May 10
Pensions strike reports
11 May
Prison officers walked out to join hundreds of thousands of
other public sector workers taking strike action in defence
of their pensions.
Trade unionists taking action include the PCS
civil servants' union; Unite in health, Ministry of Defence
and the civil service; lecturers in UCU; and members of the
Nipsa public services union in Northern Ireland.
RMT transport union members in the Royal
Fleet Auxiliary are also taking action to defend their
retirement benefits and tens of thousands of off-duty police
are demonstrating today against privatisation and cuts.
Some
reports from the picket lines and rallies:
(latest at top)
Swansea rally
Torrential rain drove the Swansea
strike rally indoors but over 100 people crowded into
a nearby church hall to hear speakers from PCS, Unite, UCU
and Swansea Trades Council. There was a combative mood;
speakers from those unions on strike called on others to
join them in rebuilding the alliance that shook the Tories
on 30 November. Members of unions not taking action on 10
May told of members who were frustrated and ready to strike
and called from the floor for extended joint action in the
near future.
Ronnie Job, representing Swansea Trades
Council, was applauded when he said he was at the rally
because he refused to cross a picket line of his comrades in
UCU. He said that workers are ready to fight on
pensions, regional pay, in defence of the NHS and to
oppose all cuts - "we won't pay a penny more for the crisis
of the bankers and the markets".
Speaking for the
PCS, Dominic McFadden drew attention to the fact that
cuts are unnecessary and unjustifiable when the rich and
corporations escape paying tax to the tune of £123 billion
each year. Unite speaker John Sloane talked of NHS cuts in
England but was reminded from the floor that local health
boards are planning for cuts of 5% a year for the next three
years. Both speakers called for the leaders of the unions
not on strike to match the fighting spirit of their members
and rejoin the pensions struggle.
Visteon pensioners, who have been fighting
Fords for over three years for pensions justice, explained
how private sector employers have raided pension funds and
the inadequacies of the pension protection fund. Chair Dave
Warren, NSSN supporter and PCS member, in summing up the
rally stressed unity and solidarity and the need to build
from here. Forward to further and bigger coordinated action!
Defend all pensions! Stop all cuts!
Swansea strike rally, 10th
May 2012, photo by Ronnie Job
Liverpool
- strong strike turnout and support for further action
60,000 public sector workers in the North
West region demonstrated their loathing of the Con-Dem
government by taking strike action on 10 May. All reports
indicated a truly magnificent response to this latest call
for strike action.
Some 400 workers packed into a rally at
the Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool to hear Hugh Lanning of the
PCS, Rachael Maskel of Unite, a speaker from NUT and Steve
Todd of the RMT deliver fighting speeches. They received an
enthusiastic response when all speakers declared that the
fight goes on. Immediate applause met Hugh Lanning's call
for the TUC to organise further industrial action to defeat
the attack on pensions.
Printers' spokesperson Terry O'Connor
representing 160 workers who have been ruthlessly sacked by
international printing conglomerate MMP outlined the extent
of their struggle, explaining that the workers were still
determined to defend their conditions after sixteen weeks of
industrial action. Reflecting the determined mood of the
rally, he received a magnificent standing ovation when he
declared they would fight until victory was achieved.
Liverpool TUSC mayoral candidate Tony
Mulhearn was called in to speak by chairman Martin Kelsey.
He received an immediate round of applause. Tony took the
opportunity of thanking all PCS members and members of other
unions who had given him magnificent support during his
campaign and declared that the almost 5% of the vote he
received was significant and a basis for developing the
anti-cuts campaign which is bound to intensify as the cuts
begin to bite even deeper during the next months and years.
He stated that his campaign policy was
based on the policy of the PCS and the TUC, and he called on
the TUC to emulate the actions of the PCS to work for a
general strike to topple the Con-Dem government which is
mired in sleaze and corruption and representing only the
richest 1%. This provoked stormy applause. He told the rally
that if Labour was elected tomorrow, Miliband's policy of
carrying out the cuts should be rejected, and workers are
entitled to demand all cuts should be restored, the NHS be
brought back into public ownership and the value of pensions
restored. If this did not happen what was the Labour Party
for? Again this was greeted with applause.
The spirit of the rally belied government
ministers' claims that the strikes were fizzling out, in
fact they were supported by a greater percentage of workers
in the unions taking action than last November's fantastic
turnout. The 10 May action has set a course for the next
stage of the campaign which will be fuelled by the
intransigence of the Con-Dems' bunker mentality of 'no
retreat from austerity'. The next few months of campaigning
trade union activity will seriously test the resolve of even
this boneheaded Con-Dem administration.
Dave Walsh
Sheffield:
Four teams of NSSN supporters visited picket lines across
the city, the best supported being Unite Health members at
Hallamshire hospital, UCU members at Hillsborough college
and PCS members at St Paul's Place (DfE & BIS). At the
hospital, a Unison member had refused to go into work, went
home, got changed and joined the Unite strikers on the
picket line.
Over 200 strikers came together for a
dinner-time rally outside the town hall. Among the speakers
was NSSN supporter and Socialist Party member Marion Lloyd
(PCS NEC) who said that today's strike had reignited the
pensions battle which given the government's weakness can
still be won, and that 11 governments have fallen so far in
Europe trying to impose austerity, so let's make Cameron
number 12!
In a show of public sector and private
sector unity, about 20 PCS members joined a dozen striking
Aslef members protesting outside Sheffield railway station.
The Aslef train drivers were on their fourth strike day
against an East Midland Trains attack on their pensions.
Alistair Tice
Leeds:
Richard Chamberlain, POA branch chair at HMP Leeds, when
interviewed by Iain Dalton outside Armley
prison, said: "We're protesting against the
retirement age of prison officers which is now being
confirmed and verified at 68. We don't feel that's safe,
practical or realistic. We've had numerous reforms to the
prison service pension over the years, the most recent of
which was in 2006 which made our pension scheme absolutely
sustainable and gave a retirement age of 65 to prison
officers.
"The proposal which is now being
implemented, for
prison officers to retire at 68, is just ridiculous
and outrageous. Other first line emergency services have
been given dispensation so they've retained earlier
retirement ages in recognition of the type of job that they
do - people like the armed forces, police, fire service. We
feel that should be extended to us. Talks have broken down.
The government's position is that prison officers should
work longer, pay higher contributions and get a worse
pension when they retire. Which is why we've been forced to
take this action today."
East London:
Pickets at Settles Street NINO (national insurance number
processing office) in Tower Hamlets had a solid turnout for
the strike. As well as real anger over the pensions, PCS
members are fighting against management bullying and
mismanagement.
Many staff are bitterly unhappy at a
scheme for reorganising document checking for people
applying for national insurance numbers. One picket
explained: "We check documents on site as well as
interviewing people, but just as the Olympics are coming up
and there is so much focus on security, they want to lessen
security in document checking.
"At the moment you have people working on
it full time who know what they're doing and they're really
good. But management wants to change this to a rota system
where different offices will check documents for six months,
and move the people who are currently checking documents to
seeing applicants.
"Workers will get one day of training, and
then for six months they might not do that job, so how are
they going to remember how to do it? It's ridiculous. That's
the system we had 10 years ago and it never worked properly
- that's why it was changed to checking all documents on
site in 2008".
The vast majority of people who came out
on 30 November were out again on 10 May, but one manager who
has since been upgraded and given a £7 a week pay rise,
decided to cross the picket line this time. "Now we know his
price, it's pretty cheap", said one of the pickets. Four out
of five bought a copy of the Socialist. Naomi Byron
Wirral:
Thousands of PCS union members on Wirral, working in Land
Registry, Job Centre Plus, Child Support Agency, County and
Magistrate courts and the Lady Lever Art Gallery, took
strike action today. There was excellent support for the
strike by members of PCS Land Registry Birkenhead branch
with only 2% of members going into work. We had 22 pickets
and supporters on the picket line. After the picket line
hundreds of public sector union members attended a rally in
Liverpool where Tony Mulhearn addressed the meeting from the
floor and called on the TUC and Ed Miliband to have the
courage to stand up for ordinary working people rather than
supporting the need for austerity, just slower. This was met
by loud applause. Dave Lunn
Belfast: In
Belfast, Nipsa (Northern Ireland Public Service Alliance)
and PCS took coordinated strike action. Unite Health were
out for 12 hours, Nipsa in Health for two. More Nipsa
members went into work than on N30, but the PCS strike
turnout stayed strong. There were 300 at an indoor rally.
Socialist Party member Billy Lynn, chairperson of the civil
service executive committee for Nipsa, spoke first,
explaining a strategy of escalating united action to defeat
the Tories' austerity agenda for pensions and the public
sector. Ian Pattison
Exeter: There
was a good mood on the picket lines in Exeter and lots of
lively debate was had about fighting the pensions attacks
but also austerity politics in general. PCS and UCU members
then leafleted in town getting great support from the
general public. A rally of over 30 people was also good,
hearing very political speeches from representatives of the
striking unions, including NSSN supporter Jim Thomson, who
called for further escalating and coordinated action.
Strongly supported walkout by
POA members at Armley prison, photo by Iain
Dalton
National prison officers' action:
A Prison Officers Association (POA) leader reports that the
POA took seven hours of national action today. The action
was solid in Scotland, and 80% solid in England and Wales.
At Belmarsh prison, 80 officers walked out and 40 remained
at work. However, when the prison governor threatened
disciplinary action on the strikers, the working 40 decided
to walk out too, and did.
Wormwood Scrubs prison, London:
The anger of Prison Officers and other
prison staff was demonstrated today. Again, as they have
done before, at a moment's notice, 97% of POA members due on
duty at Wormwood Scrubs didn't go in and stayed on the
picket line, 150 strong. Also there were 70 out at Brixton
prison.
At the Scrubs a larger number of police
were sent to the scene than last time, but they were largely
sympathetic. They had to resist the governor's request to
move the strikers off the forecourt as they said it would
endanger the pickets. As they changed shifts some were going
to the mass police march.
Walkout by POA members at
Armley prison, Leeds was Strongly supported by
PCS members, admin and training officers
picketing outside the prison (Click to enlarge)
Alan Gourley, the POA branch chair, said:
'The police respect our cause as the pension issue affects
them also'. He said: 'This is a great turnout considering
the members' worries about losing their jobs, I am proud of
our members. However this is literally a life and death
issue for us. How can they expect us to do this dangerous
job until the age of 68? This is the issue for today's
action. Society owes them a debt for doing this job and most
people recognise that'.
Today has been a great success, up until
10am, two meetings were held to keep the pickets up to date
with the day's developments. All the prison vans where
turned away so no prisoners were sent to the Crown and
Magistrates courts. The UCU rep in the prison had been going
straight to the Central London demonstration when she heard
the POA was on strike and diverted to the prison to give
solidarity. Keith Dickinson
15.15 PCS sends out press release on
strike figures: "The government's
claims about numbers of civil servants on strike over
pensions are wildly inaccurate ... Nearly 200,000 PCS
members have walked out - according to figures communicated
to the union's head office from picket lines across the UK.
"There are also thousands of civil servants on strike from
Unite, the Northern Ireland Public Service Alliance (NIPSA),
the Rail Maritime and Transport union (RMT), the Prison
Officers' Association (POA) and the Immigration Service
Union (ISU). Cabinet office minister Francis Maude has
claimed only 100,000 civil servants are on strike. In fact
the number is well over 200,000.
PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said: 'Instead of
announcing made-up figures to undermine the strike Francis
Maude should be acknowledging that there is huge opposition,
and start meaningful negotiations about public service
pensions'."
Leeds HMRC workers photo by
Iain Dalton
15.00
Leeds: 300 have attended a
Leeds strike rally where NSSN supporter and PCS
vice-president John McInally was amongst the speakers. Youth
Fight for Jobs had a noisy contingent on the demonstration.
Iain Dalton
14.40 Winchester:
Winchester University UCU picketed the main entrance to the
King Alfred Campus today as part of the ongoing dispute over
public sector pensions. From 8am union members leafleted
passers-by and spirits were high as over a dozen strikers
crowded onto the pavement sharing out the biscuits and
sweets donated by well-wishers. Although it was quiet on
campus, with many students now entering the exam period,
there was a feeling that the strike had been a success.
There had been talk that the university
management was bringing in outside invigilators to cover the
exams that they had not bothered to rearrange, cover that
they had originally pressured other staff to do. A united
front from the Unison and UCU unions had quickly been
formed, refusing to allow their members to be forced into
doing the work of those on strike. Management had clearly
backed down and hired in people to oversee the few exams
taking place from off-campus.
By lunchtime the pickets were boosted by
support staff who took advantage of their break to join the
picketers and show support. Strikers discussed what would
happen next in Britain following the recent council
elections. It was clear that the events in Greece and France
with the gains made by the Left on an anti-austerity ticket
had had a big impact on them. However foremost in the minds
of those on strike was that the action has to be escalated
to involve other teaching unions and the rest of the public
sector workers. Those out today were already veterans of
half a dozen pickets but were determined that next time it
would be bigger and better! Hampshire Socialist Party
14.00 Brighton:
70 took part in a rally at the town hall, with good speeches
and a good mood. At lunchtime there are 20 on a picket at
the Royal Sussex hospital. Jon Redford
13.30 London:
The strike rally in Methodist Central Hall is underway with
700 strikers present. As well as speakers from leaders of
the unions taking strike action, including Mark Serwotka
(PCS) and Len McCluskey (Unite), Christine Blower has spoken
from the National Union of Teachers - a union that took
national action in defence of pensions along with other
public sector unions last year but is unfortunately not
taking action today.
She made no concrete promises at the rally
but said that the campaign against the pension attacks will
continue.
Applause was given to an audience members
who shouted out: "Why wasn't the NUT on strike today?".
Bob Crow received huge applause when he said that the rest
of the trade union movement has got to wake up and start
looking towards a 24 hour strike against the government's
austerity measures.
He called for the prison officers and
police (both also demonstrating today) to be brought on
board as part of the movement. "We need the entire trade
union movement to link up with the community and all hit by
austerity" he urged, and he finished with another much
applauded call for the TUC general council to call general
strike action.
Mark Serwotka paid tribute to all involved
in the day's 400,000-strong action, including the jurors who
refused to cross the picket line outside a London court, the
"brave men and women" in the Prison Officers Association,
and the lecturers who are out again in force. He said we
should take heart from Greece, with its 15 general strikes
and now a strong vote against austerity by the electorate.
He called on the TUC to re-open talks with the government on
public sector pensions and said that a commitment for more
action is necessary. The PCS executive has agreed to
organise further action in June. "Going on strike is not
easy, but we have to reaffirm that the alternative to
fighting is to lose", he said in his closing remarks.
Len McCluskey reminded the audience that
the strike is speaking "on behalf of millions of ordinary
men and women". He spoke of the need to pick up the momentum
again after the N30 strike and said that there will be "more
strike action in June, in the summer, in the autumn, in the
winter and on and on and on" if necessary. The trade union
leaders have to step up and give the leadership that's now
needed.
Sarah Sachs-Eldridge
13.00 Southampton: PCS pickets were
out in Southampton this morning at HMRC and the Maritime &
Coastguard Agency. PCS Rep Andy at MCA said: "Frances Maude
says strikes are futile. Anything but. We can't afford to
back down. If we do, some may never see their pension. We've
no choice but to keep up the fight til we get proper
negotiations". Tina at HMRC said: "My contributions have
doubled. What for? This is plain wrong". PCS members said
support was as strong as ever with over 85% supporting the
action. Nick Chaffey
Members of newly formed Leeds
teaching hospitals unite branch picketing
outside Leeds General Infirmary, photo by Iain
Dalton
13.00 London:
400 Unite health strikers and supporters have marched across
Westminster Bridge from St Thomas's hospital to attend a
lunchtime rally with other unions in the Methodist Central
Hall.
Over 300 at rally in
Nottingham city centre, joined by Aslef workers
on East Midlands trains on strike 10 May 2012,
photo by Becci Heagney
12.30 Nottingham:
Over 300 at rally in Nottingham city centre, joined by Aslef
workers on East Midlands trains on strike - public and
private sector workers together fighting to defend pensions!
Becci Heagney
11.40 Canterbury:
Canterbury College UCU pickets are solid and well manned.
They send solidarity to all strikers. The Students Union
president joined them on the lines. PCS at the DWP and
Courts in Canterbury were out - small but determined. At
Canterbury prison, I was a solitary PCS member but was then
joined by Socialist Party members. In Folkestone, PCS were
solid at Customs for the Eurostar, and Dover Port reported
the same. Dave Semple