Strike by Unite oil
tanker drivers to defend jobs hits fuel supply
January 24 123 oil
tanker drivers employed by road haulage firm Wincanton began a week long
strike at 5am Tuesday 24th January. Employed on the ConocoPhillips
contract, they deliver fuel to Jet petrol stations.

Interviewing pickets at Immingham
After a 83% vote for action, these Unite members are
striking for job security – they want ConocoPhillips to guarantee they
will abide by TUPE (Transfer of Undertakings Protection of Employees, an
agreement where workers in privatised industries retain the terms and
conditions they had when the company was state owned) if they end or
fragment the Wincanton contract. In effect, the tanker drivers are being
subcontracted to ConocoPhillips who want to cut costs by putting the Jet
contact out to the lowest bidder which would see the Wincanton drivers
either lose their jobs or see their terms and conditions cut if they
aren’t protected by TUPE.
Three major fuel distribution depots are affected, in Kingsbury,
Stockton-on-Tees and the biggest on Immingham docks, where nearly all
the 86 drivers and fitters manned picket lines in and out of the
refinery depot. Unite steward Barney said, “There’s usually 400 units a
day in and out of here, so far we’ve given dispensation to just one.
Most other tanker drivers (the sector is 95% unionised) are not even
coming to this depot but those that do are turned round to loud cheers.
Later a couple of Calor Gas tankers turn in. “They’ll be agency drivers”
says Kev, “they’ll have been threatened with the sack if they don’t
cross.” However 5 minutes later, a Calor tanker comes out, the driver
jumps out of the cab and says “Now I know all the facts, I’m not filling
up.”
Another Unite driver rep Nick Dennis reports that at Kingsbury, all but
one of 50 Wincanton drivers on the Texas contract have refused to drive
past the Jet picket line there. He says that other drivers understand
that ConocoPhillips are testing the water. National Unite officer Matt
Draper explained “It’s all part of the bosses’ cost-down agenda, if they
can cut pay and conditions, it won’t get passed on at the pumps, it’ll
just mean more profits for the oil majors.” Unite branch secretary John
Roscoe added, “Total, Fina and Elf are threatening to do the same thing
when their contracts end in September.” That’s why Unite are fighting
for a “minimum standard” agreement across the industry. This strike
could determine whether that’s achieved.
Jez, another steward thinks the employers are using the recession to
have a go. John says they all feel “Enough is enough.” Kev says “We’ve
got to stand up to these Fat-Cats!” The tanker drivers at Immingham
certainly are, picketing around the clock in 6 hour shifts. They expect
their action to force Conoco to give them a written guarantee regarding
TUPE.

Driverless tankers sit idle at Immingham