Thursday, June 26, 2008

Local government workers seek 48-hour strike

UNISON local government negotiators for England, Wales and Northern Ireland are seeking authorisation to start the “sustained strike action” over the below-inflation pay offer of 2.45% with a 48-hour strike in mid July.The union’s industrial action committee meets on Friday 27 June to make the decision over strike action – and negotiators on the union’s National Joint Council committee are recommending that 600,000 local government workers kick off the action by striking on 16 and 17 July. “It is a tough decision to take strike action but our members have shown that they are willing to fight for a fair deal,” said UNISON head of local government Heather Wakefield. “Once the dates are finally agreed we will be going all out to mobilise maximum support around those strike days.”Members voted 55% to 45% in favour of a programme of sustained strike in a ballot whose result was announced yesterday. That vote was in reaction to a ‘final offer’ from local government employers of a 2.45% pay rise. The government’s Office of National Statistics’ own figures show that Retail Price Index inflation reached 4.3% in May. In the same month, the CPI measure of inflation, which the government uses to set its inflation target, hit 3.3%“We are of course always willing to meet the employers,” said Ms Wakefield. “The solution to this is in their hands.” But she also warned the employers that the union will mobilise its members for strike action, saying “they must know that we mean business and they must know that our members cannot afford to take another pay cut this year.”
Local government workers in Scotland are being balloted in July on taking strike action after rejecting a three-year offer worth 2.5% in each year.

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