Justice For Cleaners - Reinstate Alberto Durango
Peter Marshall | 12.02.2010 22:01 | Social Struggles
Police tell demonstrators they must move
A noisy demonstration
Alberto Durango
Not Criminal
Protesters and placards
The green 'trumpets' from the RMT were loud
Around a hundred came to the protest
After a few minutes, a number of police came and eventually the protesters were persuaded to move onto the pavement and the noisy protest continued for an hour, with speeches from a number of supporters including the sacked Unite shop-steward and leader of the Latin American Workers Association Alberto Durango.
The UBS is one of the world's leading financial firms and in the last 3 months of 2009 made profits of £772 million. On Feb 1 in a money-saving exercise they transferred their cleaners from Mitie to Lancaster Cleaning and Support Services.
Durango had formerly worked for Lancaster for 10 years, but when he became an active union organiser in a campaign for a living wage at Schroeders bank, they made allegations later shown to be false to get him arrested by the Home Office, who later released him without charge. Lancaster then made a further allegation that they later had to admit was false and sacked him.
Lancaster took over the RBS contract on Monday 1 Feb and suspended Durango the following day, sacking him on Thursday 4 Feb after what appears to be an unfair disciplinary hearing. They refused to recognise him as a Unite shop steward and gave as a reason for his sacking that in his previous employment with them he was sacked for "dishonesty", despite the fact that they had previously had to admit their allegations were false - a Tribunal case is still proceeding over his previous dismissal.
Lancaster had immediately changed the cleaner's hours to cut their already low wages by around £150 a month, in complete defiance of any protection they may have under employment law on the transfer of undertakings. The company appear determined to break the unionisation of cleaners that has led to many of London's cleaners now getting the London 'Living Wage' rather than the national minimum wage, which is well below that needed to live in London.
Support at the meeting came from a wide range of groups, and there were speakers from Unite and the RMT, which has been involved in the campaign on behalf of its own cleaners. Surprisingly, although Unite claims on its web site to be "a campaigning union, fighting for members in the workplace" I can find absolutely no mention of this clear case of attempted union-busting and discrimination there and it has so far failed to give official support.
More pictures on Demotix:

and in a few days on My London Diary:

Peter Marshall
e-mail:
petermarshall@cix.co.uk
Homepage:
http://mylondondiary.co.uk
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