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Birmingham strike

Birmingham council have imposed a new pay and grading system onto their 40,000-strong workforce, under the guise of the 'single status' scheme. Under this, some workers will lose half their pay. 20,000 angry workers came out on strike on 5 February and this is likely to be repeated and exceeded on 23 and 24 April.
Dave Griffiths, West Midlands Socialist Party, reports
Birmingham council workers strike on 5 February 2008, photo S O

Birmingham council workers strike on 5 February 2008, photo S O'Neill

Packed meetings of Birmingham council workers have rejected the council's new proposed 'single status' deal. Two more strike days have been announced for 23 and 24 April.

Councils across the country, pushed to end unequal pay for women, have sought to do this by robbing their fellow workers and attacking pay across the workforce. Angered by Birmingham's proposed pay cuts of up to £15,000 a year, tens of thousands of workers undertook mass lobbies and strike action earlier this year. 20,000 were on strike on 5 February.

The council also sought to force through performance-related pay. Faced with huge workforce rejection they then sought to impose their deal.

But following strike action in February the council were forced to start negotiating and to offer new proposals. Fighting back works!

Despite all their bluster the council have 'found' £9 million to soften the blow of their package. But they are still seeking to rob Mary and Peter to pay Pauline.

They say pay will now be cut in stages and have found some improvements for low-paid grades. They are also trying to sneak in performance-related pay in a new disguise.

The mass rejection of the new deal which saw votes to resume industrial action shows that workers are determined to secure a fair package across the workforce. They believe councils and government should pay for their decades-long failure to pay equally.

Birmingham council workers strike on 5 February 2008, photo S O

Birmingham council workers strike on 5 February 2008, photo S O'Neill

While similar lousy deals have seen Labour councils seek to impose them, this one has been Tory and Liberal led. Here we have seen that 'old fashioned Toryism' is still alive and well.

Faced with strike action, Councillor Rudge, the cabinet member responsible, claimed that workers were 'being influenced by national officials'. When the mass meetings rejected his proposals he claimed they were 'taken over by rabble rousers and the left'!

At a time when local union reps face pressure from national officials to accept poor deals the former is an unlikely tale. The latter merely shows the council's failure to understand the anger of their workers. "Equal pay now, No losers" remains their demand.

In Greenwich the unions secured a 'no losers' deal from the council. This shows what is possible if the unions are strong, already evidenced by the concessions forced on Birmingham council.

'Not an hour on the day, nor a penny from our pay' was Greenwich's slogan. Socialist Party members will do their best to ensure Brum's council workers are made aware of what was achieved in Greenwich. If it's good enough for London, it's good enough here as well.

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In The Socialist 16 April 2008:

'We're striking against low pay'

Birmingham strike

Editorial: 24 April strikes: step forward in pay battle


Unison witch-hunt

Unison witch-hunt: Defend 'the four'

Stop the witch hunts!

National Shop Stewards Network


Workplace news and analysis

Re-elect a fighting PCS leadership

News in brief


Global food crisis

Global food prices: anger erupts in mass protests

How the other 0.01% live


Socialist Party election campaign

Elections 2008

Health campaigners fight council cuts

Standing up for socialism: candidate list

Campaign for a New Workers Party - conference 2008


Socialist Party feature

The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill: why all the controversy?


Socialist Party news and views

Housing crisis: Britain's house of cards

Tax attack hits low paid workers

Water 'regulators' hide real prices


International socialist news and analysis

Rising class struggles across Europe

Italian election: new Berlusconi victory will provoke mass opposition

France 1968: 10 million workers occupied factories

France 1968: month of revolution by Clare Doyle

The radical life of Martin Luther King


Socialist Students

Portsmouth Activists Academy day of debate


 

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Related links:

Birmingham:

triangleStockland Green march for jobs

triangleBirmingham, Erdington, March for Youth Jobs

triangleMcWorkfare - "Let's campaign until it's stopped completely"

triangleBirmingham Socialist Party: Socialism and religion

triangleThe battle of Saltley Gates

triangleBirmingham Socialist Party: Lessons of the Occupy movement

Council:

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

triangleGreenwich libraries - fighting back can win

triangleElection results: How did TUSC do?

Single status:

triangleThe costs of privatisation

triangleGreenwich workers score victory against single status

triangleEditorial: Stop witch-hunts in Unison - defend those attacked!

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