UWU Picket of A4E, Friday 22/01/2010
Cameraboy | 23.01.2010 02:36 | Workers' Movements | Cambridge
The group was UWU (Unemployed Workers Union) and the target was A4E.
That's democracy in action for you right there.
They are subcontractors to various governments, including the UK, France, Germany, Poland, Australia, South Africa and India - in effect, they are a multinational whom derive their income from government funding, their 'clients' being coerced into attending workshops.
This "Help with finding a job" seems in part to entail doing cheap labour for local employers, therefore completely anulling the idea of being a Jobseeker in the first place, because of course while you are labouring for your benefits, you have no time to look for other better paid work.
This also has the knock-on effect of depressing average wages for those who are lucky enough
to have employment without this company's assistance.
It is a classic example of post Thatcherism in action - get a private company to run what should be dealt with the public sector.
However, it transpires that this company has previously been investigated (to quote from Wikipedia), "after the Department for Work and Pensions uncovered discrepancies in its "confirmation of employment" forms - discrepancies which centred upon the falsification of employer's signatures by a number of recruiters", so clearly they do not always have their clients' best interests at heart.
During the UWU picket a couple of A4e employers came out of the office block to investigate what was going on, including the mangeress of the Cambridge branch, who was not amused by their presence.
We were treated to the spectacle of not one, but four Community Support Officers loitering around the picket, and at one pointone of them rather kindly made it clear where the boundary was between the office's own private land and the pavement, so the stall had to be moved forward by a foot. It should be pointed out that no one was harassed or alarmed by the presence of the UWU, although some A4e employees did seem to be slightly distressed that their company's location had been outed!
The UWU is a newly formed group whose mission is to represent and defend the rights of those who are currently out of work, as well as fighting the Welfare Reform Act.
More details about the UWU can be found here:
cambs_unemployed@worker.com
Cameraboy
Additions
Correction and addition.
23.01.2010 14:09
My bad!!
See also additional resources attached for download.
Cameraboy
Nice one - this is more like it
23.01.2010 15:41
The other big issue is that we are dispossessed on this island and in a service based 'society' servicing the corporate-fascist money/commodites/war markets. This is the centre of capitalism hence the inabiluity to feed us and the fact that we are kept out of the countryside.
facistsstate
They are also bidding for a govt contract to give welfare rights advice
23.01.2010 22:19
Guess who is planning on putting in an aggressive bid to get LSC contracts across the country? Why, E4U of course. And since they are a big multi national firm they have a good chance of squeezing out every other bidder and getting to be the monopoly provider of welfare rights advice in the UK.
They may have their welfare rights arm formally separated from their 'work for your dole' arm so it looks like it's independent, but an organisation that has an ethos of only being interested in meeting government targets so it keeps its funding will never promote welfare RIGHTS and will never challenge government policy, or mismanagement by the DWP (Department for Work and Pensions). It is also unlikely to thoroughly train its workers so they give high quality advice to claimants, and they will probably never represent anybody at appeals because legal aid funding doesn't cover tribunal representation. It is very easy to give mediocre welfare rights advice under a legal aid contract, because when you get audited the LSC is primarily interested in making sure you get the paperwork straight, only claim for things you're allowed to, and properly check your client's incomes to make sure they actually qualify for legal aid. They don't look at what percentage of appeals you win, or how much extra money you get for claimants by winning appeals and reviews and doing thorough benefit checks. And they certainly don't want to know how often you challenge government policy by complaining oficially, or threatening government departments with judicial review proceedings!
I know all this because I work under a legal aid contract for one of the small organisations that could be threatened by E4U. And I already despise them for coercing claimants into what amounts to bonded labour.
I wish there was a claimants union or campaign group where I live. All the organised opposition to the Welfare Reform Bill seems to be based in London. (Yes, I know I could set up my own group! But it's easier said than done when you're in full time work and living in a backwater town which has had no radical political movements since the Chartists.)
Annie Citizen
Homepage:
http://www.rightsandwrongs uk.blogspot.com
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