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Pay strikes brewing in education and construction

Ed | 08.09.2008 19:38 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

The past few days have seen teachers set to vote again on strike action in an ongoing dispute over a sub-inflation pay offer while thousands of carpenters, bricklayers, painters, joiners and labourers employed by local authorities voted in favour of industrial action for the same reason.



Executive members of the National Union of Teachers (NUT) unanimously voted to proceed with a formal ballot at a meeting on Friday 5th September.

Christine Blower, acting general secretary of the NUT, said: "This is a campaign that becomes more relevant with each passing month. With food prices up 40%, utilities up over 30%, along with general inflation now running at 5%, teachers, particularly young teachers, are suffering."

The NUT represents almost 250,000 teachers and headteachers and is England's biggest teaching union and the strike by NUT members on the 24th April 2008 is estimated to have affected up to 9,500 schools.

The action sought to convince the Government to change its mind about a proposed 2.45% pay rise for teachers this year. Teachers received that pay increase this month, but the workers argue that, with inflation rates at 5%, this amounts to a 2.55% pay cut.

The ballot will take place over the next few months, meaning that action could "potentially take place this term."

Meanwhile, members of the construction workers union Ucatt in England and Wales backed action in protest of their 2.45% offer by 60%.

General secretary Alan Ritchie said: "Our members have signalled their unhappiness with the proposed package. We are scheduled to meet the employers next week. I remain hopeful that even at this late stage common sense will prevail."

Leaders of unions representing other local authority workers have been holding talks with employers for the past few weeks to try to break a deadlocked dispute, also over a 2.45% pay offer.

Ed
- Homepage: http://libcom.org/news

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Advertisng your website is not news about workers struggles

08.09.2008 20:33

do we really need other peoples press releases/news items disguised as libertarian 'news'?

The above rip-off internet article can be read in full, and with more background information, from their original souce material here:

Press Assocation news article from eastwood advertiser (Sept 5th) :
 http://www.eastwoodadvertiser.co.uk/latest-national-news/Fresh-strike-vote-for-teachers.4464842.jp

or

Evening Standard (Sept 6th):
 http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23551464-details/Fresh+strike+vote+for+teachers/article.do

Construction workers UCATT press release (Sept 3rd):
 http://www.ucatt.info/content/view/558/30/2008/09/

public


only 60%???

09.09.2008 11:49

blimey, UCATT can only muster a 60% pro-strike vote? that's pretty feeble, especially when you think that not all the members concerned bothered voting. that'd probably put it below 50% in favour. deary me. i thought UCATT were pretty rubbish, but this takes the biscuit if they can't even get a decent majority of their members fired up about the pathetic pay rates on offer!

tony


Money

10.09.2008 07:43

Where will the money come from?

CB Eye


Keep it coming

11.09.2008 14:57

Personally I found the post a bit more interesting and useful than the usual dire postings that pass for news here even if it is cobbled together from other sources. As i read Indymedia more than say The Standard or UCATT sites, I think it serves a good function here. Nice one

TT