in

Unite Viewpoint

June 2008 - Posts

  • Art Studio's - Directories Agreement

    This week saw the conclusion of negotations with the employers who are part of the Art Studios and Directories Agreement, namley Yell and Pindarset Studios, producing adverts for Yellow Pages directories. Details of the agreement are being sent to members with a ballot to follow. The agreement provides for a cash increase worth 4.2% on basic rates with most members getting an increase, if it goes through of £15.00 per week. The directories sector is going through tough times, as move advertisers switch to electronic media - so our negotiating panel consisting of lay reps and full time officers are recommending the deal.
  • Unite - USW Merger Deal To Be Signed Next Week

    This is a press notice issued via The Earth Times which gives details of the USW Convention next week and the signing of the historic agreement to create a merger between Unite in the UK and Ireland and the USW in the USA and Canada. The signing will be broadcast live on the USW web site on Wednesday, July 2 at approximately 11:45am and the name of the new union will also be announced. Nope I am not giving it away! http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/usw-convention-june-30-july-3-in-las-vegas,445225.shtml
  • Support Lovemore Matombo and Wellington Chibebe

    I was pleased with other Unite collegaues be able to join in a peaceful lunchtime demo outside of the Zimbabwean Embassy in support of Lovemore Matombo and Wellington Chibebe, Zimbabwean trade unionists currently facing trial in Muagbe's hell hole. The wonderful mosiac designed by the TUC to support our comrades is on display at : http://www.tuc.org.uk/international/tuc-14995-f0.cfm
  • Announcement By Skills Minister Is A Backward Step

    The announcement by Skills Minister David Lammy that under new proposals outlined last week, from 2010, employees will be entitled to request time off work for training after six months in a job was too be welcomed. However........David Lammy has gone onto state that employers would not be obliged to pay an employees’ salary while they were undertaking training, neither would they be obliged to organise or pay for the training. Have you ever heard such arrant nonsense? This decision makes the right to time off for training totally meaningless. It will prove to be a disincentive for workers to seek training and is tantamount to workers paying for their own training. How many workers are going to seek time off for trainining if not only will they have to pay for it themselves but also not get paid time off to train or help organise it? Its like joining the AA but not owning a car - or even a bike! Unite's DGS Graham Goddard, commented today that; “Once again the government has given in to employer pressure. This lets employers and business off the hook and will do nothing to address the UK’s chronic skills shortages. Hopefully employers will understand that fully funded training benefits both the company and employee. ” And as far as the printing industry is concerned the decision is a backward step, will not help with the training, learning and skills problems that the printing industry faces. Our industry has a poor record on training (we have been described as "bottom of the league") - which Unite and others in the industry have been trying to change. Training, learning and skills helps workers and their families get on and helps them deal with the changes that they face at work - this decision is a backward step.
    Posted Jun 23 2008, 08:10 PM by Tony Burke with no comments
    Filed under:
  • You Tube Clip - Printing Is Alive

    Check it out..... http://youtube.com/watch?v=VpAuDrs5ocg
  • Finnish paper strike averted at last minute

    Finnish paper strike averted at last minute A strike that would have hit 1,000 staff at Finnish paper manufacturer Stora Enso has been averted just minutes before it was scheduled to start. Toimihenkilöunioni (TU), the Finnish union of white-collar staff, has threatened rolling strikes across the Finnish paper industry over a dispute relating to pay talks. The strike was stopped on Monday (16 June) following TU's approval of the National Conciliator's proposal for the new collective agreement for staff. TU president Antti Rinne said: "We almost achieved the level of pay rises we pursued. It will close the gap between the pay development of salaried employees and workers." According to the agreement, salaries will be raised by 5.3% which will equate to a pay rise of at least €60 (£47) per month, or at least an increase of 2.7%. The agreement, which is in force from 16 June 2008 to 31 March 2010, can be terminated on 15 October 2009. If the conciliation had failed, the strike would have begun on Monday for white-collar staff at all of Stora Enso's Finnish manufacturing plants. TU has said it would also spread the strike action to paper companies UPM, M-real, Myllykoski and Metsä-Botnia. The union said it believes the pay gap between its members and those of Paperiliitto, the union that represents blue-collar workers, is widening.
  • Strike Action In Finnish Paper Industry Planned

    Toimihenkilöunioni TU, the Union of Salaried Employees of Finland, issued a 14-day strike notice against companies aligned with the Finnish Forest Industries Federation. The union’s Paper Industry Bargaining Council, and then the International Chemical, Energy and Mineworkers affiliated trade union’s Executive Committee, voted in back to back industrial action across the country’s pulp and paper sector. The strike notice, filed under the country’s Employment Contracts Act, means that 6,500 salaried, technical, and professional workers begin taking rolling strike actions against 100 employers on 16 June. It is expected that Stora Enso salaried staff will begin the actions at all but two mills on 16 June, with staff at other companies to then strike in the following weeks if an agreement is not reached. The union and employers’ association have bargained since 11 April over a contract that expired Saturday, 31 May. The association entered talks again on 29 May by announcing they would not budge on unresolved issues. Those issues include offering no pay increases, agreeing to no job security, retraining, or other financial cushioning in the event of redundancies, and refusal to meet pay equity differences with Paperiliitto, the pulp and paperworkers’ union which reached accord with the Forest Industries Federation in April. “The ICEM has been monitoring TU’s talks with the industry for the past six weeks,” said General Secretary Manfred Warda, “and we are disturbed by the lack of employer movement. We now will alert our trade union affiliates globally, within these relevant companies, of this dispute but we urge the Finnish employers to return to talks and to make meaningful progress toward a renewal contract.” In Finland, TU represents 1,000 salaried staff at Stora Enso, 1,000 staff at UPM, as well as less numbers of workers at major pulp and paper producers M-Real, Myllykoski, and Metsä-Botnia. The negotiations also cover salaried staff at a number of other global paper producers, and staff inside power generating facilities, pulp and paper maintenance companies, and paper converting firms. The industry has turned a deaf ear to a TU proposal for six months of pay and re-training for staff made redundant; to a 12-month special job security and training measure to protect shop stewards and health and safety personnel that might face redundancy; a bonus for staff who train other salaried personnel; and travel time for staff moving from one site to another. Since 2000, the pay gap between TU members and Paperiliitto members has widened because of smaller pay raises on the national level, and greater job development incentives for blue-collar workers at mill level. Since 2000, Finnish pulp and paper companies have shed some 1,500 jobs among TU’s ranks.
  • EMCEF Congress 2008

    Returned from the 2008 congress of the European Mining, Chemicals, Energy Federation in Prague. This is a European body which represents trade unions across Europe in oil, petrochemicals, chemicals, phramaceuticals, energy, glass and papermaking. Unite has a significant interest in all of these areas and played an important part in the conference. The biggest unions in EMCEF are IGBCE from Germany and the "Nordic Bloc" - who work together through Nordic - IN, a trade union federation covering the Nordic countries. The congress set out the policies of EMCEF for the next four years. All of the Unite delegation made contributions and speeches on a wide range of issues including equalities, health and safety in papermills, the current EWC revisions, organising and on the behalf of Unite I was able to propose the main motion on the future of social Europe and the recent ECJ decisions. The main points were that Europe is seeing an unprecedented neo liberal attack on labour and employment standards and on the terms and conditions of European workers. Employment rights that were won through the work and sacrifices of our members over decades across the European Union are now under real threat. The recent decisions of the European Court of Justice in regard to the Lavel, Viking and Rueffert cases could create a climate that could lead to worker being pitted against worker and create “a race to the bottom”. If the ECJ judgement stands we could could see National Agreements (such as Unite has in Construction and Print/Paper) undermined - therefore we have to now campaign to overturn the judgements and pursue and defend progressive social policies in Europe. The European Commission and the European Parliament now needed to stand up to European Governments who are intent on blocking the progress of social employment standards in Europe that have been developed over the past 60 years. John Monks, General Secretary of the European TUC told the Congress the ECJ judgements are already having an adverse effect on Union power. They have already turned some trade unionists against the Lisbon Treaty and they are leading many trade unionists to question whether there really is a Social Europe if the free market can ride rough shod over Collective Agreements. John announced that the ETUC would be seeking a social progress protocol to be attached to the treaties of the European Union making clear that fundamental rights are not secondary to the single market. This will be a big fight, John said, it was going to be a tough campaign, but it is one that we must win.
  • Unite Conferences

    Unite (Amicus) has just completed 22 industrial conferences in a week in Brighton. Each morning delegates attending their industrial conferences were adressed by Derek Simpson Joint GS. Derek delivered a wide ranging speech - putting forward alternative policies that would help Labour's fortunes turn round, agency workers, a windfall tax on energy companies, the case the our merger with the USW, globalisation, the need to organise, the need for the two wings of Unite to come together etc and he took questions and comments from delegates. The key message from Derek was that to be a successful union, delegates and activists should look outward at the issues members are really interested in - pensions, pay, job security, housing, dignity at work, equal pay etc and not arcane arguments about internal union structures and committee's. He also argued strongly that there was a real need for "ordinary" delegates to become involved in the Labour Party and to stand as MP's who represent people rather than people who are currently in Parliament who have little or no experience of ordinary working life. I attended most of the conferences on Tuesday and spoke on my work the the Cogent Sector Skills Council at the Process and Chemicals sector conferences and well as attending and being responsible for the GPM conference. As always the GPM Conference had controversy (whats new?) and some excellent policies were proposed by delegates on a wide range of issues - agency workers; the CPI Corrugated and Paper Agreements, EWC reform; relations with the NUJ; newspapers in Ireland, Sick Pay Agreements to name a but a few. Stuart North our FOC at Butler & Tanner gave a detailed account of the recent dispute with the company and recieved a standing ovation from delegates. Guest speakers included Steve Davidson Vice Chair of Unite; *** Blin from ICEM; Adriana Rosenveig from Uni Graphical, Ana Gonzalez a senior trade union officer from Columbia - who has faced assasination attempts at the hands of the Columbian paramilitraries - she recieved an emotional standing ovation and last but not least, Tony Dubbins gave his farewell address to GPM sector delegates saying he had enjoyed the job, recounted the many disputes he had been involved in, was proud that the sector still had nine national agreements, that union density in the sector was still high, that we had led the organising agenda in the 1990's. His main message was for delegates to get involved in the union and defend all we had acheived and the GPM sector. Tony was given a prolonged standing ovation. Each day the Morning Star provided extensive coverage of the Conferences and hopefully the pdf's of the coverage will be made available on the Unite website soon.
  • Richard "***" Barker RIP

    As readers may know *** Barker, former Chair of the Unite GPM Sector, VP of the GPMU, Member of the former Amicus NEC and F&GP Committee died recently. *** was the Unite FOC at Benhamgoodheadprint in Colchester for many years and left the print industry after a long period of unemployment. He eventually found a job as a lorry driver after working as an agency worker. *** was a great character, popular within GPMU and Amicus and worked hard for the membership. As the chair of the GPM sector he was always on hand to give help and advice to the officers of the sector. His funeral will be on Monday in Harwich and it looks like Unite members and activists from all over the Uk and Ireland will be attending.