UK Pensioner risks amputation if she demonstrates at Tory Headquarter to save Wardens on 22nd March

Pensioner Betty Martin, the Co chair of the UK Pensioners Strategy Committee is determined to join the demonstration on Monday 22nd March to save the UK’s Resident Sheltered Housing Wardens.  The demonstration starts at 12.00pm in Parliament Square and continues at 1.00pm outside Tory Headquarters, 30 Milbank where a letter will be handed in for the attention of David Cameron.  The message is (Are you going to change the law to protect Resident Sheltered Housing Wardens?  We need to know now, so we can advise the five hundred thousand tenants of sheltered housing and their supporters who to vote for.) 

After the demonstration a delegation of sheltered housing tenants will hand in similar letters at the Liberal Democrat Headquarters for Nick Clegg, and 10 Downing for the Prime Minister.

For more click here

Our AGM.

A big thank you for all of you who took part and for setting a challenging action plan for the branch to complete in the next 12 months.

To view the action plan click here

Barnet College marches on 10 Downing St!

On Friday 26th March delegates from Barnet UNISON branch will attend the London Region Local Government AGM.  The branch executive passed the following motion and submitted it to the AGM. Branch delegates are going to speak to the motion and look to build a regionwide response to the massive attacks to the FE sector

Join Barnet College UNISON members along with other members working in FE & HE in London on Saturday 20th March

Click here for details

Catering services…Da Vinci Code?

I was re-reading the Transact Report again……and noticed the following comments on school catering…….which said “most local authorities do not provide an in-house school catering service”

Now as someone who has always asked questions…..I really need to see some evidence for statements like this. In July 2009 the Trade Unions submitted a report to Future Shape Cabinet Committee with a number of questions in particular about the Transact Group. 

I have to say trying to find out what the group was actually doing and who was doing the doing has felt like being in a Dan Brown novel!

However, 11 months after asking for the Transact report it finally appeared in my in box…….I took a deep breath and opened the report……..had I finally got my hands on the Future Shape Da Vinci Code?……would  I finally understand the mysteries of easyCouncil? ….would I hear a choir of angels singing in my ear…………?

No….this is what I saw?

Does this report, justify the local press story or this interview with Vanessa Feltz on BBC London earlier this week.

You tell me.

Defend – your Pension Scheme

We all know we are going to have to defend our scheme so let’s start now

UNISON is supporting a nation-wide coalition of organisations to begin an unprecedented mobilisation of pension fund members and the public to petition their pension funds in support of oil sands resolutions due to be voted on at the BP and Shell AGMs this Spring. The UNISON staff pension fund has co-filed resolutions to the Shell and BP AGM’s.

Your pension fund will hold shares in BP and Shell on your behalf. We are asking you to help mobilise the power of your pension fund – it’s your money!

For LGPS members add your voice click on the link http://fairpensions.org.uk/unison/tarsands–

put the name of your employer in the search box – follow instructions and it will send an automated email to your fund administrator. It only takes two clicks of a mouse from your computer! 

Tour of Europe – Public Services

By Louis Smyth –  Teaching Assistant and UNISON rep

“The bankers messed up the economy of most countries around the world. The solution appears the same – cut the public sector – Here are a few examples.”

Germany.-  for Public-sector workers get a 1.2 per cent pay rise backdated to January 2010

Germany’s 2 million public-sector workers will get a pay rise this year that is only slightly above the level of inflation, another sign that German unions are willing to be flexible to protect jobs.

Verdi, the services union, wanted a 5 per cent pay increase for workers employed by central government and towns but accepted a proposal for Public-sector workers are to get a 1.2 per cent pay rise backdated to January 2010, and then a 0.6 per cent rise at the start of 2011. A further 0.5 per cent rise in August 2011 a 2.3 per cent rise over 26 months.

Thomas Boehle, head of the municipalities’ employers’ (local authorities)  said the deal would cost towns €1.1bn this year and another €1.3bn in 2011. “The situation of municipal budgets is as bad as never before,” he warned. sound familiar?

Ireland – disruptive action seems inevitable

The Civil, Public and Services Union (CPSU), which represents 13,000 lower paid staff, general secretary Blair Horan warned that strikes are “likely”.

He gave notice of strike action “of indefinite or limited duration” and a four-week ban on overtime from  15th March. It has also threatened to immediately place pickets on any location if a member is removed from the payroll. This is against a 5pc pay cut inflicted on members earning in the main less than €30,000. CPSU assistant general secretary Theresa Dwyer said the approach showed the sense of outrage among workers. “Further combined and more disruptive action now seems inevitable,”.

Greece – huge amount of discontent

Public sector workers in Greece have all ready taken part in a national one day strike in protest s against the measures proposed to address the financial cricis casued by the bankers. The proposals include cuts in public sector pay and bonuses, and a freeze on hiring new employees and increasing the average retirement age from 61 to 63.

Portugal- Huge amount of discontent

Public-sector workers have Held a 24-hour strike in Portugal in the latest protest Trade unions representing more than 500,000 civil servants have joined forces for the first time in four years in a protest against a planned pay freeze, indirect tax increases and cuts in bonuses and pension benefits.

Portugal’s unions said that their members had suffered worsening conditions for years as public pensions and other benefits were cut by the minority Socialist government, which this year froze public-sector wages ..

Unions  say that public sector workers bear the brunt of belt-tightening every time the government overspends, pointing out that public-sector workers have suffered real wage cuts of up to 7 per cent since 1999.

The government has said it will present further cost-cutting measures later this month. It also plans to cut the amounts paid to civil servants who take early retirement.

General Confederation of Portuguese Workers general secretary Manuel Carvalho da Silva said: “There is a huge amount of discontent.”

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