• This topic has 74 replies, 41 voices, and was last updated 7 years ago by Lifer.
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  • Stop striking and get back to work…
  • unfitgeezer
    Free Member

    …be glad you’ve got a job in this day and age !

    anagallis_arvensis
    Full Member

    Yeah, know your place workers!

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    whats that Discount Tents?

    Tensions ‘boiling over’
    Prof Roger Seifurt from the University of Wolverhampton said many of the tensions were longstanding and were “boiling over now because during Christmas they get more media coverage”.
    He told the BBC’s Today programme that discontent among workers was not just affecting these companies, and that worsening pensions, stagnant pay and reduced job security was hitting a range of industries.
    “This is now boiling over into strikes which I think will carry on into the new year.”
    He added that we were entering “a period of quite bitter and prolonged disputes” where unions will take more strike action.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/business-38359640

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    wordnumb
    Free Member

    But in the future they’ll have robots for striking and we should make the most of it before the tradition extincts.

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    So far this year we’ve had

    Teachers(standard)
    Tube drivers(standard)
    Doctors(unprecedented)
    Paramedics(unprecedented)
    Royal mail (standard)
    Train drivers(standard)
    Prison service(unprecedented?)
    Pilots on a work to rule(virgin)

    Any I’ve missed?

    Mrs T must be so proud of Mrs T’s and Mr C’s performance – its like the late 70’s all over again.

    convert
    Full Member

    I wonder if the average RMT striker today thinks they are striking over safety as their leaders proclaim or if in their heads its only about saving their jobs. My feeling is the latter. If the former and they are doing it for ‘us’ we the public don’t seem very grateful. I just wish they would be honest – I’d respect them more for it.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    Is it the EUs fault? 😉

    It seems to be riding on the same wave of disconnect as Brexit

    oldnpastit
    Full Member

    unfitgeezer – Member

    …be glad you’ve got a job in this day and age !

    Not sure if being ironic?

    The UK jobless rate held steady at a near 11-year low of 4.9% in the three months to August, figures show.

    We need more migrants to fill all these job vacancies….

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    What is the common theme amongst that eclectic mix of 2016 strikers?

    dantsw13
    Full Member

    The gap between those with their noses in the trough, and the workers had got ridiculous, so I’m not surprised.

    bigrich
    Full Member

    the covenant with capitalism is broken, also southern rail is awful.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    Mrs T must be so proud of Mrs T’s and Mr C’s performance – its like the late 70’s all over again.

    Nothing like it at all!

    You obviously weren’t about in the 70s….

    We had rubbish piled high in the streets and a 3 day week.

    ulysse
    Free Member

    Enlighten me, what is the common theme amongst disgruntled striking workers?

    ulysse
    Free Member

    The only reason we ain’t got rubbish piled in the streets here footflaps is most of us here are resigned to taking it to the waste centre ourselfs

    BillMC
    Full Member

    Increasing job insecurity, downward pressure on wages and pensions, rising inequality between the boardroom and the employees, inflation, rising rents, cutbacks in public services etc etc etc. Who in their right mind would be gruntled?

    footflaps
    Full Member

    The only reason we ain’t got rubbish piled in the streets here footflaps is most of us here are resigned to taking it to the waste centre ourselfs

    Do you not have weekly / fortnightly bin collections like the rest of the UK?

    Increasing job insecurity, downward pressure on wages and pensions, rising inequality between the boardroom and the employees, inflation, rising rents, cutbacks in public services etc etc etc. Who in their right mind would be gruntled?

    I’m surprised we don’t have more strikes to be honest, the public sector pay settlements are basically a pay cut every year till 2020.

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    For me, working frontline in the public sector right now (NHS) you’re bearing the brunt of “austerity” every day. If it was just the stagnant wages(effective cut) the increasing pension contributions(effective cut), the unsustainable workload, the toxic litigious environment and the demonisation by the press I wouldn’t mind. But not having the resources to do my job to the best of my ability and seeing people harmed or die as a result is getting old, especially when you’ve worked in another system.

    Its been this way for several years but the numbers are just starting to filter through – correlation does not imply causality but Mental health services have basically collapsed and guess what

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-38343186

    “GP’s need more training” says the article above – I can never get enough training, I love it. Even though I pay £thousands for it myself every year.

    What I need more is capacity in local services to see and treat people that need it. Last week, young man comes to see me, first presentation of moderate -severe depression with strong suicidal thoughts. Phone up local MH team -“give him a leaflet and we’ll see him in 2 weeks” Ok but what about the fact he’s told me he lined up a beam in his garage and practiced tying the noose? “He’s got no previous and he’s not psychotic” ” Why don’t you see him next week to make sure he’s ok” Brilliant. Trouble is the guy on the phone knows he needs to be seen today, but there is NO capacity, so he’s taking a gamble, literally. This happens every days thousands of times in the good old NHS.

    Fully qualified after 8 years of training last year and Ive just handed in my NHS notice. I will just wait it out on a series of short term contracts, where I dictate the terms while I can, until people decide how and what they want to pay for healthcare.

    Others may not be so fortunate.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    GRAPHTIME!

    Even if it were updated, I doubt even this year’s shenanigans would feature as more than a tiny blip on the LH Scale. No political conviction of the modern worker, that’s the problem these days! Too content to change career rather than fight for a dying industry! Where’s their backbone?! It weren’t like this in’t 70’s yerknow!

    oldnpastit
    Full Member

    I’m surprised we don’t have more strikes to be honest, the public sector pay settlements are basically a pay cut every year till 2020.

    Won’t Brexit put pressure on employers to increase salaries, once the flow of cheap migrants dries up?

    fifeandy
    Free Member

    Won’t Brexit put pressure on employers to increase salaries, once the flow of cheap migrants dries up?

    Possibly so, but no employer will be willing to take that as a hit to profits so we’ll just see it reflected in increased price of goods and then that salary increase was all for nothing.

    just5minutes
    Free Member

    The toady old unions have long since stopped caring about ensuring the organisations their members work in remain financially viable or serve the customers that keep the money coming in.

    Having Theresa May as a PM represents a once in 30 years opportunity to re-run a coordinated campaign against a female prime minister – it’s no coincidence that nearly all of the union leaders are men. We don’t need to guess as to why there are so many strikes:

    – The Union leaders told us they wanted to use Jeremy Corbyn to re-establish hard left politics and funded him for that purpose
    – They told us they would seek to agitate disputes with the Government
    – They told us they would work to do this
    – Jeremy Corbyn / Labour have nothing to say – perhaps the £116K the former received from the Unions has something to do with this?
    …And they are still telling us this now.

    The video of RMT president Sean Hoyle takes away any uncertainty about how these strikes will play out – “we are coordinating to bring the government down”.

    http://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/rail-union-boss-vows-to-topple-tories-c0hm3r3sh

    As with NUM/ miners in the 80’s these disputes will simply cause untold misery for the majority of workers who aren’t in Unions and will likely cause the government to introduce even more anti-union legislation. This is something that’s a retrograde step but when the likes of the RMT have balloted their members more than once a week for the whole of the last year it’s pretty clear they have no desire to resolve things in an sensible negotiated way and the only measure of success they seek is conflict.

    philjunior
    Free Member

    oldnpastit – Member
    I’m surprised we don’t have more strikes to be honest, the public sector pay settlements are basically a pay cut every year till 2020.
    Won’t Brexit put pressure on employers to increase salaries, once the flow of cheap migrants dries up?

    LOL.

    edenvalleyboy
    Free Member

    Yeah OP I agree…Be glad you’ve got a job even if it doesn’t pay the bills and you have to use foodbanks, your kids miss you because you hardly see them because you’re working long hours to make ends meet and consequently your health suffers and your chances of dying early is increased… least you know the shareholders/decision makers are doing alright for themselves. 🙄

    convert
    Full Member

    Having Theresa May as a PM represents a once in 30 years opportunity to re-run a coordinated campaign against a female prime minister – it’s no coincidence that nearly all of the union leaders are men. We don’t need to guess as to why there are so many strikes:

    That would have so much more credence if the TUC General secretary was not called Ms Frances O’Grady.

    philjunior
    Free Member

    edenvalleyboy – Member
    Yeah OP I agree…Be glad you’ve got a job even if it doesn’t pay the bills and you have to use foodbanks, your kids miss you because you hardly see them because you’re working long hours to make ends meet and consequently your health suffers and your chances of dying early is increased… least you know the shareholders/decision makers are doing alright for themselves.

    Indeed, I saw an infographic (which I have to admit I didn’t have time to fact check) claiming that due to benefits needed by low paid workers, we (the taxpayer) subsidise supermarkets to the tune of 150-300k/yr depending on brand (and I guess depending more upon size of their typical store).

    footflaps
    Full Member

    Won’t Brexit put pressure on employers to increase salaries, once the flow of cheap migrants dries up?

    I doubt it, as the jobs will just move overseas to places that have a good supply of cheap labour. Most of the veg/salad farmers in the UK will sell up and we’ll just import veg from Europe. At the end of the day, consumers will still want cheap veg in the super markets….

    cchris2lou
    Full Member

    But Jambalaya told us that cheap migrant labourers will spend thousands of pounds to apply for a work visa.

    convert
    Full Member

    Yeah OP I agree…Be glad you’ve got a job even if it doesn’t pay the bills and you have to use foodbanks, your kids miss you because you hardly see them because you’re working long hours to make ends meet and consequently your health suffers and your chances of dying early is increased… least you know the shareholders/decision makers are doing alright for themselves.

    Apart from of course very few of the lowest paid using the foodbanks etc are in unionised professions. Train guards basic is circa £25K pa. Looking down the list of 2016’s strikers teachers, tube drivers and doctors are not on the bread line (or the paramedics, prison guards or royal mail come to that) and the BA pilots are positively rolling it in. It does not mean you don’t have a point but don’t don’t mix the issues.

    just5minutes
    Free Member

    That would have so much more credence if the TUC General secretary was not called Ms Frances O’Grady.

    Yes but this misses the point that the TUC can’t call members out on strike – that’s the likes of the RMT, ASLEF etc. most / all? of which are led by men.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    No political conviction of the modern worker, that’s the problem these days!

    That probably correct for the people who have the sort of job you could withdraw your labour from. Unfortunately a lot of people now seemingly have a ‘job’ but don’t know today if they’ll be asked to work tomorrow or ever again. Zero hours contracts have effectively returned us to the pen system.

    Lifer
    Free Member

    just5minutes – Member
    Having Theresa May as a PM represents a once in 30 years opportunity to re-run a coordinated campaign against a female prime minister – it’s no coincidence that nearly all of the union leaders are men. We don’t need to guess as to why there are so many strikes

    And nothing to do with comments like this, from February (before the strikes and May becoming PM)

    DfT ‘punch-ups’ with union

    Over the next three years we’re going to be having punch ups and we will see industrial action and I want your support,” Mr Wilkinson told residents in Croydon Town

    “I’m furious about it and it has got to change – we have got to break them,” he said.

    “They have all borrowed money to buy cars and got credit cards.

    “They can’t afford to spend too long on strike and I will push them into that place.

    “They will have to decide if they want to give a good service or get the hell out of my industry.”

    Lifer
    Free Member

    just5minutes – Member
    Yes but this misses the point that the TUC can’t call members out on strike – that’s the likes of the RMT, ASLEF etc.

    No union ‘calls members out on strike’.

    most / all? of which are led by men.

    Doesn’t seem like it would be too difficult to find out before making allegations of a patriarchal conspiracy against a female PM who wasn’t even in power when the dispute started.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Unfortunately a lot of people now seemingly have a ‘job’ but don’t know today if they’ll be asked to work tomorrow or ever again. Zero hours contracts have effectively returned us to the pen system.

    A lot ie, less than <3% of the workforce including some for whom ZHCs work well. 😯

    Lifer
    Free Member

    3% of 30 odd million is still ‘a lot’ of people imo. Zero hour contracts do have their place though, as you say.

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    Zero hours works very well for the worker when theres an undersupply of skilled people. You basically choose when, where and how you work!

    For example, a new rota for the most experienced A+E nurses was implemented. In addition to being inflexible, it was short notice shift work(3 weeks) which made childcare planning etc impossible for them. So the majority of them left and came back as agency staff when we failed to recruit anyone else to replace them. These are senior, band 6 -7 nurses essential for smooth running of the department. The NHS now pays them double what they were earning and they work when they want with less responsibility and less stress. Meanwhile the gaps in the rota opened up by their reduced hours sees a newly qualified band 5 is “acting up” to be nurse in charge of a busy A+E running considerably over capacity with majority locum staff.

    It’ll be years before we can replace these experienced people by which time they’ll most likely be tucked up in managerial roles for Virgin et al. The same pattern is happening across all spheres of healthcare and probably the rest of the public sector?

    chakaping
    Free Member

    Unions don’t strike for political reasons.

    They strike because members have voted to do so in order to protect their own interests. That they have the right to do so is incredibly important.

    On the subject of safety concerns vs. job security in the rail dispute – think about it for a second and you’ll realise the two are not mutually exclusive.

    I’m dismayed at the extent of anti-union sentiment in this country – the nation that gave the world the trade union. I wonder what the correlation is with Brexit support? Both have an element of turkeys voting for Xmas.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    “Establish a Socialist Order”, you say?

    Ermmmm. No thanks.

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    Not sure about your first point chakaping.

    If its public sector you withdraw labour from the government in the hope they(government) will come under public pressure and either relent to your demands or be replaced by the electorate.

    pahoehoe
    Free Member

    Unless you’re the BMA of course, in which case you just organise a right merry balls up and start handbagging each other.

    TheWrongTrousers
    Full Member

    So far this year we’ve had

    Teachers(standard)
    Tube drivers(standard)
    Doctors(unprecedented)
    Paramedics(unprecedented)
    Royal mail (standard)
    Train drivers(standard)
    Prison service(unprecedented?)
    Pilots on a work to rule(virgin)

    Any I’ve missed?

    How about Swissport baggage handlers at Heathrow
    And British Airways cabin crew

    It’s Virgin pilots, not BA as someone up above said, that are working to rule apparently.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 75 total)

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