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DON'T
PRIVATISE PRISONS - SUPPORT THE POA!
We reproduce the
following interview with POA Assistant Secretary Joe Simpson with kind
permission from the Socialist newspaper.
The Con-Dems have sold Birmingham prison to private security firm G4S.
This is the first existing public sector prison to be contracted out.
The POA prison officers� union opposes privatisation and has warned
that it will challenge the move. According to the BBC justice minister
Ken Clarke told MPs the �military are involved� in contingency plans
should prison officers stage a strike. The Socialist spoke to Joe
Simpson, assistant secretary of the POA.
What�s going on at the moment?
�We are living at the
moment with threats of injunctions against the union. It�s been going
on since the start of the week when we put out two circulars to our
members reminding them of the policies of the union. We immediately
got a letter from the Ministry of Justice asking us to withdraw the
circulars because they believed we were inducing prison officers to
take industrial action which we weren�t.
This resulted in
another letter coming back saying that they were going to seek
�injunctive relief� against the POA, ie to get an injunction to stop
us from doing anything.
If we try to do
anything in the mean time they can just come in and seize the assets
of the union. Phil Wheatley, who was director general of the prison
service and is now on the board of directors of G4S, who�ve just won
the bid for Birmingham, did say that if we ever went on strike he
would �own Cronin House�, which is our HQ.
What are the policies of the union?
The policies of the
union are that we would take industrial action up to and including
strike action if a public prison went over to private.
We are opposed to
privatisation because we believe that the state has a fundamental
obligation, that if it�s going to sentence its citizens then it should
also have the obligation of looking after them and rehabilitating
them. But what they�re doing now is actually selling their obligation
to the lowest bidder just to get out of that.
What will privatisation mean for members?
For members we are
hitting a level of uncertainty here. This is unprecedented. We�ve
never ever had a prison go over to the private sector and now
Birmingham has.
The state of play now
is that we are going to meet with the chief executive of the National
Offending Management Service. We�ve requested a meeting with the
Prisons Minister, Crispin Blunt, who we are meeting on Monday 4
April 2011 at 5pm. And we�re also going to be asking for a
meeting with Brendan Barber of the TUC for support. We have received
support from individual unions, RMT, PCS.
But the thing that
disappointed us was that a Labour front bencher got up and actually
supported everything that ken Clarke was saying, that was Sadiq Khan.
The opposition is in total agreement. This was a process that was
started by a Labour government. They started this process in 2009.
Was it Labour who originally took away your right to strike?
Jack Straw brought
back section 127. Actually it was 1994 when we lost our industrial
rights through a Thatcherite government in which Ken Clarke was one of
the more prominent MPs. Then when we signed up to the JIRPA [joint
industrial relations procedural arrangement]
which
was a no-strike agreement because we thought we were getting a deal,
but then management started to veto what was a dispute, they were
deciding what was a dispute and when we went to get agreement from
court they agreed with the prison service so we withdrew from. When we
withdrew Jack Straw tried to get another no-strike deal. When we
refused he brought back 127 on the statute books. In fact the law that
was brought in by Jack Straw is worse than what the Tories put in in
1994.
The only thing they
could do in 2008 was to come out and start dismissing people which we
believe they will try to do anyway. This is all about the union is
being bullied by an employer and by government.
How can readers of the Socialist support your members?
We will accept any
support from anyone in our fight against this. We�ve got policies out
there where we�re asking our branches to organise meetings, which they
will be doing over the next couple of days in the lunch hour. We�re
even getting threatening letters about that from the employer, calling
it industrial action! Having a meeting in our own time!
We believe that
government are trying to make law-abiding members of the public, i.e.
the professional men and women who work in our prisons, slaves to the
state. And to the private company now. |