As a local
trade union activist I deal with a number of reasonable and experienced
managers who understand employee relations. Sometimes I also deal with others.
Last week I was irritated to read a message from a manager who was clearly trying
to limit the impact of the coming pay strike.
Sensible
managers in local government understand that it is in their professional
interest that our strike action on Thursday should be as effective and
successful as possible.
Unfortunately,
local government not always being a brains trust, there are too many of the
other sort of managers who take the views expressed in a disappointingly
reactionary post on the website of the Local Government Association.
Some
managers seem to view strike action (in a national dispute) as some sort of
football match in which they are on the other team from the trade unions. This
leads them to do all they can to encourage the thoroughly discreditable action
of crossing a picket line.
Those of our
managers who are truly “Thatcher’s children” can expect the support of the
hard-right fringe of the Tory party for such managerial machismo – but Councillors
and senior managers who aren’t rabid right-wingers need to (and, in my
experience, do) take a much more measured approach.
Local
government services have borne the brunt of public spending cuts since 2010 as
the Government of Bullingdon boys and millionaires has sought to resolve the
crisis caused by the bankers at the expense of the living standards of working
people.
A
short-term, short-sighted view of the pay claim from the NJC trade unions is
that, if it brings us a better pay rise, it will only worsen the consequent
budget crisis. A more intelligent view is that, if we can defeat the pay freeze
we can begin to hope that we may reverse the tidal wave of austerity engulfing
our local services.
Local government
isn’t a private sector manufacturing plant, and approaches to employee
relations drawn from that past are as inappropriate when applied by managers as
when they are applied by trade unionists.
The delivery
of local government services is not, generally, “Fordist” process production,
and the impact of our industrial action is not primarily about how much we disrupt
everyday life (although that matters) but about the political impact we can
have upon those with power.
The coming
strike on Thursday, and the further strikes we will need to take if we are to
secure a worthwhile outcome, are not – essentially – a local industrial fight
between “bosses” and “workers”. They are part of a national campaign which is
as much about fair funding for local government as it is about fair pay for
local government workers.
It is in the
interests of all those who care about local government that Thursday’s strike
should be as solid as possible.
Labour
Councillors have a particular opportunity to ensure that they use their
influence to seek an intelligent approach from managers in local government,
including a reasonable approach to deductions in pay and assurances to all
employees (regardless of union membership) and to agency staff that there will
be no adverse consequences from taking strike action (other than loss of pay).
I know many Labour Councillors (including people in leading positions who wouldn't agree with much of what they might read here) understand the politics of this position - although I'm sure we all have experience of less astute and informed Labour Councillors who haven't immediately "got" that.
And, of
course, Labour Councillors should be supporting our picket lines on Thursday!
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