Monday 29 August 2022

I’m in a Trade Union – Why should I get involved with a Black Members Self Organised group?

 


In UNISON, Black is used to indicate people with a shared history. Black with a capital 'B' is used in its broad political and inclusive sense to describe people in Britain that have suffered colonialism and enslavement in the past and continue to experience racism and diminished opportunities in today's society.

Right here and now, the challenges for both those in and out of work are extreme. With many facing the poison cocktail of both low pay and exponentially climbing bills the future looks at the very best insecure with many households simply at a loss to know what to do.

We know that Black members are likely to be in more insecure and lower paid work. We also know that they are more likely to experience poor outcomes in their engagement with public services as a result of structural racism. Just this weekend there has been another report published about the longer waits that Black communities face for cancer diagnosis. These kind of struggles can only be tackled by organising to challenge inequalities. Organising within workplaces has long been an effective strategy to identify and campaign for improvements in our lives with the support and solidarity of others.

I am inviting Black members of West Northants UNISON branch to a meeting of the Black Self Organised Group taking place on Monday 5th September at 6pm the office at 6 Darnell Way Moulton Park NN3 6RW Northampton. Hot and cold drinks and light refreshments will be available.

There will be a warm welcome whether you are or you are not active member currently.

Discussion will include:

Role holders in the Self Organised Group (Chair, Vice Chair etc)

Future meetings

Future events

2023 National Black Members Conference, 20 – 22 January 2023, The Exchange, Edinburgh International Conference Centre, 150 Morrison St, Edinburgh EH3 8EE, UK

               Motions

               Delegates/visitors

Workplace issues

If you want to have an informal discussion before the meeting, please feel free to get in touch through the branch or directly




Time to join a Union #SummerOfSolidarity

 


I was asked to present to te Independent socialists of Wellingborough meeting on the Theme of Trade Unionism today and in the future. The following is the transcript of what I presented. 

The Trade Union Movement 2022 and beyond

I’ve been a union member since 1983. First in ASTMS and after a period of time out of the Country I have been a member of UNISON since 1993. The entire time I have been a UNISON member I have been working in the voluntary and community sector. UNISON has only been organising in this sector in the last 12 years and some part of the country evidently find this more difficult than others as in my region this sector still has no lay leadership and no influence on decision making in the organisation.

The Community and voluntary sector of the union is biggest growing sector in UNISON. This is mainly as a result of neo-liberal policies put forward to shrink the state and outsource public services to third party organisations many of whom act as if their primary duty is to their shareholders. These are care services, leisure services. These are workers who have been impacted by the 2021 Supreme Court final judgement on a case of great significance for care providers and low-paid care workers. The case in question was Royal Mencap Society v Tomlinson-Blake, was first brought to an Employment Tribunal in 2016. It turned on whether care workers on ‘sleep-in shifts’ were entitled to the national minimum wage for the full duration of their shift, including time spent asleep.  ‘Sleep-in shifts’ are those where workers are required to sleep at a residence overnight with the possibility of waking to provide care. The Supreme Court found that those on sleep-in shifts in social care are not entitled to the national minimum wage while asleep over turning previous tribunal victories.

This case related to an employment that 20 years ago would be undertaken by a local government or health agency but now undertaken by a charity. Does this have an impact on tribunal/supreme court decisions?

The workers in the community sector are often in insecure employment. Perhaps on time limited contracts or hours which go up and down at the drop of a hat. Often the kind of jobs that are done are central to the welfare of the most vulnerable in our community and this ethical angle is often exploited by employers to eek out every last bit of goodwill and flexibility to ensure that the bottom line on the budget reports are as low as they can possibly be.

With better employers looking at what they can do to support their worker through the cost of living crisis, what hope for those in the community sector. 

With the actions of the #SummerOfSolidarity with industrial action from the RMT, ASLEF, the CWU and Criminal Bar Association going on strike, there has been a re-discovering of the both the mundane (who’s going to be on the picket at 6am) to the creative use of social media to engage and update the public.

There is more to come of this with local government, health and the national education union all at various stages of balloting membership for strike action.

Within this there is a dimension-shifting disconnect between all kinds of the political establishment and unions taking industrial action.

Firstly in the Labour Party, the picket of not to picket. Front benchers notable by their absence. Backbenchers link Zara Sultana embracing the #Solidarity.

Even with in the Conservative Party, there are discussions about the inconvenience of Train Drivers taking action on some days and Train Maintenance and support staff taking action on other days. Would not it be more sensible to take action on the same day they say. Conservative industrial relations guru’s the number one supporters of the general strike!

This after all is the source of compassionate conservatism who joined the public outcry when P and O Ferries made more than 1000 workers redundant with no consultation on March. These employees were sacked by a pre-recorded zoom message and initial statements about government legal action disappeared like the morning mist. Individuals were left on their own with a complex and lengthy tribunal process or the company payout which was just slightly more that they would get in tribunal. So dismayed was the government about this, that they are now considering taking action to use agency workers to break strikes.

On the more positive side is the creation of the Enough Is Enough campaign. Crucially significant is the adoption of a broader set of demands

The five demands to tackle the crisis

1. A Real Pay Rise.

2. Slash Energy Bills.

3. End Food Poverty.

4. Decent Homes for All.

5. Tax the Rich.

At a time of spiralling housing, energy and food costs. Workers need wages but they also need a homes, food and utilities

Night before last there was also an announcement by the TUC.

The announcement itself came about with quite a lot of hype and expectation, being released at 10.30pm at night. When the details came out of a petition campaign for £15 an hour by 2030.

While the call for £15 national minimum wage is to be welcomed the aspiration for this by 2030 is poor and as a movement we can and should do better than this





Friday 12 August 2022

Returning to familiar space


 It seems that involuntary removal of my Labour Party membership is an event that takes place once every thirteen years.

I’ve looked back at the last time this has happened when I wrote this. I guess things are pretty much the same but this time I am without the good company of the late Geoff Howes.

For people wanting to know what the crack is, I am accused of being an active member of Labour Left Alliance. This is a group I never have been a paid up member to and a group others have told me have no members. The evidence is one post two years ago which ironically enough  is mildly critical of the Corbyn administration of the Labour Party. You can read the documentation here and here.

The Labour Party National Executive proscribed Labour Left Alliance in March 2022.  It did not notify any members that the organisation has been proscribed but perhaps that’s a little academic when the proscription was retrospective so no member could take action to protect their membership if they found themselves added to a social media group or chat.

I want to thank again those comrades who have got in touch with me to offer solidarity and support. I remain who and am and continue to have the same values regardless of the views of the Labour Party about me.

I also want to encourage people to act together to achieve change with or without the Labour Party by joining the enough is enough campaign.

They have five demands to tackle the crisis

1. A Real Pay Rise.

2. Slash Energy Bills.

3. End Food Poverty.

4. Decent Homes for All.

5. Tax the Rich.

Find more about it here