Monday 24 December 2012

DEFEND THE HALESOWEN 4



A number of UCU activists are being tried in disciplinary action at Halesowen college on trumped up charges, the Branch Secretary Dave Muritu has already been sacked, there will be a lobby of the college at 0815 on the 7th of January, and I am intending to try and make it down, would be good to see any other Birmingham types who can make it.

Nick Varney the regional Official states that “I have never known such an abuse of disciplinary procedures. It is obvious that despite the lack of any evidence the college were determined to dismiss David and it is impossible not to link this to his union activity where he has legitimately challenged the Principal over the years .The whole process was like a kangaroo court and it was clear that the management chairing the hearings had been told what the outcome had to be. Indeed evidence is now emerging that new maths teachers were being appointed prior to the hearing so that they would be in place e for the beginning of the new term!”

Petition and further details can be found online here: http://uculeft.org/2012/12/defend-the-halesowen-4/

Doug

Wednesday 19 December 2012

Alarming new evidence of hunger in schools raises urgent call for free school meals

Alarming new evidence of hunger in schools...
Martin Roger Francis9:14pm Dec 18
Alarming new evidence of hunger in schools raises urgent call for free school meals

Nearly half of UK teachers are seeing hungry children coming into school, a new report from The Children’s Society, released today (14 December) reveals.

‘Food for Thought: A survey on teacher’s views on school meals’ reveals alarming evidence of child poverty and hunger in UK schools. Nearly three-quarters (72%) of teachers reported seeing children coming to school with no lunch and no means to pay for one.

And two thirds (66%) of the teachers we spoke to stated that staff provide pupils with food or money if they come into school hungry.

The Children’s Society’s report comes just a few days after the government announced its plans for implementing Universal Credit. The introduction of a new welfare system provides decision-makers with a unique opportunity to make sure all children in poverty get a free school meal.

Every day, more than half of the 2.2 million school children living in poverty in England miss out on a free school meal. 700,000 of these children are not even entitled to one - often because their parents work, regardless of how little they earn. A further 500,000 are not taking up their free school meals because they face barriers, such as stigma, teasing and bullying.

‘Food for Thought’ also reveals that 98% of teachers believe that all children living in poverty, including those in working families, should receive a free school meal.

Matthew Reed, Chief Executive of The Children’s Society, said: “This report sets out shocking evidence of just how much hardship teachers up and down the country are witnessing in classrooms day in, day out. Something is going badly wrong when teachers themselves are having to feed children.

"Every child in poverty should be given a free school meal. Free school meals are key to moving children out of poverty and vital to helping them flourish."

Christine Blower, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers (NUT), said: “Our teachers see hunger in their classrooms every day. Free school meals often are the only chance children in poverty get to have a balanced, nutritional meal. They should be available to all children in need.”

Hank Roberts, President of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL), said: “It is deeply worrying that our teachers are seeing pupils arriving at school unable to pay for their lunch and are too often going without. The Children’s Society’s report clearly shows the importance of free school meals in tackling child poverty, and we support the recommendation that all children living in poverty should be entitled to free school meals.”

The Children’s Society’s report also highlights teachers’ views of the importance of a healthy lunch on students’ ability to learn.

It also emphasises the importance of a cashless system for helping to end the stigma sometimes associated with free school meals.

Monday 17 December 2012

Clegg targets pensioner benefits

If the Coalition, Conservative Party or...
David Francis10:27pm Dec 17
If the Coalition, Conservative Party or Liberal Democrats try to
 withdraw the Bus Pass and other universal benefits from 
Pensioners there will be a massive campaign by NPC & Other 
Pensioner Groups . Also Trade Union Retired members will be 
part of that campaign. It is rumoured the threshold for 
withdrawal will be quite low. Not just rich pensioners.

Please make sure the Green Party supports Pensioners. The Bus
Pass is environmentally friendly and has social benefits. An 
investigation in Devon where I live found that it also benefited the 
local economy by encouraging pensioners to travel and use local 
shops, cafes etc. Quite apart from the reasons I have given so far
there are now huge numbers of pensioners with votes (pensioners
are the most enthusiastic voters) .

Saturday 15 December 2012

Conference Agenda Prioritization Ballot


Conference Agenda Prioritization Ballot
The agenda for conference is ordered in accordance with a vote of the membership, the motions with the most support appear higher up the agenda than those with less support. This ensures that where time is tight, the most supported motion prior to the conference get the best chance of being heard. 
The agenda and the ballot will be published as close as possible to December 21st and will run until the 15th of Januarywhen it will close in time for the publication of the final agenda.
To find the first agenda and the prioritization ballot when they are published, please visit the SOC part of the members website

Thursday 13 December 2012

PROTEST AGAINST UNFAIR DISMISSAL! Re-instate Dee Topping! No more bullying!

Message from members of CONEL College UCU about bullying and victimisation of a staff member.

PROTEST AGAINST UNFAIR DISMISSAL! Re-instate Dee Topping! No more bullying!
Tuesdays 12.45pm - 1.30pm CONEL College, High Road, Tottenham N15

More than 100 staff, students and members of the community held a noisy and angry protest on Tuesday outside CONEL college in Tottenham against the sacking of UCU member Dee Topping. We need your continued support!

Dee is a teaching assistant working with 14-16 year olds at CONEL. She has been sacked because students on a trip to Thorpe Park were accused of smoking dope, although no drugs were found on them, and the college did not ask Thorpe Park staff for evidence or challenge Thorpe Park for searching youngsters without parental consent. 7 staff were on the trip, but only Dee has been sacked: the college claim Dee could have predicted and prevented this incident, even though she was not in charge, and was not with the students who snuck off for a cigarette. Dee is being targeted, and taking the rap for management failings.

College management talk about ‘cleansing’ the staff body and are operating to create a cheaper, more expendable and compliant workforce: where ever possible replacing permanent staff with hourly-paid and agency staff, and cranking up the use of capability and disciplinary procedures to get rid of staff without having to pay redundancy. This strategy can only damage the college, as well as us as individuals: Dee is a highly-respected support teacher, and makes a massive difference to the life-chances of her students. Treating her so unfairly damages all staff. We are not the enemy – we are the college community.

UCU at CONEL are organising protests in support of Dee every Tuesday until she is re-instated, 12.45pm - 1.30pm, outside the college in Tottenham High Road. Please come and give your support - we need as many people there as possible to prevent reprisals against union members taking action for Dee.

UCU Branch Secretary, Jenny Sutton, contact 07707 011 374, jsutton@conel.ac.uk - please circulate this widely.

acknowledgements to Steve Cushion, Secretary UCU Retired members branch (London)

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Some Thoughts on Cuts by Doug Rouxel




It's a discussion about torture, militarism, going to war, and films - Zero Dark Thirty to be precise. However, the mindset which leads some people (on the 'soft left' in this country, or in America, liberals - I personally prefer the term liberals because it identifies them pretty well, and Phil Ochs wrote a nice tune all about them.) to support war (see support for bombing Libya from Sunny Hundal, or the ex-chair of GPEX's comments on the futility of demonstrating against the Iraq war) and the following quote stuck out at me:

"It's not that I think liberals support torture. No, I think liberals 
want to be forced to support torture. What liberals want is ultimately to do what conservative hawks want to do, but only after experts and leaders assure them that they have no choice. They want extreme events to make the choice for them"

You could easily take out the word torture, and replace it for cuts:

"It's not that I think the Green Councillors support cuts. No, I think the Green Councillors want to be forced to support cuts. What the Green Councillors want is ultimately to do what conservative hawks want to do, but only after experts and leaders assure them that they have no choice. They want extreme events to make the choice for them"

When you read/talk o or generally hear a response to the call for opposition to cuts from anyone within the party, or even within the Labour party and beyond, then the most important part of their argument is the inevitability of cuts, and ultimately that there is no choice - because that's what we are told, that there is no choice.

I think that this is something, in and of itself that requires challenging - the reason why we want a bottom up party (or union) is not that we like it that way, or it's nicer - it's to avoid the situation where people are able to absolve blame onto a higher power which sets the agenda that there is no choice - there is always choices, you might not like them, but they are certainly there.




Protests as Michigan passes 'anti-union' law


Thousands of union workers and their supporters crowded into downtown Lansing - the capital of Michigan. A show of strength against so-called Right To Work legislation that would prohibit unions from forcing people to join and pay dues as a condition of employment. Al Jazeera's John Terrett reports from Lansing, Michigan see 
acknowledgements to Ged Hickman

Sunday 2 December 2012

Rally in defence of public services, the NHS and the Welfare State

Subject: Dec 5th protest in Brighton
Rally in defence of public services, the NHS and the Welfare State

Wednesday 5th December
5.45 pm
Clock Tower
Brighton

Speakers from NHS and Council Unions, and campaigners for public services.

Why are large corporations and wealthy individuals able to avoid tax while our services are slashed?
Why do bankers get bonuses while we get wage and benefit cuts?
Why are millions unemployed while employers are allowed to use workfare schemes to avoid taking people on and paying them a decent wage?

Austerity isn't working!

Join the Budget Day protest

Supported by
Brighton Hove and District TUC
Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition
GMB
Unite
Unison
BMA
Brighton Benefits Campaign

In his Budget statement on December 5th, Osborne is announcing more misery for ordinary people. This is in addition to the cuts in benefits already announced and the selling off of the NHS.  Brighton and Hove City Council is facing a deficit of £25 million next year alone.  This will decimate local services and destroy jobs.

Saturday 1 December 2012

NHS resistance events this week


Attached is the Kilburn Unemployed Workers Group leaflet advertising a protest on Monday December 3rd against even tighter DWP rules against the PROVEN sick. 
Apologies for the short notice, but please support if you can.

REMINDER: Next Brent Fightback meeting Tuesday December 4th 7.30 pm at Brent Trades Hall, 375 High Rd, Willesden NW10 2JR

Events this week
Wednesday 5th December: The Chancellor's Autumn Statement
PROTEST: NO MORE TORY AUSTERITY
March from King's College, Strand assembling 5.30 pm to Downing St for a rally at 6.00 pm Called by UCU London Region, hosted by Unite the Resistance.

Thursday December 6th Meeting for Health Workers and Health Service Campaigners 6.00 - 8.00 pm Thatcher Room, Portcullis House, Westminster Bridge. This meeting will unite campaigners from across NW London, Lewisham and other health campaigns to discuss the way forward in the fight to defend our NHS. Room booked by Andy Slaughter MP. Make sure you allow time to get through security.

NW London Joint Committee of Primary Care Trusts will be meeting from 4.00 pm at Central Hall Westminster. Documents for the meeting - which bring the decisions on the Shaping a Healthier Future "consultation" up to date -  can be downloaded from the Shaping a Healthier Future website www.healthiernwlondon.nhs.uk.
There is space on the agenda for questions from the public, but not until 5.30 pm. We plan to ask for it to be taken earlier as we will have to leave at 5.30 pm.

Saturday 8th December "CASUALTY CONVOY" organised by Ealing Trades Council - cars decorated with Save Our Hospitals posters will drive past the four threatened hospitals. Organiser Oliver New writes:
Assembly Point Please arrive by 11..00am in the Hayes Bridge Retail Park.http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&tab=wl 
To get there drive down the Uxbridge Road through Southall Broadway (it won't be too busy at that time) towards Hayes. Just as you leave Southall you will go over a canal bridge. Turn left at the traffic lights into the Hayes Bridge shopping outlet - you will see Currys/PC World on the corner. (Alternatively, if you are coming via the M4, take the Hayes bypass and signs for Southall, just before Southall turn right when you see Currys/PC World.)  Enter the shopping outlet and park your car insideon the left. This place is always unoccupied.  Here we will put posters on the cars, using masking tape of the type used in car body shops.  The posters are bright and the designs are as attached to this e-mail in the 'all posters' PDF.
If you are coming by bus, take the 207 and get off at the Hayes Bridge stop. (If you want to come early for shopping, this retail park includes Currys/PC World, Staples, Halfords and furniture shops.)
What you will need  A car, with enough petrol in it, preferably at least one passenger who can read a map and keep up good spirits.  You might also want to bring a whistle for making a noise, or even a loud hailer if you have one.  You might want a bottle of water or a sandwich as we will be driving though lucnch time. Our trial run on a Saturday took about 2 hours and 30 minutes.
If a traffic light goes red, don't worry or crash the lights to keep up. You will be given a map and a route so we will all go the same way, even if we get a bit spread out at times. We will all be very noticeable with our posters and we will toot and whistle etc (obviously not to the extent of becoming aggressive or counter productive.)
The Route Led by our hired lorry, we are going to head off down the Uxbridge Road, though Southall (beep beep!) and past Ealing Hospital (Save Our Hospitals! Save Our Hospitals!), through Ealing (beep beep SOH, SOH). The convoy should stay together during this part. We will turn left into the North Circular and up to the Hanger Lane gyrator where we will turn right into Twyford Abbey Road, where we will pause to regroup. From there we will drive past Central Middlesex and then Hammersmith Hospital (beep beep SOH etc). From there we will go down Wood Lane, round Sheperds Bush, down to Hammersmith curl round North End Road, Lillie Road, past Charing Cross Hospital, back to Hammersmith, down the Chiswick High Road and regroup/debrief in Bollo Lane, Acton. We fully expect to be spread out during the second half of all this, but the brightly coloured posters and a bit of beeping will make local people highly aware that we are THE SAVE OUR HOSPITALS CASUALTY CONVOY!
We will  pass thousands of local people, Christmas shoppers as well as the four threatened hospitals.  We will probably be on loads of facebook photos and get into the local press.
So thanks for your support - it's not to late to tell friends. 
Toot toot for now!
Oliver New

BARNET Don't Let Capita in!

The Cabinet of Barnet Council meet on 6 December to decide whether to award a £750 million contract to Capita to run a huge chunk of council services - and put 200 council workers out of a job. We will be there to lobby and demonstrate our opposition to the Council's #OneBarnet outsourcing programme. Please join us!

Morning protest: Don't Let Capita in! Residents and supporters protest outside North London Business Park, 8-10am, Thursday 6 December.https://www.facebook.com/events/306485829462707/

Friday 30 November 2012

Caroline Lucas supports PCS protests

On 30/11/2012 16:27, Martin Francis wrote:

From Caroline Lucas's blog today

The Chancellor will publish details of his spending plans in the Autumn Statement next week.
 
They are expected to include information from the Office of Budget Responsibility showing that the Government’s programme of austerity and cuts to public services is failing to get our economy back on track.
 
 The promised creation of new private sector jobs has simply not materialised and more and more households are struggling to cope with rising bills, unemployment or job insecurity, and attacks on essential support mechanisms.
 
 What’s more, the Government’s economic policies have resulted in many public services workers having their pay frozen, their pensions cut and their terms and conditions placed under review.
 
 None of this makes sense if we want to keep money circulating in the local economy.
 
 So I'm pleased to support today’s protests by members of the Public and Commercial Services Union, designed to highlight the harmful impact of the Government’s policies on individuals and on the city.


Wednesday 28 November 2012

Vote for the GREEN KNIGHT, Sasha Khan.

THE GREEN PARTY TRADE UNION GROUP meeting this evening voted unanimously to call for votes for Sasha Khan, Green party candidate in Croydon North. All Croydon North voters should vote for the GREEN KNIGHT, Sasha Khan.

Shock Therapy and Popular Uprising: Greece at the Crossroads.*


Syriza UK invites you to join an event on the Greek crisis and the current situation.
*Title: Shock Therapy and Popular Uprising: Greece at the Crossroads.*
Date: 7 December 2012
Location: ULU, Malet Suite 7,Malet St, London WC1E 7HY
Time:19.00 – 21.00
Speakers:
Costas Douzinas, Birkbeck College, London
Stathis Kouvelakis, King’s College, London
Seumas Milne, The Guardian
Marina Prentoulis, University of East Anglia

A contribution of £5 towards the cost of the room is recommended.
This event is organised by the London branch of Syriza which lacks its own financial means to cover the cost of hiring the hall.

Tuesday 27 November 2012

Principal of Ruskin College, Audrey Mullender, ordered the shredding of thousands of historic student records



Principal of Ruskin College, Audrey Mullender, ordered the shredding of thousands of historic student records from 1899 to recent years, an act which has been nationally condemned by students, staff, historians, archivists and journalists. No records  have been scanned and only barest details digitised. Information on  students'  backgrounds, progress and achievements has now gone. Only some from the 1950s remain.

She has insisted, after the event, that these actions were legally justified despite repeated advice to the contrary from experienced archivists and internationally prestigious historians.

 On Thursday  Nicholas Kingsley, Head of Archives Sector Development & Secretary of the Historical Manuscripts Commission at the National Archive, confirmed ‘it would have been acceptable to retain these records indefinitely for historical purposes’.


In October  we listed the records that have been destroyed. They included thousands of files on individual students  as well as those of the Ruskin Student Union. Student dissertations, often based on the unique opportunities for access to working lives that Ruskin students possessed, were also destroyed. Further unwanted material, including collections on the National Register of Archives, had been dispersed to other archives.


Over 7,500 people * (see examples of names below) have signed the petition to halt immediately the destruction and to transfer the remaining records to an institution committed to preserving the recorded experiences of working people. We have had no confirmation from Ruskin management that the remaining historic student records, mainly dating from the 1950s, will be saved. We have had no expression of regret as to the destruction of records relating to so many people’s lives.

In order to save the remaining student archives and to ensure that no further destruction takes place we are lobbying the next meeting of the Ruskin College governing executive on Friday 30 November from 10.30 am outside the Rookery entrance, Ruskin College, the new Headington site, Dunstan Road, 0X3 9BZ.

We will be presenting the petition. We will  also be laying a wreath in memory of the achievements of students whose lives have been eradicated from the records. Please come and show your support and, if  you can, bring your banner or placard. Please email me onhildakean@hotmail.com if you can come. We will adjourn afterwards for coffee in the White Hart.

Please also write again to the governing executive members (email details attached) alerting them to the advice of the National Archives and asking them to save the remaining archives –and to help salvage Ruskin’s tarnished reputation.


Dr Hilda Kean FRHistS



 *Signatories include Sarah Waters, Alan Bennett, M Lewycka, Sir Brian Harrison former editor of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; Dr Nick Mansfield former director of the People’s History Museum; Dr Eve Setch History publisher at Routledge; Professor Alison Light (widow of Raphael Samuel); Professor Jonathan Rose author of The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes; Stewart Maclennan, chair of the Scottish Labour History Society; MPs John McDonnell, Dave Anderson and Jeremy Corbyn; Harry Barnes, former Labour MP and former Ruskin student; John Hendy QC; Professor Geoff Whitty, former director of the Institute of Education; Professor Pat Thane, co-founder of History and Policy; Alice Kessler-Harris former President, Organization of American Historians; Dr Andrew Foster, Chair of the Public History Committee of the Historical Association; Professor Geoff Eley, Chair of the History Department at the University of Michigan; Dr. Serge Noiret, Chair of the International Federation for Public History, Italy; Dorothy Sheridan, former archivist of the Mass Observation archive; Dr. Roger Fieldhouse, joint author of A History of Modern British Adult Education;Keith Bilton on behalf of the Social Work History Network; Bob Price, leader of Oxford City Council; former governors including David Buckle and Brian Cohen; and hundreds and hundreds of former Ruskin students and staff.

RUSKIN GOVERENORS

The Chair of governors is David Norman, retired trade union officer from CWU
cllrDNorman@southend.gov.uk

Vice chair Carole Orgell-Rosen Carole is a nominee from the Ruskin Fellowship, the alumni association. rosen.carole@gmail.com

Other members at July 2012:

Chris Baugh, assistant general secretary Public and Commercial Services Union

Jane Dixon, head of Denman College
j.dixon@denman.org.uk

John Fray, former NUJ deputy general secretary
john.fray@ntlworld.com

Anne Hock of Popularis, a company managing ballots and elections

Roger McKenzie, Unison West Midlands regional secretary R.McKenzie@unison.co.uk

Jo Morris, former women’s officer at TUC

Doug Nicholls, national officer for youth work, Unite the Union    Doug.Nicholls@unitetheunion.com

Professor John Raftery, Pro Vice-Chancellor (student experience) Oxford Brookes University
jraftery@brookes.ac.uk

Pauline Ryall from WEA

Alan Shepherd,secretary of the Ruskin Fellowship, the alumni association 

Marva Small, former student

Colin Taylor of Oxford City football club

Van Coulter, Oxford city councillor (and former Ruskin student)
cllrvcoulter@oxford.gov.uk

Staff members are:
Kieron Winters (Unison) kwinters@ruskin.ac.uk
Alan Irwin (UCU) airwin@ruskin.ac.uk  
Peter Dwyer (UCU) pdwyer@ruskin.ac.uk

2 student members:
Geraldine Sherratt 10sherge@ruskin.ac.uk

and the principal Audrey Mullender  amullender@ruskin.ac.uk



Wednesday 21 November 2012

IWW John Lewis cleaners win pay rise


IWW John Lewis cleaners win pay rise

IWW John Lewis cleaners win pay rise
Cleaners at contractor ICM working in John Lewis stores in London, who are members of the Industrial Workers of the World revolutionary union, have won a 9% backdated pay rise following them balloting for strike action.
Outsourced John Lewis cleaners have won an immediate and backdated 9% pay rise following their pledge of industrial action. The increase, backdated 5 months, takes their pay to £6.72 per hour at three central London sites, and £6.50 at one outer London site. Supervisors will now get £8.00 per hour and £7.84 respectively.
United in the IWW trade union, the cleaners notified their employer, ICM, last week of the trade dispute and impending ballot for industrial action. This ballot could have seen visible and noisy industrial action by cleaners at four John Lewis sites in London in the run up to Christmas.
John Lewis has seen pre-Christmas profits increase on last year already. The company are proud of their partnership structure, where all staff are ‘partners’ who share in the company’s profits.
But John Lewis’ cleaning contract is outsourced to MML, who outsource it again to ICM. The cleaners have seen their hours reduce and workload increase, while they were paid minimum wage of £6.19 – and they don’t share in the profits.
This increase, including a backdated lump sum just before Christmas, will make a real difference to our members’ lives. ICM further pledged to look at the potential to pay a Living Wage of £8.55 as they enter contract talks early in 2013.
IWW National Secretary Frank Syratt said:
“It is our members’ unity, solidarity and courageous stance that has won this increase. They are an inspiration and a lesson to other workers”
“There is still work to do. John Lewis needs to ensure all their workers – whether partners or outsourced - take home a Living Wage of £8.55 and receive full sick pay, lifting them out of poverty and insecurity. IWW pledges to continue organising and campaigning to make this happen”.
Edited from www.iww.org.uk
(acknowledgements to Danny Bates)

Thursday 15 November 2012

GPTU banner at Eurostrike solidarity demo

Charlie Kiss and Pete Murry with banner. Smith Sq London 14/11/2012

Wednesday 14 November 2012

Naya Nikolaou and Vasilis Sylaidis, both militant unionists, talk about the situation in Greece and the importance of the international general strike at 14 of November

Naya Nikolaou and Vasilis Sylaidis, both militant unionists, talk about the situation in Greece and the importance of the international general strike at 14 of November

Tuesday 13 November 2012

Euro strike begins. Vive les Pompiers!

Striking French firemen block a tramline. Acknowledgements CoR and Martin Francis.

Johnson: Bring London fire engine contract in house after PFI failure


Darren Johnson, Green Party Assembly Member for London has called for the London fire engine contract to be brought back in house as a ‘sensible long term solution’. He was esponding  to news that the private company which owned the contract for London’s fire engines has been put into administration. A temporary arrangement for the contract with a new company is in place for the next 18 months.

Darren Johnson said:
The sensible long term solution is to bring the contract in house and scrap the PFI arrangement. Many other fire authorities have a straight forward leasing arrangement. I hope that both the Mayor and the Government will see sense and recognise that the experiment with PFI has failed. We shouldn’t be taking financial risks with something so essential as our fire engines. Government funding guarantees for PFI credits could be better spent on developing an in house contract.

Monday 12 November 2012

MEMBERS OF TRANSPORT UNION RMT will be taking a further 24 hours of strike this Thursday (15th November) on First Devon and Cornwall buses

Glen Burrows2:48pm Nov 12

MEMBERS OF TRANSPORT UNION RMT will be taking a further 24 hours of strike this Thursday (15th November) on First Devon and Cornwall buses in a continuing dispute over pay.

Relevant members are have been instructed not to book on for duty between 00:01 and 23:59 hours on Thursday 15th November 2012.

The action follows a rock solid strike on the 26th October where even the company admitted that only a tiny fraction of buses ran and comes after a massive rejection of this year's long overdue pay offer.

Industrial action scheduled to take place on 8th November 2012 was suspended to allow for a consultation with members on a revised offer from the company.

The overwhelming consensus from the shop floor was to reject the offer on the grounds that the company are refusing to honour back pay. RMT believes that the company have deliberately dragged out the negotiations in order to dilute the first year of the offer by not including the crucial back pay element.

Support for the first day of action was solid in all depots. RMT members in Plymouth, Dartmouth, Tavistock, Torpoint, Camborne, Eden, Helston, Truro, Falmouth and Penzance formed picket lines and ensured the success of the action, The company (in their own words) ran less than 10 per cent of services, which were run by a handful of Managers.

RMT General Secretary Bob Crow said:

"After the magnificent support for the strike action at the end of October we would have hoped that First Devon and Cornwall management would have come forward with and offer aimed at reaching a solution to this dispute over pay justice.

"The refusal to honour back pay deliberately watered down the value of the deal and that penny-pinching has led us back into strike action this week.

"The strength of feeling amongst the staff remains as strong as it ever was and the determination to secure a fair deal is rock solid amongst the bus workers. First Devon and Cornwall must recognise that and get round the table with us to sort out a deal that properly rewards this key group of transport staff without unacceptable strings and conditions."

Further strike action on First Devon and Cornwall buses this Thursday as RMT steps up fight for pay justice.

Eurostrike solidarity across Britain


Glasgow

6pm, Called by Coalition of Resistance, George Square
More info

Birmingham

1pm - 2pm, outside Birmingham Council House
More info

Manchester Uni

2pm, Defend Education & Solidarity with the European Strikes – called by Education Activists Network at University Place.
More info

Cambridge

5pm, Called by Trades Council, outside Town Hall

Kingston

5.30pm, called by Trades Council, Penrhyn Road campus, Kingston University
More info


Newcastle

4:30pm, Called by Coalition of Resistance at Greys Monument
More info

Manchester City

12pm - 3pm. City Centre Solidarity Rally & Anti-Austerity Protest. Organised by Greater Manchester Association of Trades Union Councils
More info

Sheffield

4pm, Sheffield Town hall. Called by Sheffield trades council.
More info

London Met

1pm, Shut the home office, On going campaign to reverse the UKBA decision for international students at London Met
More info

Edinburgh

6pm, outside St Giles Cathedral, Royal Mile, Edinburgh
More info

Liverpool

5.30pm, Bold Street, Liverpool called by Liverpool Trades Council
More info

Oxford

12pm - 1pm. Oxford trades council is staging a lunchtime protest in the Cornmarket. Contact gawainlittle@yahoo.co.uk

Crossrail Picket

7am, London Oxford Street Mass Picket of Crossrail at Westbourne Grove
More info

Leeds Uni

12pm - 1pm Parkinson Steps, University of Leeds.
More info