to share expert views to shape 10-year vision for the NHS in England read more

NHS pay consultation in England: members vote reject (23 Sept) – Two-thirds of members who voted said the 5.5% pay award isn’t enough read more

NHS pay award in Wales: our consultation is now open (25 Sept) – Two weeks ago, the Welsh government announced a 5.5% pay award for NHS staff on Agenda for Change contracts in Wales. As an award, this will be implemented in November and backdated to April 2024 read more

RCN opens donations to strike fund in response to public desire to support striking staff – We’ve launched a donation page for people to financially help nursing staff on strike read more  

RCM

RCM press for progress on pay for members in Northern Ireland (7 Oct) – The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) in Northern Ireland says it’s pressing the Government for progress on an overdue pay award for its members. Midwives and maternity support workers (MSWs) in Northern Ireland were due their pay uplift on 1 April and the RCM says its completely ‘unfair’ that its members remain in limbo. The RCM alongside colleagues from other HSC trade unions last week met with the Health Minister, Mike Nesbitt to press for immediate progress, with the RCM saying the delay is eroding staff morale, particularly as there have been announcements for members in all other parts of the UK read more

RCM urges members in Wales to have their say on pay award (23 Sept) – The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) is calling on all its members working in NHS in Wales to have their say on the 5.5% pay award announced by Wales First Minister Eluned Morgan earlier this month. The call comes as the RCM today opens a two-week consultation with midwives and maternity support workers (MSWs) in Wales. The RCM says it’s pleased the award is above inflation which meets the asks set out in its pay claim and that it’s on a par with what midwives and MSWs will receive in England read more

CSP

NHS pay across the UK (24 Sept) – As pay for 2024-25 moves forward in three of the four UK countries we look at the latest information read more

Scotland – members overwhelmingly vote to accept offer

Wales – members should look out for their opportunity to have their say

England – the majority of members feel the award is acceptable

Northern Ireland – awaiting Executive response to PRB recommendations

SOR

SoR refers Royal Devon University NHS Trust to pension regulator over bank pay dispute (16 Oct) – The Society of Radiographers has escalated a dispute with the Royal Devon NHS Trust to the Pension Regulator over pension opt-out concerns read more

Northern Ireland health trade unions meet with health minister over pay (9 Oct) – With health staff in Northern Ireland still almost a year behind other parts of the UK, health trade unions pressed for clarity over uplifts read more

SoR seeks responses from members in Wales on NHS pay award (2 Oct) – The 37th NHS Pay Review Body report has resulted in an offering of 5.5 per cent to radiographers and other NHS professionals read more

Pay award consultation for Scottish SoR members open now (4 Sept) – The Society wants to hear responses from members in Scotland over the proposed 5.5 per cent pay increase read more

BMA  

GPs prepare to take collective action after overwhelming ballot result (1 Aug) – GPs across England have voted overwhelmingly in favour of taking collective action. More than 8,500 GPs in England took part in the ballot and 98.3% voted in favour of taking part in one or more examples of collective action read more 

NEU

Further Education pay recommendation 2024/25 (11 Oct) – All staff working in FE deserve better than this deeply unsatisfactory offer read more

STRB Report and Government response consultation (7 Oct) – Joint unions welcome the 5.5% pay increase for this year but this must be the first of steps to reverse pay cuts read more

Support the following NEU strikes:-

ActionDateContent
Wirral Send Team/ Wirral (Changes to Terms & Conditions)29-31 OctIan Harris [email protected]

Support staff pay – NEU members voted overwhelmingly (92% in England and 96% in Wales) to reject the offer. Similar consultations in NJC recognised unions led to Unison and Unite also rejecting the offer, though GMB have accepted it. NEU have already conducted an indicative ballot that indicated a willingness to take industrial action in support of the NJC claim alongside others, as well as a willingness to take industrial action on pay and funding alongside NEU teacher members. The vote and turnout strongly suggest that a formal ballot of support staff would return a legal mandate to take action in both scenarios. Therefore, we are approaching Unison and Unite to discuss co-ordinated action in pursuit of the claim. The ‘snap poll’ of state funded teachers in September may also open possibilities of co-ordinated action in schools in the next academic year. More details and the latest support staff newsletter are available here

NASUWT

Teachers strike after failure to make progress on behaviour and wellbeing (8 Oct) – On Wednesday 9th and Thursday 10th October, members of NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union, at Ysgol Nantgwyn, Rhondda Cynon Taff, will take strike action after promises of change from the employer to deal with poor pupil behaviour failed to materialise read more

Northumberland teachers strike to save jobs (7 Oct) – Members of NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union are continuing their campaign of strike action at three middle schools in Northumberland following the failure of Northumberland County Council to engage in meaningful consultation over plans to close the schools, which has resulted in over 100 redundancy notices being issued. The council wants to close Glendale, Tweedmouth and Berwick Middle Schools as part of a move to a primary and secondary school system. The NASUWT have tried for months to secure firm commitments from the Council and from Berwick Partnership Headteachers, to put in place real mitigations to avoid unnecessary compulsory job losses and teachers took strike action earlier this year in June. Teachers begin the first of seven days of strike action over the next three weeks beginning today (Monday 7 October). They will be on strike on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday this week and further action will take place on Tuesday 22, Wednesday 23 and Thursday 24 October. Members will be demonstrating on Berwick Bridge on Monday and Tuesday between 8am and 9.15am and National Executive Member John Hall will be available to speak to media on Tuesday 8 October on Berwick Bridge read more

Lincolnshire teachers strike for safe and healthy working conditions (30 Sept) – Members of NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union at The Deepings School in Lincolnshire will take two days of strike action tomorrow (Tuesday) and Wednesday over working practices and a management culture which is driving up teachers’ workload and failing to support them to promote positive pupil behaviour. The strike action will take place despite extensive negotiations by the NASUWT with the employer, Anthem Schools Trust. NASUWT called off planned strike action last July after a series of talks on the key concerns facing members. It was agreed there would be consultation with union reps on those issues. However, on returning to school for the new academic year union members were presented with a revised policy on pupil behaviour that had not been agreed or even discussed with reps. Workload, due to staff shortages and management actions is a significant and growing problem in the school and new staff are expected to work through their lunchbreak as part of “The Anthem Way” read more

INTO

Message to members Re: Submission of Levels of Progression (16 Oct) – Schools will have received a letter today in relation to the submission of Levels of Progression to enable DE to carry out a systems check. I wish to stress that INTO strongly opposed this decision by the Minister and have made it clear to DE that this is a breach of previous agreements with the unions. We, with our colleagues across the teaching unions, can assure you that we will continue to raise our objections strongly in the coming days. We will keep you informed of progress read more

UCU  

UCU response to ‘disappointing’ further education pay recommendation (11 Oct) – UCU has today responded to the latest further education pay recommendation from the Association of Colleges (AoC). The further education employer body is recommending a pay offer of 2.5% or £750, whichever is greater. As part of the union’s New Deal For FE campaign, UCU members are calling for a 10% or £3k pay rise along with: parity with schoolteacher pay, a minimum starting salary of £30,000, closure of equality pay gaps, national agreements on workload, a return to national bargaining read more

New strike date at five North East colleges (25 Sept) – The University and College Union (UCU) has today announced a further strike date at five colleges in Cleveland, Redcar and Stockton-on-Tees. UCU members at Bede Sixth Form College, NETA Training Group, Stockton Riverside College, The Skills Academy, and Redcar and Cleveland College will down tools on Thursday 10 October as part of a long running dispute over pay read more

UCU calls on Open University to withdraw fire and rehire threat (20 Sept) – UCU today called on the Open University (OU) to scrap its plans to fire and rehire staff. The OU first began consulting on fire and rehire plans in 2023 and expects to cut up to 26 tutor jobs by January 2025, if the tutors refuse to have their working hours and pay reduced.  If tutors are fired and rehired, they would have the reduction of hours and pay imposed, without compensation read more

University of Hull carbon neutral campus plans go ‘up in smoke’ as strike ballot opens (30 Aug) – A strike ballot will open on Monday 2 September at the University of Hull over plans to sack up to 127 staff. The latest round of cuts comes after the closure of a voluntary severance scheme in May (2024) that led to 107 employees already leaving the university read more

Joint statement on this week’s New JNCHES dispute resolution meetings (23 Aug) – UCEA and the five trade unions (EIS, GMB, UCU, UNISON and Unite) met in two dispute resolution meetings on Monday 19 August and Thursday 22 August 2024 read more

Staff at Sheffield Hallam University set to strike (9 Aug) – Staff at Sheffield Hallam University will take four days of industrial action in September in defence of jobs and employment conditions, the UCU has announced today. Members of UCU at the university will strike from Monday 23 September until Thursday 26 September following a ballot that saw 87% of those voting agreeing to take action read more

UCU fighting fund:the link is here and donations to the fund are spent on supporting members involved in important disputes.  

  

FBU

FBU to review report into South Wales fire and rescue service (17 Oct) – A report by the Welsh Government’s Chief Fire and Rescue Advisor (CFRA) into the South Wales Fire and Rescue Service has raised concerns regarding the safety of firefighters and the public, training and operational procedures, and made a series of recommendations read more

FBU calls for end to “embarassment and disruption” in West Midlands fire service (15 Oct) – The FBU has raised concerns over recent events in West Midlands fire and rescue service, which have seen both the Chair of the Fire Authority and the fire service’s Chief resign read more

“Rebuild our fire service” – a thousand firefighters rally to demand action from government (8 Oct) – Around a thousand firefighters have rallied today in central London to demand that the new government take urgent measures to rebuild the fire and rescue service. The rally, organised by the Fire Brigades Union, drew attendance from firefighters and fire control staff across the UK. Speakers included Matt Wrack, FBU general secretary, rank and file firefighters, MPs, and international speakers representing firefighters in Greece and Italy. During 14 years of Conservative rule, the fire service lost 1 in 5 firefighter jobs, and 30% of its central government funding. Response times rose steadily to their worst ever level. Decades of fragmentation have also created a postcode lottery on fire cover, with no national standards covering issues such as crewing, response times, equipment, training, and so on. Labour promised in its manifesto to re-introduce national standards in the fire and rescue service, and to repeal the latest anti-union laws read more

POA  

National Chair Update September 2024 read more

NHS Staff Side Seat (21 Oct) – The Health Unions met on Thursday 17th October 2024 as part of the NHS Staff side and on the agenda was the constitution of the composition of the Staff side. I am delighted to announce after many years of campaigning the POA have been voted on to the full Staff side with voting rights. I am grateful to all the Health Unions that supported us having that right. The history of this was that the POA did not have a seat on the NHS Staff side at all. Previous General Secretaries had those internal dialogues with other trade unions but to no avail. In 2010 I raised the issue internally within the TUC but was met with the same resistance but in 2012 a breakthrough came where we were given observer status within the NHS Staff side in England/Wales. I made it clear that whilst this was a step in the right direction for our members at Rampton, Mersey Care and Broadmoor that the POA would not rest until we had a full seat with voting rights read more

Membership actions in the campaign to repeal Section 127 of the Criminal Justice Public Order Act 1994 (11 Oct) – Our campaign to repeal Section 127 of the Criminal Justice Public Order Act 1994 was launched at the TUC with a motion which was unanimously approved by all trade unions who were present. The POA also had a stand where documentation was given out explaining our position. Copies of that document can be found on the POA website. I would ask all POA members to familiarise themselves with that document. A short film was produced at the TUC and indeed at the Labour Party Conference where the POA also had a stand where many members of Parliament attended and spoke to National Officials about our campaign including the Prisons Minister James Timpson. If you haven’t already viewed the two short films, they are available on the POA website and I would urge all POA members to view the short films. The NEC will be holding a parliamentary briefing for all MPs and Lords and invitations have been sent out, so we are hoping for a large turnout, but we also need your help read more

Launch of POA Briefing – “the right to strike” – Please find attached a letter from the Prime Minister and my response, together with a copy of “The Right to Strike” Briefing here

Prison officers demand the right to strike – POA publish briefing paper for TUC and Labour Conferences 2024 – Read the POAs briefing paper for TUC and Labour conferences 2024 here

NAPO

Early release prisoners at risk of recall because of lack of resources (21 Oct) – Tomorrow 22nd October will see the release of approximately 1100 prisoners at the 40% stage of their sentence. The first tranche of SDS40 releases placed a huge amount of additional work on Probation staff across England and Wales. This continues as even more work has been involved in preparing for the second tranche of releases. As Napo feared would be the case, our members have reported that a significant number of those released so far have been already been recalled to custody. We call on HMPPS to be clear to the public about the results of the first tranche of the SDS40 scheme, for instance how many people have been recalled or committed serious further offences. It is important that this is monitored and reported on throughout the lifetime of this scheme, for all those released under these provisions read more

Government agree to re-open pay talks (2 Aug) – Napo’s Probation Negotiating Committee met yesterday to consider a pay offer that had received the personal endorsement of the new Lord Chancellor Shabana Mahmood.  While the PNC noted that the offer does not wholly satisfy the terms of Napo’s current trade dispute on pay and workloads, it follows the joint unions’ campaign to re-open the three year pay award to give probation staff more pay now. The unions submitted a claim to get more pay back in 2023, which HMPPS rejected in April this year. But following votes in the UNISON and Napo consultative ballots of members which showed strong support for consideration of industrial action, the change of government, the escalating prison overcrowding crisis and the embarrassment of probation pay falling further and further behind prison pay, HMPPS finally agreed to re-open the award and offer more money in this final year of the Multi Year Pay Deal MYPD to our members. Of course, It would have been better if the employer had done this much earlier, but their hands were tied by the previous Conservative government. The HMPPS offer would not have happened without the unions’ campaign to re-open the pay talks over the last year and a half read more

BFAWU 

Support the campaign to unionise Samworth Brothers – get organised, sign the petition read more  

Nautilus International

Mounting pressure on government to resolve RFA pay dispute (23 Sept) – Members of Nautilus International working for the Royal Fleet Auxiliary stepped up their dispute with employers on Sunday 22 September with a rally outside the Labour Party Conference in Liverpool. The protest was part of the ongoing dispute between RFA officers and the Ministry of Defence (MoD), which oversees the service. Nautilus members are demanding the government end years of stagnating wages, and cuts to vital services leaving many feeling overworked, underpaid and undervalued read more

NUJ   

NUJ condemns abuse of counter-terror legislation as harmful to media freedom (21 Oct) – “The UK government cannot on one hand state its commitment to valuing media freedom whilst endorsing the targeting of journalists through raids and seizures” says Michelle Stanistreet, NUJ general secretary. The National Union of Journalists has condemned the rising use of counter-terrorism legislation against journalists as an intimidatory measure harmful to public interest journalism and press freedom. The NUJ recognises the raid of journalist Asa Winstanley’s home on Thursday 17 October 2024, part of so-called ‘Operation Incessantness’, as the latest in a string of targeted approaches by police officers using anti-terror legislation and contributing to a concerning police culture where the rights of journalists and their ability to ensure the safety of sources is placed at risk read more

​​​​​​​NUJ agrees pay deal for PA journalists and concludes detail of landmark recognition agreement (18 Oct) – Low pay, improved transparency and pay stagnation were among member concerns discussed in negotiations read more

Guardian & Observer journalists hold consultative ballot over proposed sale of The Observer (17 Oct) – The consultative ballot in place over the next week, follows opposition from the NUJ at the sale to Tortoise Media read more

NUJ condemns RELX for its union-busting decision to derecognise the union at LexisNexis and LexisNexis Risk Solutions (4 Oct) – The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has today received notification from LexisNexis and LexisNexis Risk Solutions (formerly RBI) of its intention to terminate long-standing recognition agreements with the union. The NUJ strongly condemns the decision, urging a reversal of the ill-judged attempt to remove collective bargaining rights from journalists and editorial workers read more

Equity

Actor’s experience of AI gone wrong (17 Oct) – When international media reports exposed the ‘fake news’ his avatar was peddling for a Venezuelan propaganda campaign, Dan Dewhirst found himself exposed and with few protections. He turned to Equity read more

Equity backs call for Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club archive (17 Oct) – Equity is supporting the Friends of Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club campaign to collect a BGWMC archive. Equity is encouraging members to share their experiences of working at or attending Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club (BGWMC) as part of the ongoing campaign to save the iconic London venue read more

WNO chorus strike remains paused following constructive discussions with new interim management (7 Oct) – Equity members in the chorus of the Welsh National Opera vote to continue to pause strike action, meaning they will not go on strike on Friday 11 October read more

Musicians’’ Union

MU Statement on Northern Ballet and Opera North Partnership (18 Oct) – The MU is deeply concerned to learn that Northern Ballet have announced plans which may cut their long-standing orchestra players read more

Welsh National Opera Orchestra Take Industrial Action Over Proposed Pay Cuts (24 Sept) – Musicians in the Welsh National Opera orchestra took Action Short of Strike on Saturday 21 September read more

Community

Community blasts HelloFresh’s mass dismissal of workers (10 Oct) – Community has blasted HelloFresh’s disgraceful decision to immediately dismiss 79 workers at their Nuneaton warehouse read more

USDAW

Employment Rights Bill: Usdaw urges MPs to unanimously back the plan to make work pay and jobs more secure (21 Oct) – Retail trade union Usdaw welcomes today’s second reading of the Employment Rights Bill and urges all MPs to support the general principles of making work pay and improving job security. The union also looks forward to engaging with the Government on the Bill, through the consultations launched today as well as the remaining stages in the Commons and Lords read more

Tesco distribution workers at eight sites reject a less than 5% pay offer – Usdaw consults members on industrial action (28 Aug) – Retail distribution trade union Usdaw has launched a consultation ballot, asking Tesco workers at eight sites across Great Britain if they are prepared to take a dispute over pay to industrial action. Members at all eight sites overwhelmingly rejected Tesco’s pay offer of between 2% plus £500 and 4.4%, depending on contract, along with some additional enhancements. The eight sites affected are: Hinckley, Magor, Southampton, Daventry Clothing, Goole, Lichfield, Livingston and Peterborough. The consultative ballot will run from 9 to 24 September 2024 read more

UVW

Security guards at the Natural History and Science museums vote overwhelmingly to strike! (9 Oct) – “We’re going through all this pain but we don’t show it. Yet the Museum looks at us as second-class citizens; directly employed staff get frequent breaks but we don’t. We do our best for the millions of people that come through the doors and all the high-profile events with politicians, billionaires, celebrities, and royalty that we look after” – Sempijja Juma, Science Museum security guard and UVW member. Outsourced security guards at the Natural History and Science museums, who are members of United Voices of the World (UVW) union, have overwhelmingly voted to strike with 96% in favour out of a 95% turnout, in a fight for better pay and conditions. They will walk out on the weekend of the 25 – 27 of October read more

IWGB

Find out more about the couriers’ strikes on the X/twitter of the IWGB Couriers’ branch @IWGB_CLB

SIPTU (Ireland)

SIPTU members in Becton Dickinson in Drogheda commence industrial action today (25 Sept) – SIPTU members employed in the Becton Dickinson manufacturing plant in Drogheda, County Louth, commenced a ‘work-to-rule’ industrial action today due to the failure of management to meaningfully engage with their Union concerning the threatened closure of the facility read more

Citizens Information Service staff vote in favour of strike action (23 Sept) – SIPTU members employed in the Citizens Information Service have voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action in a dispute over pay in a ballot counted this morning in Liberty Hall, Dublin read more

Other news  

Affiliate with STAMMA – at this year’s NSSN Conference, Gary Clark retired CWU Royal Mail rep and a member of the NSSN Steering Committee spoke about STAMMA. STAMMA’s Employment Support Service helps people who stammer as well as those who don’t around issues related to stammering in the workplace. Union branches and regions can affiliate with STAMMA to access a range of services and support at a reduced rate. 

  • £75 for branches and regions 
  • £125 for national unions with under 400,000 members 
  • £200 for national unions with 400,000+ members 

STAMMA website  

Day of Action against Starbucks, 26th October – On Saturday, 26th October, STAMMA and the Stammering Pride community call for change in how Starbucks treats people who stammer. Many in our community have faced difficulties and ridicule when ordering in coffee shops. After hearing from over 1,500 of you, we shared a guide full of recommendations with all major coffee chains. Most responded, but not Starbucks. Starbucks’ policy of asking customers for their names to write on cups creates barriers for people who stammer which is why we’re asking for a discussion about making their stores more inclusive read more

Protests:-

London: 13b Hanover Square, W1S 1HN

London: 3 Tower Place, London EC3R 5BT

Liverpool: Ranelagh St, L1 1JW

Glasgow: 27 Sauchiehall Street, GS 3AT

Doncaster: Silk Road, DN2 4LT

Grimsby: Cleethorpes Road, DN313BP

Sign this petition: To the Right Honourable Steve Barclay, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and The Right Honourable Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister – Make toxic landfills safe – Support ‘Zane’s Law’!  Find out more about this campaign here

Make Equality Real – campaign call 23 October – We are a coalition of 14 national trade unions, community & campaign groups.We believe that social economic duty should be written into the Equality Act 2010 as part of a campaign to end austerity and make equality real. Ensuring that everyone in Britain can live secure and fulfilling lives. Find below our campaign petition, pledge for local councillors and materials to use in your workplace and beyond. Support the campaign to end austerity and make equality real read more

From Strike Map – Our final instalment of the ‘Industrial Unionism’ series with Manifesto Press is here. Building on this success of our other pamphlets- which has sold over 2,000 copies, our next pamphlet in our series is the infamous ‘A Manual of Industrial Unionism’ by William Z Foster. Click the button here to pre-order your copy for you and your organisation

NEW Play: Cramlington Train Wreckers – Following the national success of Wor Bella (about WW1 women footballers), Tyneside-based playwright Ed Waugh will present his new work in November, which is about the Cramlington Train Wreckers. Ed, who has the distinction for a local writer of having had a record five plays produced at Newcastle’s prestigious Theatre Royal, writes about forgotten working class stories and his latest play is set during 1926 General Strike when striking miners uncoupled a rail on the mainline Edinburgh to London railway. As we rapidly approach the centenary of Britain’s only General Strike, the most notorious incident of that societal unrest in May 1926 happened when miners inadvertently derailed the Flying Scotsman on the mainline Edinburgh to London railway at Cramlington in Northumberland. The Cramlington Train Wreckers, which is supported by Arts Council England, will tour the North East in November. For further details visit www.cramlingtontrainwreckers.co.uk

filmpro with ten public sharing launch party – The launch party for the filmpro with ten public sharing, celebrating our 10 disabled campaigners turned artists – Monday, 11 November 276 Oak Square London SW9 9AW more details

  

Stop the attack on Gaza 

Many NSSN supporters have joined marches and protests against the escalation of violence in the Middle East, particularly the invasion and bombardment of Gaza by the Israeli government. This has now escalated and widened.

See Stop the War website for info on protests. The next national demo in Central London is Saturday 2nd November 12noon details

A number of unions have issued statements on the situation in the Middle East, including: the TUC, FBU, RMT, NEU, Unite, Unison, PCS, ASLEF, TSSA, UCU, EIS, CWU, Equity, BMA, NUJ, UVW, GMB, SOR, RCM, RCN, IWGB, Prospect, CSP, NAPO, INTO (Ireland), SIPTU (Ireland) and Mandate (Ireland)  

  

Fight blacklisting and victimisation of union reps  

Blacklisting collusion investigation update:-

Statement from the independent investigation into union collusion in blacklisting, commissioned by Sharon Graham:

“90 per cent of the investigation has been completed. However, in preparing the last 10% some new issues have been thrown up which need some urgent investigation, and these issues have to be looked into which will cause a delay.”

The independent investigation into union officials colluding in blacklisting was one of the first things Sharon Graham set up when she was elected as General Secretary of UNITE the union. The independent legal team is headed up by Nick Randall KC (Matrix chambers), alongside JC Townsend (XXIV Old Buildings) and Paul Heron (Public Interest Law Centre). Witness statements, documentary and electronic evidence has been collated over the past two years. 

The investigation was set up because blacklisted union members in the Blacklist Support Group, the Construction Rank & File and UNITE branches campaigned for it. An oversight committee made up of blacklisted workers, has been assisting the legal team, and has ensured that the investigation is independent from the union itself. There has been much speculation about the likely outcome of the final report. This statement gives an indication that there is light at the end of the tunnel. 

https://ibci.uk

Builders Crack: The Movie  

In the current situation, this long lost film from the 1990s about rank and file union organising in the construction industry is intended to lift the spirits, but also to spark a debate in our movement. Hope the youngsters in this film put a smile on your face.  

Watch – Share – Discuss https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VZ-QMA1FMg   

Blacklist Support Group  

Book: http://newint.org/books/politics/blacklisted-secret-war/   

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNcgrNs6pB8   

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/blacklist-SG/   

Blog: www.hazards.org/blacklistblog   

Blacklist Support Group financial appeal: the Blacklist support group is desperately short of funds, to continue the incredible work we need more finance, would you please consider making a donation, raise it at your branches and trade councils. Please make cheques payable to Joint sites committee and send to 70 Darnay Rise Chelmsford Essex CM1 4XA. Please forward onto your contacts many thanks Steve Kelly (JSC Treasurer)  

Blacklisted t-shirts available at: https://shop.hopenothate.org.uk/component/hikashop/product/78-blacklisted-t-shirt   

  

Keep an eye out for other Facebook and social media groups and pages that are being created. You can catch up on disputes at Strike Map UK. Also, check out Organise Now! – Support for new worker organising.   

  

International  

Nigeria: Support the campaign to demand the release of Adaramoye Michael (Lenin), Babatunde Oluajo(Sankara), Mosiu Sodiq and 1 other person abducted by the state. They are not criminals! They  were leaders of the #Endbadgovernance protests in Abuja. You can make donations through the link below to support the campaign for their release.

Model motion – https://linktr.ee/nigeriansolidarityuk

https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/the-democratic-socialist-movement

Afghanistan: multiple journalists arrested by Taliban intelligence (19 Oct) read more on NUJ website

Yemen: journalist sentenced to death by Houthi-controlled group (19 Oct) read more on NUJ website

Turkey: Fernas mining workers marched to Parliament against slave-like conditions (4 Oct) read more on website of SPOT – Solidarity with the People of Turkey

Diary   

2024 

October

November

29 from Strike Map: London book launch & social: A Manual of Industrial Unionism

Join the exciting launch of our reprint of A Manual of Industrial Unionism by William Z Foster 6.30pm on 29 Nov at Marx Memorial Library more details

  

CONTACT US  

PHONE 07952 283 558  

EMAIL mailto:[email protected]   

   

TWITTER – https://twitter.com/NSSN_AntiCuts   

FACEBOOK NSSN GROUP   or STOP The CUTS  Likes page   

ADDRESS NSSN, PO Box 54498, London E10 9DE