A MESSAGE TO THE PUBLIC
Britain’s postal workers – members of the Communication Workers Union – are asking you to support our campaign to stop Royal Mail’s cost-cutting business plan which will mean cuts in your postal service (with hikes in stamp prices, fewer collections and deliveries and more post office closures) and cuts to our members’ pay and pensions.
CWU members want to do our job serving the public. We have tried every measure possible to seek a fair resolution to this dispute. Over 70% of our members voted for strike action to force Royal Mail to think again but they are simply refusing our offer of meaningful talks.
Starved of investment for decades Royal Mail now faces unfair competition from private operators who, for a discounted price, collect and sort profitable bulk business mail before passing it on to Royal Mail to deliver over the ‘final mile’. The result is Royal Mail has lost millions in revenue while the profits of private competitors has soared.
In 2006 Royal Mail and the Communication Workers Union agreed that we would work together to tackle the impact of competition in the mail market, use government investment to introduce automation, improve efficiency, introduce innovative products that we know customers want and raise the value and status of postal workers’ jobs.
Instead, Royal Mail has ditched the agreement, refused to negotiate a pay settlement and insisted on unilateral imposition of its cost-cutting business plan with mass job losses and cuts to members’ pay and pensions. Royal Mail has been deliberately misleading the public by saying the CWU wants a 27% pay rise. The CWU has never asked for a 27% pay rise.
That’s why the CWU are asking for your support in our campaign to stop Royal Mail’s cuts, end unfair competition and preserve a vital public service.
DEFENDING POSTAL SERVICES
A combination of Royal Mail s slash and burn strategy and rigged competition rules now threaten the future of Britain s universal postal service. As competitors queue up to cream off the most lucrative work, Royal Mail is facing a financial black hole and proposing a swingeing round of cuts both to postal services and to our members terms and conditions. That’s why the CWU is asking you to support our calls for:
• Royal Mail to enter meaningful talks with the CWU on resolving pay and major change and to honour the 2006 agreement which committed both parties to agree a joint approach on pay and modernisation.
• A Government review of the damaging impact of competition on Royal Mail to date, in line with Labour’s manifesto commitment.
• An immediate change to Postcomm’s competition rules and a fairer pricing and access regime that gives Royal Mail the revenues it needs to support the universal postal service and post office network.
NO TO POST OFFICE CLOSURES
END UNFAIR COMPETITION
A DECENT LIVING WAGE FOR POSTAL WORKERS
DEFEND POSTAL SERVICES
150 The Broadway
Wimbledon
London
SW19 1RX
www.cwu.org
0208 971 7200
Billy Hayes
General Secretary
www.billyhayes.co.uk
01778 Published by the Communication Workers Union 2007.
Reply With Quote
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
Xmas box
29.06.2007 17:40
appointed messenger ...
afore ye,
You Go!!"
Solidarity CWU!
The important jobs are always the most screwed over, and you have my support.
outrageous!
Their fight is our fight
29.06.2007 18:43
Ready to stand side by side for as long as it takes!
NBS SOS
If it's that bad then leave!!!!
30.06.2007 22:46
Chris.
If its that bad . . . then all leave
01.07.2007 14:49
I'm sorry but I just don't understand the logic of the above comment.
The whole point to workers having rights and the existence of trade unions is to make sure of fair treatment and decent pay and work conditions. Striking is never the first option - it is a last resort when the employers fail to negotiate. The workers have been backed into a corner and forced to strike due to Royal Mails lack of negotiation.
I fully support all those who have striked - to be honest getting my post a day late is an extremely minor inconvenience compared to the workers who are fighting for decent pay / conditions.
Heather
e-mail: hmpaterson@hotmail.co.uk
Homepage: http://www.myspace.com/grrlthatyoufear
Heather you fool
02.07.2007 02:14
Delivering post is an essential job for society, and you don't seem to understand that some people actually want to do it. Why should they (have to) leave their chosen industry?
There will never be some dream world which you obviously imagine where everyone can be a beer-taster or a sex-toy tester.
Newsflash: There is a theory that mutual support is actually human evolution in action.
These workers are on the frontline of the struggle today, but it could be you tomorrow. Engage your brain and support them!
NBS SOS
Homepage: http://nbs-sos.blogspot.com
Sorry Heather, duh I meant Chris!
02.07.2007 15:44
I'm in agreement with you there, I should have aimed my reply at Chris - that's what posting on the internet at 3am leads to eh...
NBS SOS
At last!!!!
05.07.2007 20:31
chris
This is a hard fight Chris
06.07.2007 17:22
This is not about taking a low-paid job and then moaning about it! Aside from the fact that well-paid jobs often need degrees and/or years of experience, delivering post is a very important job, as is working in healthcare, higher education and other public service roles (I would love to know what fantastic contribution to society your job makes). Workers in all of these industries have been told they must take a paycut this year. In the posties' case, they have been told they are '25% overpaid and 40% underworked', while their boss Adam Crozier pockets £1million in bonuses (for running a company that you must agree is not at peak performance). The postal strike is also about defending local post offices from closure which even a small-minded selfish person like you should agree with.
Sometimes placards and a petition, or some clown street theatre, just ain't enough. To strike collectively is literally the only weapon that workers have against their employers, and you're right, it can be be frustratingly unsuccessful. But all throughout history it has also been essential. We wouldn't have the (supposed) 8 hour day or the minimum wage without industrial action. They need maximum public support for what is an exhausting and soul-sapping battle. You display the classic 'I'm alright Jack' syndrome to such a degree (unless you are joking and I'm wasting my time with this rant) that I can't believe you read this website.
Get back to the Conservative Club where you belong.
NBS SOS
Homepage: http://nbs-sos.blogspot.com