Reject
Royal Mail deal
Vote No and reinstate the action
Postal
workers up and down the country have taken part in a
courageous fight against a vicious management intent on
destroying jobs and postal workers’ conditions while
preparing the industry for privatisation.
Gary
Clark
Sub area rep, Scotland No.2 CWU
We
have taken both official and unofficial action over the past
few months involving the loss of two weeks wages for all
posties and for some up to four weeks, which has caused
hardship in many cases. Despite this the strikes remained
strong, in fact as solid as they were on day one of the
dispute.
Against this background it is with anger that
postal workers will view the “deal” that the
Communication Workers Union (CWU) postal executive committee
(PEC) has agreed to recommend to our members in a ballot.
While a few concessions have been won, this agreement will
mean a wage cut in real terms and a real attack on terms and
conditions with more to come in the near future.
On pay
the headline rise of 6.9% over 18 months does not tell the
real story. What the management is offering is 5.4% from
October 2007 with an extra 1.5% in April 2008 only if local
flexibility has been deployed. With a pay rise due since
April 2007 the 5.4% is clearly a false figure and equates to
a six month pay freeze from April to October. Over the whole
year it only amounts to a pay rise of around 2.8% which is
well below the rate of inflation.
Royal Mail have
included a one-off lump sum of £175 from savings
already made, which is our own money. This all amounts to a
wage cut in real terms.
If this was not bad enough the
additional pay rise of 1.5% from April next year is only
ensured if we implement local ‘flexibility’. The
series of unacceptable strings includes immediate
operational changes which will include later start times.
The deal recommend by the CWU PEC includes the securing of
“grandfather rights” (rights attached to the
individual and not the job) on early shift allowances. But
this will be lost by natural wastage over time.
So we
are supposed to agree to savings for Royal Mail with no real
gains for the postal worker and a change in start times that
are supposed to take into account individual circumstances
“as far as possible.” But this guarantees
nothing.
Weekend working will cease along with bank
holiday work apart from dealing with first class mail. This
will be accompanied by the end of Sunday collections from
Sunday 21 October representing a major lost of earnings for
many members.
Management’s one sided approach on
flexibility includes “longs and shorts” which
means different daily attendances, for example one day
working for seven hours and the next day working nine hours.
This will be coupled with a variation of hours. Postal
workers could be asked to work an extra 30 minutes a day at
short or no notice. This represents a slight concession from
the two hours that Royal Mail originally wanted.
During
our dispute we resorted to ‘doing the job properly’
ie not coming in early, taking our full break and not using
our cars. As a result mail has been failing day by day so we
proved that we don't have enough hours on a daliy basis as
it is without more cuts.
They also want to
introduce summer staffing where five postal workers will be
expected to do the work of six at present.
What the
management calls “transforming the way we work”
really means that we will have to agree to trials to cover
anyone on annual leave or on short term sick leave within
our duty time. This will put extra work onto the postal
worker. We will only receive our next year’s pay
“rise” of 1.5% once this is achieved.
The
above are termed as phases one to three. In phase four there
will be three joint working groups to look at modernisation,
consultation and negotiation which will mean future attacks
on our terms and conditions.
CWU reps who have had their
union facility time taken away will have it restored as part
of the deal but we must ensure that all disciplinary
procedures against victimised workers are removed.
Despite
the management proposals to decouple the issue of pensions
from the pay deal their aim remains the same - to remove the
final salary pension scheme and replace it with a career
average one. Despite some more concessions being made they
have not gone far enough to match the members’
aspirations, which have been made clear by the postal
workers’ massive support for the recent strikes.
The
fact that the negotiations between Royal Mail and the CWU
negotiators were secret and the lack of information
generally from the leadership has meant postal workers have
not been sufficiently informed of the negotiations and
strategy during the dispute.
It is vital that the left in
the CWU and new union activists in the union organise to
build for a massive No vote in the forthcoming ballot. We
need to send a clear message to management and our union
leaders that we will not accept these attacks and be walked
over. We can and must continue the fight to defend our
wages, conditions and pensions through both official and
unofficial means. This fight is far from over. Vote No and
reinstate the strike action.