Monday, 16 December 2013

FBU hardship fund please support

<strong><strong></strong></strong>After five bouts of strike action and the prospect of a protracted battle with the Tory-led coalition over serious detrimental changes to firefighters’ pension scheme, the FBU is appealing to other trade unionists to contribute to its hardship fund.


In London cheques payable to ‘FBU Hardship Fund’ can be sent to the attention of Mr Paul Embery, London Regional Secretary at FBU London Regional Office, John Horner Mews, London N1 8PB. For those who can make direct transfers the account details are as follows:

Lloyds Bank, Sort code: 30-94-57. Account number: 01764558.

<strong><strong></strong></strong>Generous? Five Myths About Firefighter Pensions and the Government's Attacks

Please find, below, a link to an article by FBU general secretary Matt Wrack, which appeared in the popular online newspaper, the 'Huffington Post'. It is important that we expose the government's spin about the cost and 'generosity' of firefighters' pensions, so please do all you can to circulate this article, including sharing it on social media.


<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/matt-wrack/fire-fighters-strike_b_4261166.html">http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/matt-wrack/fire-fighters-strike_b_4261166.html</a>


 


Yours in unity


LONDON FBU

Friday, 15 November 2013

TUC Day Of Action on 20 November on Blacklisting

Blacklist Support Group (BSG) is calling on all supporters, Trades Councils and trade union branches to organise an event in your area for the TUC Day of Action on Blacklisting.The nationwide event will take place on 20 November.

BSG suggests groups should protest outside a building site being run by a blacklisting company or should target a public body still using blacklisting firms to provide public services. This is an official TUC sponsored Day of Action, so all unions in an area should work together to coordinate action.

Whether it is a protest, a media event or direct action please take pix and post on social media and contact the local press to ensure the story runs everywhere.

Use the hashtags #blacklisting #N20 #BSG

Ideas to maximise the chances of getting media coverage:
Blacklisted T-shirts, banners, placards, PA (play some music not just speakers on a megaphone), hand in a giant oversized protest letter, inflatable rat, it’s just been firework night so make a guy in a suit with a Cullum McAlpine face mask, blacklisted workers have been locked out of work so a big padlock & chain might come in handy. Whatever you do – make it visual.

PLANNED EVENTS

London
7:00am – Protest at Laing O’Rourke, Cheesegrater, Leadenhall St, City of London (opposite Lloyds Building)

10:00am – Protest at Laing O’Rourke, Francis Crick Medical Research Centre, Kings Cross (behind the British Library)

1:00pm – TUC protest with MPs & 4 union General Secretaries, College Green, Parliament Sq, Westminster

2:00pm – TUC Lobby of MPs, House of Commons

3:30pm – House of Commons Committee Room 11 – John McDonnell MP chairs BSG meeting speakers: Sean Curran (GCR solicitors for High court claim) & blacklisted workers.

Tuesday, 12 November 2013

University staff announce 3 December for second date of strike action

University staff across the UK will walk out for a second day of strike action on Tuesday 3 December, announced trade unions representing university staff today (Tuesday).

The three unions, UNISON, Unite and the University and College Union (UCU), that took strike action on Thursday 31 October confirmed their members would walk out again in three weeks’ time and be joined by Scottish education union, the EIS, unless the dispute over pay could be resolved. 

Union members are angry at a 1% pay offer, which has seen their pay fall in real-terms by 13%. The squeeze on staff pay comes at a time when pay and benefits for university leaders increased, on average, by more than £5,000 in 2011-12, with the average pay and pensions package for vice-chancellors hitting almost £250,000. More on that here http://tinyurl.com/o43bss2

UNISON head of higher education, Jon Richards, said: “Members have had enough. It is a disgrace that universities are sitting on billions of pounds, but are not ready to reward those who make UK universities the best in the world. The 1% pay rise on offer is an insult to the services they deliver especially those staff who are currently paid below the Living Wage. We have the ridiculous situation where a university vice-chancellor can spend £1.5 million on a work of art, but not give decent pay to his own staff. We are calling on employers to get back into talks as a matter of urgency.”

UCU head of higher education, Michael MacNeil, said: “Staff have suffered year-on-year cuts in the value of their pay and have made it clear that enough is enough. We remain committed to trying to resolve this dispute and the employers now have until 3 December to sit down and positively engage with the unions. If they don’t, then our members and those from our sister unions will be out on strike again, as well as continuing to work to contract.”

Unite national officer for education, Mike McCartney, said: “We had a very successful joint union action on 31 October to highlight the five year pay drought that our members have endured which has meant a 13 per cent drop in their incomes since 2008. However, the employers have refused to budge from their hard line in refusing to recognise the contribution that the workforce makes to the excellent global reputation that Britain’s universities currently enjoy. We hope that this latest strike will drive home the determination of our members to achieve a fair pay deal and focus the minds of the employers that they need to get around the table promptly to negotiate in a constructive and positive manner.”

General secretary of the EIS, Larry Flanagan, said: ”Staff in our higher education establishments have simply had enough after years of real-terms decline in salaries and are determined to make a stand in defence of their pay.  EIS-ULA lecturer members will stand united with colleagues from our sister academic and support staff unions in the ongoing campaign for fair pay for all workers in our HE institutions.  Our members never choose to take industrial action lightly, but now feel that they have no other option in light of the current stance of their employers.”

The first day’s strike, on 31 October, left some campuses deserted. Around the country, lectures were cancelled, libraries shut and deliveries turned away. Services such as cleaning, catering and security were also affected.  

The cumulative operating surplus in the higher education sector is now over £1 billion and many higher education institutions have built up cash reserves. Overall staff costs in higher education, as a proportion of income, have fallen from 58% in 2001/02, to 55.5% in 2011/12.

Richard Laco R.I.P. Minutes Silence

Richard Laco R.I.P.

Minutes Silence

 

A wreath will be laid and a minutes silence held in tribute to Richard Laco who was killed on this building site last week.

 

2pm Thursday 14th November

Laing O’Rourke site entrance  

Francis Crick Institute project

Kings Cross (behind the British Library)

 

This is an opportunity for friends and workers on the site to show a moments respect for this tragic death.  We appeal to all workers leave your place of work and come to the site entrance at 2pm to join the tribute to their co-worker.

Too many building workers die on construction sites. We need to make sure no other families have to suffer the heartache of losing a loved one.

 

Mourn the Dead – Fight for the Living

Organised by: Construction Safety Campaign

Friday, 8 November 2013

IUF News: New study highlights elevated breast cancer risk for women working in chemical ‘toxic soup’


IUF News
New study highlights elevated breast cancer risk for women working in chemical ‘toxic soup’
Posted: 07 Nov 2013 09:32 AM PST
An important recent study by the UK’s Stirling University suggests that women working in particular industries run double or more the risk of developing breast cancer. In the IUF sectors, women working in agriculture, food packaging, canning, bars and the gaming industry, were identified as being at heightened risk.

Read more here

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Firefighters will strike again on 13 November and hold new ballot for further forms of industrial action


FBU London-banner

Firefighters today announced that a fourth strike on pensions will take place between 10am and 2pm on Wednesday 13 November in England and Wales.

This follows the decision of the government in Westminster to worsen proposals on firefighter pensions.

In addition the Fire Brigades Union announced the start of a further ballot for other forms of industrial action, which will close on Wednesday 4 December.

On the new strike date, FBU General Secretary, said: “Our members enter burning buildings for a living, and will not be intimidated by the government’s decision to worsen their proposals. This latest attack will simply harden the resolve of firefighters.

“Ministers continue to ignore the professional, evidence-based case firefighters have presented over the past three years and refuse to establish an affordable occupational pension scheme which reflects the occupation of firefighting.

“There seems to be little or no understanding of what our members actually do or the standards they are required to meet.”

On the new ballot for further industrial action, Wrack said:

“Although we still hope the government returns to negotiations, our members have told us that they are prepared for a long, hard campaign if necessary.

“As a result we are now balloting for further forms of industrial action.

“The fire and rescue service is totally reliant on the goodwill of firefighters on the front line. Many are now performing additional duties and additional hours as a result of central government funding cuts.

“There is precious little goodwill left in view of these attacks and that I am confident that will be reflected in this further vote.

“I urge the government to come back and talk about all the issues in dispute.”

Fire Minister, Brandon Lewis, told firefighters on Friday 1 November that he had withdrawn June proposals on firefighters taking their pension before 60.

The FBU has argued that firefighters are likely to experience a decline in fitness in their 50s, meaning that they would be unlikely to meet the fitness standards required in the fire service.

Chief Fire Officers last week highlighted that the government’s proposals would mean firefighters facing a choice between the loss of almost half their pension or dismissal for failing to reach the standards.

Monday, 4 November 2013

Trade unions need to toughen up

Polly Toynbee (Welfare dependency isn't the problem. Pitiful pay is, 1 November) is undoubtedly right to point to widespread passivity against the background of "pitiful pay" for many and eroding real wages for many more. Some of the most drastic restrictions on trade union activity in the western world are part of the explanation. But when I scoured the pages of the same edition of the Guardian, I could not find a single mention of the 31 October strike by tens of thousands of members of three unions – Unison, Unite and the UCU – taking co-ordinated action for the first time across Britain's universities over the issue of endemically low pay.

For the majority of direct employees the real value of pay has shrunk by nearly 15% in the past five years, while thousands in the higher education sector work on hourly rates well below the current standards for the "living wage", not to mention thousands more on outsourced contracts on the £6.31 an hour national minimum. And as in the FTSE boardrooms, the salaries of university chancellors and other executives continues to balloon, with more than half now on remuneration packages exceeding £250,000 a year. The fact that thousands were and remain prepared to take a stand over pay in a sector hardly renowned for union militancy surely warranted coverage in Britain's foremost liberal daily.
George Binette
Unison, Camden branch secretary


Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Update on CWU and other strike action in Camden

Next Monday (04 November)

members of the Communication Workers Union (CWU) will be on strike

in Royal Mail across all grades. Amazingly, for the first time

since 1979, the middle managers’ union, the CMA/part of Unite will

also be taking strike action on the same day! There will also be

strike action by CWU members across scores of Crown Post Offices

including Swiss Cottage in Camden, which is threatened with

privatisation in the new year. A rally will be held at the Queen

Elizabeth II Conference Centre, SW1 near Parliament Square (nearest

stations: St James Park, Westminster), from 12 noon. The CWU action

in the wake of the flotation of Royal Mail on the Stock Exchange

coincides with a two-hour strike by FBU members in defence of

firefighters' pensions on the Monday morning, which itself comes

soon after an evening walk-out by the FBU this Friday. On Thursday

of this week (31 October) UNISON members in Higher Education will

be joining lecturers in the UCU and other support workers belonging

to Unite in unprecedented cross-union action following the

overwhelming rejection of an abysmal 1% pay offer by the university

employers. Pickets are planned at 22 campus sites across London

including Birkbeck College, the Institute of Education, the School

of Oriental &amp; African Studies, University College London

and the Senate House building in Camden.


George Binette. Chair Camden trades council

Friday, 25 October 2013

HIGHER EDUCATION STRIKE 31ST OCTOBER 2013

As you’ll be aware UNISON members working in Higher Education have voted to take strike action due to the low pay offer from employers of 1%.  These members have seen their pay cut by 13% over the last 4 years and yet nationally Universities have amassed a surplus of over £1.1 billion!

 

All of the 22 University branches in London will have pickets on entrances to their main campus buildings from 7am; please show your support by attending your nearest university picket line (outside of your working hours); publicise the strike with your members and also send the link below to an online petition calling for Fair Pay in Higher Education.  

 

http://www.fairpayinhe.org.uk/ 

 

For more information on the dispute please visit the UNISON webpageshttp://www.unison.org.uk/at-work/education-services/key-issues/he-pay-dispute/home/

 

University main campus addresses

 

Birkbeck College

University of London

Malet Street

London

WC1E 7HX

 

Brunel University

Kingston Lane

Uxbridge

Middlesex

UB8 3PH

 

City University

Northampton Square

London

EC1V 0HB

 

 

Goldsmiths College

Lewisham Way

London

SE14 6NW

Imperial College

Exhibition Road

London

SW7 2AZ

 

 

Institute of Education

20 Bedford Way

London

WC1H 0AL

 

Kings College London

Strand

London

WC2R 2LS

 

Kingston University

Penrhyn Road

Kingston upon Thames

Surrey

KT1 2EE

 

 

London Metropolitan University

166-220 Holloway Road

London

N7 8DB

 

London School Economics

Houghton Street

London

WC2A 2AE

 

South Bank University

103 Borough Road

London

SE1 0AA

 

 

Middlesex University

The Burroughs

London

NW4 4BT

 

 

Queen Mary & Westfield College

Mile End Road

London

E1 4NS

 

 

Senate House

University of London

Malet Street

London

WC1E 7HU

 

School of Oriental & African Studies

10 Thornhaugh Street

London

WC1H 0XG

 

 

University of West London

Walpole House

18-22 Bond Street

London

W5 5AA

 

University of East London

Stratford Campus

Romford Road

London

E15 4LZ

 

 

University College London

Gower Street

London

WC1E 6BT

 

University of Westminster

115 New Cavendish Street

London

W1W 6UW

 

University of Greenwich

Avery Hill Road

London

SE9 2HB


Firefighters announce further strike dates as government fails to offer firm guarantees

Pensions photoshootThe Fire Brigades Union has announced further firefighters’ strikes on Friday 1 November 18.30-23.00 and Monday 4 November 06.00-08.00 after government and fire employers failed to offer any firm guarantees for firefighters facing ‘no job and no pension’ as a result of pension changes.

Last weekend the FBU postponed a five hour strike after the Westminster government and fire employers shifted their position and finally recognised that firefighters faced losing their jobs and a large chunk of their pensions under new changes imposed in April.

Government and employers had offered various routes to tackle the problem of firefighters not fit enough to work beyond the current retirement age of 55, but this week they informed the FBU they could provide none of the guarantees necessary to address this crucial aspect of the dispute.

Matt Wrack, FBU general secretary said: “The FBU has been very reasonable, but we are now faced with broken promises and those in power evading their responsibilities. The Westminster government has created this mess, but it is refusing to clear it up. It now recognises the problem, but it won’t provide the legal and financial guarantees firefighters need to ensure they have a job and an unreduced pension in the future.

“Firefighters face the sack towards the end of their career and the loss of their pension. That can’t be right. The employers promised to tackle the issue of firefighters facing the sack for failing fitness tests last week, only to say they can’t offer any guarantees this week. That is simply not the way to run a public service.

“The government is now making threats to withdraw some of the other concessions they have made this year. Their own Williams report shows most firefighters cannot work beyond 55. They are trying to bludgeon firefighters into an unworkable pension scheme. We are not prepared to be bullied.

“Firefighters don’t want to go on strike, but we are left with no option when the government and the employers refuse to deal with the problems of their own making.”

In addition, the government is proposing further increases in employee contributions from April 2014. This will mean a third year of contribution increases and will see the majority of firefighters paying around 14.2% of salary towards their pensions – among the highest contributions in the public and private sector.

Thursday, 24 October 2013

European health and safety week training day


Safe at Work? Ramazzini versus the attack on health and safety

Safe at Work? Ramazzini versus the attack on health and safety ‘This is an important time to write the history of health and safety in the UK, given the near derision that the term now evokes in the media and from the Government. What Dave Putson demonstrates in writing this book is that health and safety, far from being the product of a more litigious society or the political agenda of overbearing bureaucrats, is rooted in human need, protecting people. This book describes how, over the last 300 years, an evolving body of surveys, research, legal challenges and often tragic experiences led to an emergence of, at first, quite limited protections. Some of these histories will be familiar to the reader, like the match girls and ‘phossy jaw’, but others, like the seminal legal case of Priestley vs Fowler, are not. What the varied and fascinating histories indicate is that health and safety evolved to improve not only the workplace, but also our homes, our communities, our roads, our waterways, and public and environmental health ... Today, there are desperate attempts to reverse those gains. Our Prime Minister echoes the worst of the 19th century’s irresponsible industrialists when he says health and safety is an “albatross around the neck of British businesses”. The burden to take reasonable and practical steps to ensure workers can come home at night is what Cameron objects to when he says he wants to “kill off the health and safety culture for good”. Despite this supposedly rampant culture, the Health and Safety Executive records that, in 2011/12, 173 people died from injuries sustained at work while, according to the Hazards campaign, up to 50,000 die each year from work-related illnesses, including 6,000 from occupational cancers.’ Mark Serwotka General Secretary of the Public and Commercial Services Union