Today’s
Grauniad carries a report on one of the things that has kept me away from
blogging recently – the dispute
at Lambeth College. UNISON members (in the Lambeth branch) took two days of
strike action last week, during the second week of indefinite action by
lecturers’ union UCU, and are planning further action.
The UNISON
dispute is over the imposition of new, less favourable, contracts on new starters
which, among other things, increase the working week and reduce sick pay for
those who are off long term.
The attack
on sick pay in particular has its origins in proposals which the Association of
Colleges (the national employers’ organisation for the Further Education
sector) could not persuade the national trade unions to accept (and which other
London FE colleges have recently considered and rejected).
The financial
savings from an attack upon the income of staff who are off long term sick are
negligible and the impact upon the culture of an organisation which announces
that it now cares less than it did for staff when they are most vulnerable is hardly likely to be positive. Attempts to reduce sick pay are a purely
ideological assault upon the rights and living conditions of working people,
driven by a generation of managers who are Thatcher’s children.
The College
management do appear perplexed that trade union members should take action
against changes which will not immediately impact upon them and have been
convinced that they could resolve the dispute with offers of (time-limited) “protection”
for existing staff. Management appears to live in a world in which one cares
only for oneself, an attitude of mind which sits comfortably alongside seeing
education as, first and foremost “a business.”
The College
workforce (both teaching and support staff) have a clearer understanding of
employee relations than their better remunerated senior management colleagues however,
as they grasp that a two-tier workforce undermines unity and (at an
organisation with an annual staff turnover of 24%) will inevitably lead to
downward harmonisation.
Both trade
unions seek negotiation with the employer over the terms of the new contract,
but the College insist that the new contracts are a done deal because they are “modern”
and “fit for purpose.”
(If any readers
have a spare English-Managementspeak Managementspeak-English dictionary that
would help the negotiators I am sure.)
The College
senior management remain apparently unflinching in spite of the news that their
parsimony toward staff does not inhibit generosity
to the Principal himself.
However, all
disputes end with negotiation. It’s up to the management to start negotiating.
In the mean time, delegates at UNISON Conference can expect to hear more about
how they can “sponsor a striker” so that we can top up UNISON strike pay should
our members be forced to take further action.
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