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Postal workers wildcat in Swindon

Joseph K. | 09.08.2007 18:29 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

More than 500 workers walk out over the transfer of prominent strikers to elsewhere in the company.



The strike at the Hawksworth sorting office lasted two hours until the CWU union persuaded the strikers to return to work. They were angry that two collegues who had taken an active part in the ongoing national strikes were being transferred to another area.

CWU rep Chris Rye said: "they [Royal Mail managers] were personally pointing out people who had been on strike. This wasn't a union-led walkout though. It was led by the workers. There wasn't even a union rep there at the time... The union managed to get them back to work."

The union-brokered deal saw bosses agree that other staff could also be transferred with the original two. Mr Rye said that tensions were running high at the office as bosses insist on unpaid overtime to clear the backlogs caused by the strike (effectively asking workers to break their own strike, for free):

"Royal Mail have tried to put this latest walkout down to us, but they started it. There are 200 bags of mail that haven't gone out today. On Saturday there were 225 special deliveries that didn't go out. We were willing to take them but they wouldn't pay the overtime for us to do it."

He continued: "they have [also] changed the times of our starts and finishes."

Joseph K.
- Homepage: http://libcom.org/news/

Comments

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What the hell

09.08.2007 19:12

Why did the unions persuade them to go back to work? What's the point, these people were obviously taking action that if contiued on that day would have crippled the royal mail.

A shore sign that the communications union is shite and needs to be shifted to a workers lead strike.

Jess the cat


Worker led strike

09.08.2007 23:03

From what I have seen and heard, this is one of the most worker led strikes in ages. Loads of spontanious strikes and actions, both by the posties affected and by other communications workers in solidarity have been amazing. Everyone knows that union leadership is shite, generally comprising SWP uni garduate lefties who have gained the position to push thier own agendas rather than forward the interests of the workers. It seems like the posties have realised this aswell, and aswell as walking out on nationally co-ordinated strikes, are doing so autonomously and when they feel the need. This has been an inspiration. Direct action gets the goods!

VICTORY TO THE POSTIES!

(A) Sab x