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Britain: More than one million strike over cuts in pension
provision, but unions limit protest
By Julie Hyland
29 March 2006
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Thousands of schools, local government facilities and transport
services across the United Kingdom were closed or partially closed
Tuesday as almost 1.5 million local government workers took strike
action to defend their pension rights.
But from the outset, the leadership of the 11 unions involved
in the dispute sought to demobilize any active participation by
workers. In the main, pickets were at a minimum and any visible
signs of protest were patchy and kept limited. In Manchester,
Englands third largest city, the regional trade unions called
off a lunchtime rally at the eleventh hour.
Prime Minister Tony Blairs government wants to overturn
the provision under the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS)
whereby local council employees can retire at the age of 60 on
a full pension if their age and years of service total 85. The
change means that some of the poorest paid workers in the public
sector, many of whom have contributed to the retirement plan for
years, have been issued with an ultimatumwork many more
years or face a one-third cut in pensions.
The government had initially wanted to impose its attack on
all public sector workers. But in a move clearly aimed at dividing
workers so as to pick off their rights one section at a time,
it agreed that existing firefighters, teachers, National Health
Service staff and some civil service employees could keep their
full entitlements, whilst the conditions of those working in the
local government sector would be cut.
The public sector unions, which include some of the largest
unions in the UK, such as Unison, the GMB and the Transport and
General Workers Union, played a crucial role in facilitating the
governments manoeuvre. A planned strike in protest at the
cuts was called off by the union bureaucracy last May so as to
avoid a potential conflict between the Labour government and a
significant section of workers in the run-up to the 2005 General
Election.
The union bureaucracy has accepted that the retirement age
for new local government employees will rise to 65, and have sought
to confine the protest solely to retaining the so-called 85-year
rule for existing staff, i.e., the same deal that was agreed with
regards to central government employees.
A three-month consultation between the government, the unions
and local government employers ended without agreement on February
28. Subsequently the unions have scaled back protests and worked
to ensure that yesterdays one-day strike was of purely a
token character.
Nonetheless, membership ballots by the unions involved returned
overwhelming support for industrial action. Amongst those participating
in the 24-hour dispute were leisure centre workers, school caretakers,
cooks, cleaners and classroom assistants, housing officers, nursery
nurses, youth and community staff and tourism officials. Traffic
wardens, the Probation Service, occupational therapy and other
social services joined the strike, as did workers in public services
that have been privatized, including bus drivers and refuse collectors.
In Northern Ireland, all bus and rail services were cancelled
and in Scotland hundreds of schools and nurseries were closed
whilst Glasgows subway system was shut, and Edinburghs
council-run bus service was off the road.
In Wales, almost 800 schools were shut as were many libraries
and council-run facilities. In the north of England, in addition
to extensive school closures, both Liverpools Mersey tunnels
were closed as were its ferry service, and Newcastles Metro
system did not open.
In London, some 70 percent of all schools were shut as more
than 100,000 workers struck, including workers in the capitals
Fire Brigade control room. The Tower of London was closed and
the Thames Barrier reduced to emergency staffing levels.
Pension provision in the public sector is one of the few areas
of employment rights still retained in the UK after decades of
cuts in social services and the deregulation of working conditions.
An official government study by the Financial Services Authority
and Bristol University reported Tuesday that almost half the working
population have no pension outside the paltry state retirement
benefit and 70 percent have no means of saving for their old age.
Throughout the day, spokesmen for the government reiterated
that there would be no retreat from its plans, and the media and
big business leaders are demanding even tougher cuts and have
denounced the striking workers as selfish.
Rupert Murdochs Sun complained that local government
workers were attempting to defend a right not shared by millions
of others workers, many of whom, it admitted, will retire
in poverty. Why local government workers should be willing
to abandon the last shield between themselves and a similar fate,
it did not bother to explain.
The Financial Times editorialised March 28, Stand
firm on local government pensions. Labour was entirely
to blame for the strike, it complained, because in abandoning
plans to raise the retirement age of all public sector workers,
it had sent a signal that unions could defend the indefensible
if only they were prepared to act tough enough.
Sir Digby Jones, head of the Confederation of British Industry,
described the action as trade unionism at its worst.
Like other workers, local government employees would have to
get real and accept longer working lives.
At the Guildhall in central London, Chancellor Gordon Brown
strode through a picket of local government workers as he attended
a conference with former US President Bill Clinton.
In the face of such vitriol, all the trade union leaders had
to offer was more pleas for talks. A common refrain from speakers
addressing a rally of several hundred strikers in central London
was, I wish I wasnt here.
Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress,
told the assembled workers that the unions were not against reform,
but changes by diktat. The strikes demands were reasonable
and the government and employers should sit down with the unions
and negotiate properly, he said.
* * *
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to strikers in Hemel
Hempstead, near London. They were picketing at Apsley, outside
one of the three new offices that Hertfordshire County Council
are moving staff to as they shut 51 local offices throughout the
county.

Referring to the media attacks on the strike, Carol, a teaching
assistant, said, The press only mentions the extended working
times we are being told to work but not the other conditions that
are under threat. It means we work more for less. The government
has made deals with some of the people we work withteachers
and nursesbut have left us out. Half the workforce have
their pensions protected whilst the other havent.
Its disappointing that a lot of the staff who are
protected are still working today, and also some social workers
who feel that they cant let down the children they are looking
after. But this strike is just the first taste of things to come.
Eighty percent of the membership backed the strike call. Its
inevitable there will be further action because the employers
wont give in just because weve gone on strike. This
is the first time Ive been on strike, but it is so important
for the future.
Sue, a senior child and family support social worker who works
with badly abused children, explained that the issue went beyond
pensions.
She said public spending cuts meant that We are losing
five social workers a month. Agency staff are brought in, but
all the complex stuff is left with us. If we worked strictly to
the contract the work would grind to a halt. Its supposed
to be a 9 to 5 job, but we get in at 8.30, work through our lunch
and stay on afterwards to all hours. Most of us are out here today
because of the eroding of all our rights. Weve been consistently
low paid and most of us are women with families.
Kate added, Because we work in special needs schools
our jobs are very demanding, so how do they think our bodies will
keep going until we are 65? We are so poorly paid anyway that
to take our pension away as well is not fair. To a certain extent
we accepted lower pay knowing we would have a reasonable pension
at the end. Now they are saying you are going to stay low paid
and you are not getting a pension either.
See Also:
For a European-wide strategy to defend
workers social gains
[28 March 2006]
France: Fight vs. First Job Contract
raises need for new working class leadership
[28 March 2006]
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