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Tax Workers Walk Out Over Sickness Discipline Measures

Infantile Disorder | 07.06.2011 11:36 | Public sector cuts | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

At 4pm today, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) workers will walk out, in protest at the imposition of draconian sick day restrictions, which could result in disciplinary measures being taken against the ill. However, if the workers are to hold back these attacks, this afternoon needs to be just the start of a broad-based, democratically-controlled fightback.

The Public and Commercial Services union (PCS) executive called the action on 31st May, in response to grassroots anger at HMRC's proposed 'attendance management policy'. Under the new system, it appears that three occasions and five days will be used as a disciplinary threshold by bosses, instead of five occasions of ten days. Having exhausted the artificial limit on their sickness, tax workers would feel intensely pressured to come into work, no matter how severe the 'extra' illness over their allotment. In winter, when viruses are most common, this would lead to increased infection of their colleagues. At all other times, staff could be hauling themselves in with all kinds of ailments and injuries, which would be better treated by spending time at home. At a time when HMRC is cutting 13,000 jobs, this will cause significant stress for employees, which could feed back into increased sickness levels. If the new system is implemented, it would be represent a huge attack on the rights of workers across the public sector, as similar moves could be expected in other departments.

The PCS executive is "not, at this point, asking members to take any full day’s strike action". Instead, it has called a one hour walk-out from 4pm to 5pm on the 7th, followed by an hour later start, a two hour lunch break on the 8th, plus an effective 'work to rule' over the two days of the action.

PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka and his executive will be hoping that these two days of mini strikes will be sufficient to let his members vent their anger, without seriously disrupting revenue collection. Were the HMRC to give way after such a small act of rebellion, it would set a dangerous precedent, from the perspective of the ruling class and government cuts agenda. Though union leaders such as Serwotka are publicly talking a good game following Business Secretary Vince Cable's threats of further restrictions on the right to strike, privately they are negotiating to force through the bulk of the Coalition government's attacks. This is because they know that their own well-heeled lifestyles are dependent on the unions demonstrating that they are able to manage their members' anger.

The PCS threat to join the one day 'general strike' called by the National Union of Teachers, the Association of Lecturers and Teachers, the University and College Union must also be seen in this light. Just like in Greece - where they have been ten one day general strikes since the onset of the financial crisis, all to no avail - union bosses will put their own class interests ahead of that of their membership. The need for a democratic, horizontally-organised working class movement has never been greater.

Infantile Disorder
- Homepage: http://infantile-disorder.blogspot.com

Comments

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Middle classes

07.06.2011 14:02

Am I supposed to come out in Solidarity with a bunch of middle class middle England middle of the road apologists for the government. These people are tax collectors, they only want our support when they need it, I doubt solidarity will be offered, just goes to show the state of this cuntry when a strike like june 30th is called to save middle class pensions, they couldn`t give a shit about REAL working and underclass people, self seeking, self serving. I guarantee if anything gets spikey on june 30th, these unions who are happy for anarchists to orginise for them will BLAME the same orginisers!! Fuck the unions, take back communities!!

Class warrior


We should all fight this opression

07.06.2011 14:43

Back in 1996 a specialist doctor employed by the company I was working for said that I was suffering from a work-related illness. He thought I should be given a Sick Note, but my GP refused & I now suffer from back pain as a result of the permanent damage I suffered.

Some one working at the local Job Centre told me this was probably because the Benefits Agency had recently sent a letter to GPs in the area, threatening them with prosecution if they gave out too many Sick Notes.

The commercial media never report cases like this, but make a meal of any cases of people abusing sick leave.

Seriously ill


The working and underclasses

07.06.2011 19:38

Why do the unemployed and unemployable call themselves the working class.

It should be:
1. Upper / ruling class
2. middle class
3. unemployable class

tool


re: The working and underclasses

09.06.2011 18:38

You think we are all middle class now?

It's more like this:

1. Upper / ruling class
2. middle class (company directors, professionals)
3. working class (most people)
4. underclass (long term unemployed, homeless, etc.)

Working class doesn't mean cloth caps, hard manual labour, baths in front of the fire, and walking to school in bare feet any more! Get with the program dude, this is the 21st century now.

anon