Public sector workers in mass strike

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 10 Juli 2014 | 15.36

10 July 2014 Last updated at 09:12
Members of NUT on strike in March, 2014

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Council staff, teachers, firefighters and civil servants are among those expected to walk out, as John Moylan reports

Strikes are taking place across the UK in a series of disputes with the government over pay, pensions and cuts, with more than a million public sector workers expected to join the action.

Teachers, council staff, firefighters and civil servants are among those taking part.

Unison general secretary Dave Prentis said workers were now £4,000 a year worse off than they were in 2010.

Prime Minister David Cameron has promised to tighten strike ballot laws.

Thousands of pupils are expected to miss lessons after schools have closed in parts of the UK as teachers strike.

Other workers to take industrial action include refuse collectors, dinner ladies and librarians, while unions rallies will also take place in towns and cities across the UK.

A spokesman for the cabinet office said the "vast majority" of workers did not vote for today's action and said early indications suggest "most are turning up for work as usual".

Pay cap

The biggest issue in dispute is pay, after ministers froze public sector salaries in 2010 and introduced a 1% cap on pay rises in 2012 which remains in place.

Those expected to take part in the action include:

For Unite, Unison and the GMB the strike action covers workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland but not Scotland, while the PCS covers all four nations. The FBU and NUT are England and Wales only.

Dave Prentis

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Dave Prentis of Unison: ''Our members...have said enough is enough''

Picket lines are expected to be mounted outside courts, council offices, job centres and fire stations across the country as well as the Houses of Parliament in London.

Unison boss Mr Prentis told BBC Breakfast workers had been left frustrated by pay freezes, adding that "enough is enough".

"When Cameron brought in the two-year pay freeze, our local government workers, our members, had already had a one-year pay freeze.

"So they've had a three-year pay freeze and then a 1% increase when inflation has gone up by something like 20%," he said.

Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude told the BBC the government had had to make "difficult decisions" to deal with the budget deficit.

Analysis

BBC political correspondent Norman Smith

Strikes are meant to cause maximum pain for employers but in this case that doesn't look like happening.

Why? Because far from causing the government much political grief, today's strikes by public sector workers are actually rather politically convenient.

Of course there will be much ministerial condemnation of the disruption caused.

But at the same time Conservative ministers hope popular annoyance will buttress support for their plans for further action to curb the power of unions.

In particular, Prime Minister David Cameron is keen to include plans for a strike ballot threshold in his party's next manifesto.

Today's strikes enable ministers to turn up the heat on Labour by pressing them to condemn the industrial action being carried out by their big union supporters.

And they also expect widespread backing in the newspapers for their bullish stance.

So, while in public ministers will appear angered by the strikes, in private they may be good deal more relaxed.

Fire chiefs urged people to take extra care because of the walkout between 10:00 and 19:00 BST, the 15th round of industrial action in the Fire Brigades Union's long-running row with the government.

TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said: "Across the public sector workers are on strike today to say enough is enough.

"Year after year pay has failed to keep up with the cost of living."

She said that public sector workers were on average £2,000 worse off because of the coalition government's policies, saying "ordinary workers" should "get a fair share" as the economy started to grow.

Ballot turnouts

PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said the action by public sector workers was about "demonstrating that they've had enough".

He told BBC Radio 5 live: "If that means that fire stations and schools are closed, and there are delays at airports and that people find that they are inconvenienced, whilst we regret the inconvenience, what we're really trying to say is that everyone depends on our members' services, so start paying them a decent wage."

The action comes despite Mr Cameron urging people to turn up for work.

Speaking during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, he said the "time has come" for legislation setting a minimum turnout for a strike ballot, promising this in the next Conservative manifesto.

Michael Gove MP

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Education Secretary Michael Gove: "It's an ideologically motivated minority who are intent on confrontation"

Under the current law, a strike can take place if it is backed by a simple majority of those union members who vote regardless of the level of turnout.

Education Secretary Michael Gove told BBC Newsnight that schoolchildren needed to be protected from what he said was "essentially politically-motivated industrial action".

Thousands of pupils in England and Wales are expected to miss lessons because of the strike action.

'No end date'

Mr Gove criticised the NUT's ballot, which was held in 2012 with a turnout of 27%.

But the union's general secretary, Christine Blower, told the programme it was "perfectly legitimate".

"We balloted for discontinuous action with no end date," she said. "The end date will be when the dispute is resolved."

A Labour Party spokesman said: "No-one wants to see a strike, not least because of the impact on children and parents.

"Instead of ramping up the rhetoric the government should get round the table, because both sides have a responsibility to stop it happening."

Are you a public sector worker? Will you be on strike? You can email your experiences tohaveyoursay@bbc.co.uk using the subject line 'Strike'.


Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang

Public sector workers in mass strike

Dengan url

http://sarapanoatmeal.blogspot.com/2014/07/public-sector-workers-in-mass-strike.html

Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya

Public sector workers in mass strike

namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link

Public sector workers in mass strike

sebagai sumbernya

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar

techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger