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Unite Viewpoint

February 2008 - Posts

  • Taskforce fights for Government money for Quebecor retraining and visit to Wales

    After being so disgracefully treated when Quebecor World at Corby closed its doors, Quebecor staff have teamed up with Unite, Corby Council and Phil Hope MP to set up a taskforce to help fight for money for retraining, not only for Quebecor staff but also other workers in the Corby area who have lost their jobs recently.

    The taskforce wants a package of help including money to pay for training to get as many workers back into local employment as possible. If the bid is successful, Jobcentre Plus staff would be able to go out to the affected companies to give staff practical help and allow them to access emergency cash to pay for training.

    Corby Council chief executive Chris Mallender was spurred to request the rapid response package after 1,000 jobs came under threat in Corby last month and after Unite officials and worker from the plant lobbied Phil Hope MP to step in and get things moving. Besides the jobs lost at Quebecor, 184 jobs are set to go when Avon moves its call centre to India. In July some jobs will go when coupon processing company Valassis moves some of its operation to Eastern Europe.

    Martin Reuby, FOC at Unite union chapel at Quebecor, said: "We are trying to get this taskforce to follow the same model as the Rover taskforce that helped the 5,000 workers made redundant at Longbridge. The job centre has been brilliant but we keep hearing that people cannot apply for help with training from them because they haven't been unemployed for six months.The rapid response package will help bypass that.

    "We still have a lot of people who may have no choice but to leave the town – a lot of these people are skilled workers aged between 45 and 55 who will find it difficult unless they get training.

    "Some of the workers are still shell-shocked, so we held a meeting at Corby Trades and Labour Club on Sunday to ensure we still keep our comradeship and to disband our old union chapels and form a new unemployed workers chapel."

    The Government's rapid response service set up in 2002 seeks to limit the damage of redundancy by offering job seekers an enhanced range of options not normally available.

    On Thursday I attended the Unite Wales GPM Sector Conference in Cardiff. We had a good turnout - with reps from print, papermaking, newspaper and metal packaging companies.

    The meeting discussed the BPIF pay deal, organising, Information & Consultation, the Corrugated packaging sector agreement Unite's international work and the problems of agency and temporary workers and why we need legilslation to provide equal treatment.

    One of the stories I heard of was of a group of agency workers (not in print) who were hired from an agency for a night-shift - only to be told they were not needed, after they had travelled to work by train and the last train had gone. This sort of crass treatment brings home the need for the Government to legislate as they promised.

  • Equity for private equity employees

    Take part in Unite's campaign to give workers in companies that have been bought out by private equity consortiums TUPE protections

    This campaign follows hot on the heels of the success of the Agency Workers Private Members Bill, Unite is giving its backing to a second Private Members Bill that would give workers in companies that have been bought out by private equity consortiums TUPE protections.

    Currently TUPE protections for workers and rights to information and consultation do not apply in cases of private equity buyouts and the number of workers affected is increasing rapidly with one in five private sector workers in the UK already employed by private equity concerns.

    Help us win backing for John Heppell MP’s Bill that will give transparency to millions of workers by asking your MP to attend the bill’s second hearing on Friday 7 March.

    Download the model letter @: http://www.amicustheunion.org/Default.aspx?page=8041 To email your MP go to www.theyworkforyou.com

  • India Poised to Become Next Global Paper Player

    I picked this up from the United Steelworker's Of America, who email me a copy of their regular e-bulletin for their members employed in papermaking - called "Pulp Truth".

    India Poised to Become Next Global Paper Player India's forest products industry is expected to dramatically grow in paper and board capacity.

    This will cause the country to make a major impact in the global recovered paper market and the market for wood. It is projected that India's demand for recovered paper will grow annually 7.9 percent through 2016. It is expected to become the second largest market in the world for recovered paper after China.

    Indian imports of logs, primarily hardwood from Southeast Asia and Africa, and softwood from New Zealand and Australia, are expected to double between 2006 and 2016.

    Most of the imports going to India are newsprint, and China has been aggressively increasing its exports of this product to the country. The development of India's paper and wood industries is expected to take a different path than that of China. An industry expert said major hurdles will make it difficult for India to reach China's level of demand in any particular product category. The country is not expected to become a major exporter of wood products and paper products like China, at least through 2016.

  • More on Apprenticeship's Week - Unite Press Release

    Further to my last posting about Apprenticeships, here is the full press release from Unite. Wednesday 27th February 2008 Unite calling for a national training levy to fund more apprenticeships

    Unite the union is calling for more action on apprenticeships by calling on the government and employers to agree a national training levy to fund more apprentice places.

    To mark the first Apprenticeships Week, Unite the union is calling for greater action for more training places by calling on the government and employers to agree a national training levy to ensure schemes are set up and more apprenticeship recruited.

    The UK's largest trade union say the fall in the number of apprenticeship places will create massive skills shortages in key industries. The union want employers to be obliged to provide a minimum number of apprenticeship places.

    Currently, only one in 10 businesses provide apprenticeships or quality workplace training.

    Unite has asked John Denham, Secretary of State for Department for Innovation Universities and Skills, to consider a levy for creating apprenticeships, especially in industries with skills shortages.

    The union also wants an increase in the minimum weekly wage for apprentices from £80 to £110 and government help for small employers who are taking on an apprentices.

    A £110 wage for a 35-hour week would bring apprenticeships broadly in line with the minimum wage youth rate (£3.40 an hour).

    According to government figures only 63% of the 180,000 apprentices stay on to complete their apprenticeship. Graham Goddard, Deputy General Secretary of Unite, said: "Unite is pressing for a national training levy for all industries to meet the skills challenge. We want to see increasing access and commitment from employers to deliver high quality apprenticeships. “Equally important is that apprentices are not trapped in a low pay ghetto. Increasing the minimum wage to which they are entitled will attract young people from a variety of backgrounds to take up places and, crucially, to complete them." Apprenticeships week runs from 25th to the 29th February 2008.

  • Union Busting In The UK By US Companies

    There is an excellent article in this morning's Guardian about the activities of US union busters in the UK including The Burke Group (no relation I assure you).

    A recent report from John Logan at the LSE identified that the Burke Group were secretly involved in Amazon's campaign to thwart then GPMU's campaign to win union rights at it Milton Keynes warehouse.

    This has only just come to light following Logan's research into their activities. Read the Guardian article at http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/feb/26/tradeunions.workandcareers

  • This week is Apprenticeship Week - but who cares?

    February 25th to 29th is the first ever "Apprenticeship Week".

    The TUC are supporting the project and in this morning's news the TUC has joined with the Federation of Small Businesses to support a call for an increase in the minimum weekly wage for apprentices from £80 to £110, once legislation has been passed to extend wage contributions to small employers who are taking on an apprentice.

    £110 for a 35-hour week would bring apprenticeships broadly in line with the minimum wage youth rate (£3.40 an hour).

    According to the TUC: "The TUC and the FSB believe that further increasing completion levels is crucial to improving the quality and reputation of apprenticeships. And with research from the Modern Apprenticeship Task Force showing a link between poor apprenticeship pay and low completion rates, raising pay would help more trainees to complete their courses.

    "The TUC and FSB are also determined to boost diversity within apprenticeships. More women should be given a route into non-traditional roles and ethnic minorities and disabled people need greater access to high quality apprenticeships. The TUC and FSB believe that apprenticeships provide the life skills and employment experience that are vital for people entering the workplace today. Small businesses are one of the leading providers of apprenticeships and further improving quality will encourage more employers to take on apprentices".

    For the printing industry, (with loads of small companies) a PrintWeek article from November, 2007 carried the damning headline: "Print named and shamed as the worst sector for staff training" pointing out our industry's poor record on staff development "which shows that the sector is the worst manufacturing industry for training its staff", with just one in five print firms having a training budget and only half of all employees receiving any form of training.

    The report also said print firms spend an average of £149 per staff member on training every year, the lowest of any manufacturing industry and compared to an average of £185 for the economy as a whole. Just 49% of workers received some form of training, compared to 70% in the economy as a whole, ranking print 24th in the economy and bottom of the manufacturers’ league table.

    And when we look at apprenticeships in print, the last available figures from Proskills shows that in the year 2006 to 2007 there were just 99 "starts" - : 16 to 18 years olds - 68 starts; age group 18+ had 31 "starts", with 83 males and 16 females. Not a good record is it? These are just the sort of figures that now demonstrate the overwhelming case for a sector skills levy in the printing industry in order to force companies to train and to take on apprentices for the sake of the future of the UK print industry.

  • Agency & Temporary Workers Bill progress and visit to Ireland

    It was good news for Unite's campaign to get equal rights for agency & temporary workers on Friday. MP's voted succeeded in stepping up the pressure on the government, (which does not support the measure), when the bill was given a second reading by 147 votes to 11. Peter Hain and former Deputy PM John Prescott voted for the measure as did fomer party chairman Ian McCartney. McCartney intervened in the debate when he pointed out that as Labour chairman he signed the 2004 Warwick agreement with trade union leaders in which the government committed itself to addressing the rights of temporary workers. But Pat McFadden, the employment minister, disputed this in the Commons yesterday when he said: "We did not say that we would sign any draft of the [EU] directive, regardless of its content, or reach an agreement that we did not believe would be in the interests of the UK labour market." McCartney intervened to say: "I remember well the words that he quoted, having written them at 4am as part of the Warwick agreement ... We signed up in good faith with the intention that if we did not reach agreement, we would tackle those abuses. The fact that we have not done that so far has led to the bill."agrgued that Tony Woodley, joint GS of the Unite will attend a meeting with Gordon Brown, on Monday. Brown is trying to sideline the issue by setting up a special commission. Tony told the Guardian "Hopefully today's vote has quashed the idea of a commission to look into agency working. The evidence of the need for legislation now is overwhelming and we will not accept the promise of jam tomorrow." The Guardian also commented that "trade union leaders will be encouraged by the support of Prescott, Hain and Ian McCartney, the former Labour chairman, who turned out in the Commons yesterday". Well, it was an important step along the way and we shall see what, if any, concessions Gordon Brown will make. This weekend I attended two Unite GPM meetings in Ireland, one in Belfast and one in Dublin. i was accompanied by our new Irish Regional Secretary, Jimmy Kelly and Unite NEC member John Ayling We were well recieved by members in both cities with interesting discussions with our members on the BPIF National Agreement, health & safety, union organising etc in Belfast. In Dublin the meeting was attended by reps from a number of companies and some of our members who have lost thier jobs so discgracefully at Keating Gravure. Our regional officer for the GPM sector Brendan Byrnre was able to report that finally a reciver has been appointed and our members can now apply for state help. In addition the matter is being raised in the Irish Parliament with the Minister For Enterprise. That won't be the end of the matter......
  • Update on Unite's Campaign To Win Employment Rights For Agency Wokers

    As we near 22nd February and the crucial vote on Andrew Miller MP's Bill to provide employment rights for Agency & Temporary Workers Unite reveals details of the "shadowy and insecure world of work". Agency working is being used to undercut permanent workers terms of employment and causing desperate insecurity in the workplace say Unite. Ahead of the second reading of a bill that would give agency workers equal rights to permanently and directly employed staff, a Unite member has been working 'undercover' to see and experience the plight of agency working. His time as an agency worker revealed a shadowy and insecure world of work where no national insurance was paid, contracts of work did not exist and no workplace training or basic safety equipment was provided. Promises of permanent employment from agency positions also failed to materialise, contradicting the government's arguments that agency working provides a gateway into direct employment. Mystery agency worker, Simon, who spent six weeks working on agency contracts in the Midlands, said: "I am a union activist so I thought I knew what to expect in undertaking this work but what I saw shocked and depressed me. "Even as a skilled manufacturing worker I barely earned above the minimum wage, I had illegal deductions taken from my pay, I had to work dangerous machinery without any training and without the legally required protective equipment and these jobs came via so-called 'legitimate' agencies. "For other agency workers the experience was even worse. Their contract-to-contract existence means a life of hardship, desperation and a weekly struggle to make ends meet.” Simon's experiences are detailed in a diary which will be made available on media@tgwu.org.uk. The House of Commons will consider the Bill to end the exploitation of agency workers and introduce equal employment rights on Friday 22 February. The Private Members Bill, sponsored by Andrew Miller MP, has the support of over 100 Labour MPs and the UK’s leading trade unions, as is required for it to proceed to committee stage. Simon, married with two young children, and a former union rep and skilled manufacturing worker, spent six weeks this year seeking work undercover from some of the country’s leading high street employment agencies based in and around the constituency of Employment Minister Pat McFadden. Tony Woodley, Joint General Secretary of Unite, says Simon’s experiences show why legislation is so urgently needed: “Working men and women are now being viewed as dispensable labour, hired and fired at will, never knowing from one day to the next if they have a job or will earn enough to make ends meet. This is not flexibility, it is exploitation. In the last century we fought against this inhumane treatment and we are not going to accept its return today.” Derek Simpson, Unite Joint General Secretary added: “Simon’s experiences are not isolated. They confirm what agency workers have been telling us from across the country, in almost every industry and workplace. From telecoms to hospitality, manufacturing to local government, employment agencies are driving a coach and horse through job security and hard-won pay. Government has to arrest this casualisation before it wrecks the real jobs we have left.” Diary of an agency worker Simon kept a daily diary of his experiences, detailing the despair and frustration he found with agency working. They reveal: Jobs advertised in the job centre as permanent were never found to be so. In one case, an employer promised permanency after 13 weeks yet no worker was ever employed for longer than 12 weeks. In another, a skilled manufacturing worker had been doing the same temporary contract for 14 months, despite the post being advertised as permanent. Advertised pay rates were rarely paid. In one contract, Simon was paid 50 pence per hour below the advertised rate. The job had been advertised at £7.50 per hour by the agency, but the company said he would only be paid £7 per hour. 10p per hour knocked off pay rate if day off taken Health and safety training was minimal. In one case, Simon’s job involved handling extremely hot plastic, yet he was provided inadequate protective equipment. In another firm, there was no accident book (check back on details) and Simon was told the company was “laid back” about such basics. Making ends meet was a huge struggle. Simon was never promised minimum weekly hours and never knew from week to week if he had work. The insecurity and minimum wages caused tremendous hardship for Simon and his family. Agencies exert a vice-like grip on access to the labour market. Far from helping workers into the job market, agencies can erect barriers to the workplace. They decide who is sent for interview, workers have no other route into prospective employers. Agencies can help employers skirt employment law. If an employer does not want to employ a woman or a migrant worker, then the agency can make sure such workers are never presented for interview. As a skilled manufacturing worker, Simon was distressed to find that even within his industry temporary agency working was commonplace, giving the lie to industry’s argument that agency working offers companies a temporary employment solution. “It seems as if no workplace is immune. Jobs I would have sworn would be permanent with good terms, pensions and sick pay are now temporary, minimum wage work with no overtime, holiday or sick pay. I had twelve year’s experience of skilled work yet I was offered low wage, insecure work. What hope do workers with less experience or who have come here to work from other countries have?”
  • Last Week.....Next Week

    The closure of Quebecor at Corby has rightly filled the pages of the trade press this last week.

    Commentators blame the collapse of the company on the senior management - notably the Canadian parent company on rank, bad management, as well as over capacity in the magazine and newspaper supplements industry.

    The failure of the management to sort out looming problems, and to inform and consult with Unite and the chapel reps early enough has been "appalling" - a word I have had to use a lot recently.

    Unite members are rightly angry and bitter at the way they have been treated and the comments of our FOC at Corby, Martin Rueby are contained elsewhere on this site's Forum pages.

    Unite local officers are now working hard to get assist our members who have lost their jobs - in a number of ways - from helping identify problems in getting their entitlements to helping with advice on training and retraining activities.

    As I have said before, these were some of the best jobs in the locality and will not easily be replaced. Corby is "coming up a ghost town", with other jobs lost in the area last week.

    Equally, our local officers have been trying to help our members at Keating Gravure who are also in the hands of Messrs Ernst & Young. PrintWeek has carried the news of the plight of Unite members who worked at the Dublin plant, who up until Friday still had not had a reciever appointed.

    This means that they can't claim benefits under Irish law. Our officer in Dublin Brendan Byrne has had to contact the local TD (MP) for help and is hoping to meet the Government Minister for Enterprise to plead our members case.

    Hopefully somebody will sort this out and a reciever will be appointed this week.

    The people responsibile for this state of affairs don't deserve to run a business ever again.

    Watch this space......

    This last week the BPIF and Unite agreed on a new pay deal for 2008 for Unite members working under the Unite-BPIF Agreement. The deal is reported elsewhere on this site and on Unite's website. It provides an increase of £9.60 on minimum rates for Class 1 workers - equating to 3.55% on minimums. This is reflected through to Grade 2 and Grade 3 workers, the Minimum Earnings Guarantee, and also onto machine classification's and overtime and shift calculations.

    The discussions were - as always - tough and frank. The Unite negotiators consisting of myself, Steve Sibbald national officer, Martin Hodges Regional officer and four Unite lay reps working under the agreement, worked well as a team and provided excellent support and advice over the two long days of talks.

    So this weekend will be spent drafting the appropriate letters and press material advising members of the offer and preparing a ballot due to take place in the next few weeks on the offer etc.

    A lot of work goes into this as we are trying to make sure our members are aware of the offer and take part in the ballot - and too make sure our members working under the agreement get the pay rise on April 24th, should the members vote in favour.

    The editor of this website would, I know, wish me to say more about the details of negotitaions and the deal, however it is only right and proper that we advise Unite members in writing, on the Unite GPM website and at the round of members meetings currently taking place over the next week or so initially rather than find out from this blog!!

    The coming week is going to be another busy one - aren't they all? However the big event will be the vote on Friday, 22nd on Andrew Miller MP's bill on Agency & Temporary Workers.

    Unite has been spearheading the campaign to get the required 100+ MP's to vote for the bill with a campaign of lobbying of MP's, public meetings and a press - postcard campaign which included Unite members who are agency workers telling their stories to the press.

    The Government has had pressure piled on them from employers and business - with dire warnings about the cost to the economy, employment opportunities and the end of life as we know it. I seem to have heard the same thing when the National Minimum Wage was being introduced!

    The reality is that the legislation we want is to protect vunerable workers, provide equal treatment, to stop exploitation and importantly to stop the wholesale replacement of permanent and stable jobs with temporary and precarious employment. One thing that amazes Unite - and many of the Bill's supporters - is that the Government appears to be oblivious to the fact that the introduction of such legislation would be very popular - not only with temporary workers, but also with thousands of other workers, union members or not, who have a family member or a friend who is now a temporary or agency worker and see the day to day problems they face.

    This last week the Government proposed a special commission, consisting of the TUC, CBI and others to look at the issue and come up with a formula. This morning's Observer is saying that we have the 100+ MPs and that the Commission idea has been rejected by the TUC. Also word has it that under the French presidency of the EC, M. Sarkozy will push through legislation with a very narrow time limit on how long an agency worker can work on an assignment before getting equal treatment. Now where would that leave the UK Government? We shall see - as they say.

  • Bleak Time For The Print Industry

    January and February 2008 have proved to be a bleak time for the printing industry. With over 1,000 jobs lost in just six weeks, this is perhaps the worst periods for big job losses I can remember in my 30 plus years in the industry and certainly in the 16 years I have been a full time union official. Polestar Greaves Press room, Wiltshires, Keating Gravure and now Quebecor, not to mention other jobs lost in smaller and less well known companies. Every closure, every set of redundancies, not matter how many, is a tradgedy for those workers and and their families. In some instances job losses come through technical change, loss of a valued or key customer, many come through change and the decisions of companies that our members and our union have no control over. We have heard much about over-capacity and the credit crunch created by the collapse of the sub-prime market in the USA. However, as I have said in in the media over the last few weeks - for the second biggest printer in the world to cut one of its companies adrift as Quebecor did at Corby, destroying hundreds of peoples lives in the process, is appalling in anyone's book. In the end the customers pulled their work out, sinking Corby. In the run up to this there was a distinct lack of information from QW and we had to watch as the company collapse before our eyes - no wonder our members are angry, confused and dismayed with the management of the company in Canada. As one of them emotionally said to me on Monday night - "Its a crying shame. Nobody should be treated like this. Its twenty years down the drain." In Dublin at Keating Gravure, at the time of writing Unite members still have not even had a reciever appointed, so they can't make a claim to the Government for help under Irish legislation. To be told the company was closing, the building locked and our officials given a mobile number to call to get more information is what I call crass. As I have said elsewhere, people who do things like this shouldn't be allowed to run a company again. But they do......
  • The 'cost' of equal rights for temps: busting the business myths

    The TUC today launched its campaign to win equal rights for Agency & Temporary Workers.

    Below is the full press release.

    Unite is one of the key supporters of Andrew Miller MP's Private Members Bill.

    At the launch five Unite members who are agency workers "told it like it is".

    The word coming back is that the arguments they put forward as to why agency workers deserve equal employment rights were impressive. Unite members are being asked to send in a specially printed postcard to their local Labour MP asking them to back Andrew Miller's Bill.

     

    "The TUC is calling on the Government today (Wednesday) to support Andrew Miller's Private Member's Bill to give agency workers legal equal treatment rights at work, and save temporary workers from discrimination and ill-treatment by rogue employment agencies.

    To coincide with the launch of the Private Member's Bill, the TUC reveals that the top business arguments against giving agency workers equal rights are based on several myths.

    Myth: Agency workers aren't any worse off than permanent staff.

    Fact: Part-time and fixed-term contract workers enjoy equal treatment with full-time and permanent staff, but currently employers are free to discriminate against agency workers in terms of pay and basic working conditions. They can hire agency workers on lower hourly rates than they would pay directly employed workers, and on far worse terms and conditions to do the same job as directly employed staff. Agency staff miss out on a whole range of benefits such as overtime, sickness and maternity benefits, and this insecurity has a huge effect on their financial position.

    Myth: Giving agency workers equal rights would cost 250,000 jobs (CBI claim).

    Fact: Similar arguments were made with regard to the introduction of the national minimum wage, and now no one - not even the business community - is claiming that the minimum wage has cost jobs. Since the minimum wage was introduced more than 2,250,000 extra jobs have been created. The same false claims were made when part-time workers were given protection; again, these extra rights did not cost jobs in the UK.

    Myth: Small businesses cannot afford to give temps equal rights.

    Fact: As before, the introduction of equal treatment for part-time workers and the national minimum wage did not lead to job losses. Given that temps represent between 1-2.6 per cent of the total workforce in the UK, it is hard to see how regulations affecting such a small proportion of workers would have such disastrous economic effects on the labour market. Indeed, other countries that have introduced equal treatment provisions have similar levels of temps to the UK (Belgium, France and the Netherlands all have between 2.2-2.5 per cent) and there has been little or no impact there on the level of growth of temporary agency work.

    Myth: Agency workers are only in temporary jobs for short placements so don't need equal rights.

    Fact: Labour Force Survey (LFS) figures show that a quarter of agency staff are in assignments for more than a year (and that they are not just filling a temporary need).

    Myth: Agency workers use temp jobs as a 'stepping stone' to a permanent career.

    Fact: Many of the companies that agency workers are placed with do not invest in training, so temps are far less likely to learn new skills than directly employed staff. As a result they become trapped in a career of low paid and insecure work, in a weak position to move on to better paid, more secure work. Thirty five per cent of respondents to a TUC and YouGov survey last year said they felt that temping had played no role in helping them achieve a permanent job.

    Myth: Agency workers want to be temps and don't want equal rights.

    Fact: The same TUC/YouGov survey revealed that for many respondents agency work was not delivering choice and control over their working lives and they wanted the same rights as those in permanent employment.

    Myth: Employers have nothing to gain from giving agency workers equal rights.

    Fact: Employers would benefit from offering temp workers equal rights, as agency work is not viewed as an attractive line of work. LFS figures show that around half all agency workers say they would prefer the security of a permanent job. Employers would benefit from a wider pool of experienced and skilled labour if agency work became a more attractive option. They would also enjoy the benefits of a more committed and motivated temp workforce in terms of service and product quality.

    Myth: Agency workers should only get equal rights after a qualifying period.

    Fact: The TUC is concerned that any qualifying period would result in many agency workers losing out on protection altogether. Recent official figures show that if agency workers were only given equal rights to the same basic working conditions as directly employed staff after 12 months, nearly three quarters (71.6 per cent) of agency workers would miss out. If the qualifying period was set at six months, over half of temporary workers (54 per cent) would still not be eligible for these rights. And a three-month qualifying period would automatically exclude a quarter of all agency workers (25.1 per cent).

    There is also the possibility that rogue employers might get rid of their agency workers immediately before they qualified for any new rights. TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: 'There is nothing wrong with legitimate employment agencies providing short-term work for those with short-term availability. 'Some people are always going to prefer to work a series of temporary contracts, but just because they opt for agency work shouldn't mean they are treated less fairly at work. But rogue agencies and dodgy practices are now tarnishing the whole sector.

    'In particular too many employers are using agencies to replace secure jobs with reasonable terms and conditions with badly paid, insecure agency staff. Far from providing a bridge to permanent work, this runs the risk of creating an underclass of workers who cannot get permanent work, who have no loyalty to employers, and who have to move from part-time job to part-time job.

    'Andrew Miller's Private Member's Bill is an important opportunity to introduce decent minimum standards for all. We ask MPs to be present for the debate on Friday 22 February, and urge the Government to support the Bill's passage through Parliament.'

     

    NOTES TO EDITORS: - The Labour Force Survey figures are from October 2007. - The TUC/YouGov survey sample size was 2,495 adults. Fieldwork was undertaken between 4-10 May 2007. The survey was carried out online. - In 1998 there were 24.786 million employee jobs. In 2007 there were 27.086 million employee jobs - an increase of 2,282,000 more jobs. Source: ONS Employee Jobs Survey. - Last year the TUC launched a Commission on Vulnerable Employment to investigate the extent of workplace exploitation and consider improvements to the enforcement regime and legal protection available for vulnerable staff. Exploited workers, including agency workers, can submit their experiences of working in the UK to www.vulnerableworkers.org.uk

  • What Have The Unions Ever Done For Us?

    If you can recite the sequence from Monty Python's 'Life Of Brian' known as "What Have The Roman's Ever Done For Us?" then check out the YouTube link below.

    The YouTube clip was broadcast during last year's General Election in Australia to support the Aussie Labour Party - which eventually defeated Michael Howard's anti union Liberal Government. Enjoy! (warning: clip contains strong language) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=184NTV2CE_c

  • Unite's Campaign To Win Equal Rights For Temporary & Agency Workers

    Unite is spearheading the campaign to get the Labour Government to implement the European Temporary & Agency Worker's Directive. We are supporting Andrew Miller MP's bill due to be heard on 22nd February.

    I will be publishing updates on the campaign here as they come through from Unite and elsewhere.

    The printing, packaging and newspaper industries use a growing number of temporary and agency staff and that is why Unite is campaigning for legislation to protect them, to stop abuses and to end the practice of replacing permanent employees (in all sectors) with temporary and agency staff.

    Last week the Labour Party NEC voted to support the bill adding weight to the campaign. Here is what Tony Dubbins, Chair of TULO and DGS of Unite said:

    "Trade unions have welcomed news that the Labour Party’s Executive Committee has given its backing to a bill for equal treatment of agency workers. Yesterday the Labour Party’s ruling body voted to support a Private Members Bill being brought by Andrew Miller MP to ensure that agency workers have the same rights at work as permanent and directly employed staff."

    Trade unions who are also backing the bill say the NEC vote is an important expression of the growing support across the party and wider movement for legislation to stop the growing abuses of agency workers.

    The joint Labour Party trade unions are urging MPs to turn out at the second reading of the Private Members Bill on Friday 22nd February. They are confident that they will have the support of more than 100 MPs on that day which will mean the bill can proceed to committee stage.

    Tony Dubbins, Chair of the Trade Unions for Labour Organisation (TULO), said: “We have been encouraged by the level of support that the campaign for legislation has gained among MPs and across the labour movement but this is further evidence of the need to act urgently to protect the growing number of agency workers from widespread abuse.

    “The Labour Party committed to introduce UK legislation to protect agency workers before the last election and now we and the estimated 1.4 million agency workers in the UK need the government to act on that promise by backing Andrew Miller’s bill.”

    The NEC’s resolution to back the bill will now proceed to the Labour Party’s National Policy Forum. You can also find out more by clicking on the link below which will take you to the Unite Graphical Paper & Media Sector Website http://www.amicustheunion.org/Default.aspx?page=1648