Wednesday 26 November 2008

A Pay Update from MoD Group

Ministry of Defence

To: All Members
MoD GEC
MoD/MB/57/08

26th November 2008


Dear Colleagues,

MoD Pay - Update Number 5

Members may have seen the Civilian Pay Update that has recently been issued by MoD.

The text of this statement, which has been agreed with PCS, states "Informal pay talks with the Non Industrial Trade Unions continue. Management propose to put a formal offer to the unions very shortly with the aim of the pay award being in pay packets early next year. In parallel, talks are being held at national level following the suspension of the PCS civil service-wide action. The pay award will not be further delayed because of the national talks but any changes required to the award as a result of the national negotiations will be considered and if agreed put in place afterwards."

Members will wish to note that the PCS talks with the Treasury and the Cabinet Office are ongoing; we do not know yet whether an agreement is possible. A special meeting of the PCS national executive committee (NEC) had been planned for Thursday 27 November. This will now take place on Monday 1 December. This is to allow the talks to be completed.

Every effort is being made to progress the talks to a successful conclusion. But we do not yet know whether an agreement will be reached. Therefore, members must stand ready to take industrial action and retain strike and other campaign materials in case they are needed.

We must also continue to make our case for fair pay to employers, politicians and the public.

In MoD we have made clear to management that we will require a clause in the pay offer that re-opens the talks if there is something tangible from the national talks. We will however continue to talk to MoD management on pay and to make progress with the Department to ensure that the 2008 pay award is paid to PCS members as quickly as possible. There will be an emergency meeting of the PCS MoD group executive committee (GEC) as soon as we receive a formal offer and further information on this offer will be circulated to members as soon as possible.

A further update on pay will be issued to members next week.

Yours sincerely



Paul Barnsley
Group Secretary

Wednesday 12 November 2008

National Action Suspended – Information for MoD Members

To: All Members (1:10) MoD/MB/55/08
cc: Group Executive Committee


Dear Colleagues,

National Action Suspended – Information for MoD Members

As you will be aware by now the NEC met on 7 November and decided to suspend the national strike planned for Monday 10 November and the overtime ban proposed to follow it. National officers will now enter into formal talks with the government.

The NEC made this decision because of the letter received from Sir Gus O’Donnell, Head of the Civil Service, which agreed that discussions should take place to address the concerns that form the basis of this national pay dispute and that the period during which the union could legally take industrial action would be extended by 28 days.

It is important that all MoD members realise that the programme of action which members voted for in the national ballot has not been cancelled: we have agreed not to take any action while talks are taking place to find a solution to the dispute. We have always said we would try and get a negotiated settlement if at all possible.

We would like to thank all members and reps who worked hard to prepare for the action on the 10 November and for your continuing support. In the MoD Group, the GEC set up a sub-committee that contacted all branches prior to the day of action to offer help and support. Had the action gone ahead, we know that we would have had a record number of picket lines at MoD sites with a record number of pickets on duty and attending the rallies up and down the country.

There is little doubt that senior MoD were aware of this and would have reported this back to the Cabinet office. We have absolutely no doubt that the strength of feeling shown in the MoD has been replicated across all groups and this will have heavily influenced Gus O’Donnell to write to our union agreeing that discussions should take place to address the concerns that form the basis of this dispute

By simply voting for and preparing to take action on 10 November, members in the MoD have now alongside all PCS members put in place a negotiating process that we hope will lead to an acceptable settlement. It remains to be seen whether enough progress will be made to form the basis of an acceptable settlement. If not, we must stand ready to take action.

In the build up to any industrial action there is always a higher than average rise in those who wish to join and those who wish to leave our union. This happened again in the lead up to November 10. We are delighted to say, however, that membership density in the MoD group has once again increased in the lead up to 10 November as it did prior to the days of action in 2007.

We welcome any new members to our union as the more members we have increases our bargaining power with the employer. You have joined the fastest growing union in the country and a union that is now consistently delivering for its members.

For those of you who have chosen to resign your membership, that of course is your democratic right and we respect that. However, we would ask that you reconsider. As stated above, the best possible chance we have of success is to have the highest possible membership density. The reality is that once again our intention to stand together in solidarity has caused the government to sit up and take notice.

Whatever the outcome of the talks, our union applied the pressure that brought them about. Every other avenue had been exhausted and as always the decision to move to action was a last resort but hopefully members who thought that industrial action or has happened on this occasion (as it happened when we protected our pensions), the threat of industrial action does not deliver will think again.

Nobody in the MoD group can afford to lose a day’s pay, but conversely and more importantly we believe nobody in the MoD group can afford to submissively accept below inflation pay offers that in reality are pay cuts for our already poorly paid members.

The ‘credit crunch’ we find ourselves in at present is not the fault of civil servants. The situation has been brought about by the banks that gambled with customer’s funds and have been bailed out of their mess with £500 billion of taxpayer’s money. £500 billion that the government apparently didn’t have! It will cost only £300 million to resolve the progression issue and bring every single servant into line with every other public sector worker.

We are not asking for special favours, we only want fairness. It is not unreasonable for our members – many of whom are among the lowest paid workers in the UK – to want to protect their living standards, particularly in these times of economic uncertainty. Our demands in the current national pay campaign are listed again below
· Consolidated basic pay increases at least equal to the retail price index
· Remove pay progression costs from budgets for increases
· Fewer separate pay negotiations
· Funding to remedy equal pay problems
· No link between pay and performance appraisal
· An end to pressure for regional pay
Finally, there may be cases where members did not attend work in the MOD on November 10 because it had not been possible to notify them that the strike was suspended. Where management are unsympathetic to such instances, please contact your local rep who will raise it up to the MOD group office so that the issue can be raised with the Cabinet Office.



Chris Dando
MoD Group President

Paul Barnsley
MoD Group Secretary

Tuesday 11 November 2008

Monday 10 November 2008

Suspension of Industrial Action

Members have asked me to clarify the reason that the strike scheduled for today has been called off. Essentially, PCS asked the government to engage in constructive talks over pay in order to avoid strike action. At the eleventh hour, Sir Gus O'Donnell agreed to the unions demand and hence the strike is suspended pending talks for 28 days whilst talks can take place. The following has been circulated to all branchs and published on the PCS website (further information will be published as it comes available) .

The following message is on the PCS website:

PCS suspends national industrial action

The PCS national executive committee met this morning and following their receipt of a letter from Sir Gus O'Donnell, head of the home civil service, have decided to suspend the industrial action planned from Monday 10 November and the overtime ban proposed to commence on Tuesday 11 November.
Further information will be issued on Monday via the website.

The letter from the Head of the Civil Service follows

Mark Serwotka, general secretary
7 November 2008,
Mark,

Following the constructive discussions between yourselves and my officials, I am writing to confirm that I am prepared to agree, pursuant to Section 234(1) of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992, to a 28 day extension to the limitation of your current mandate for initiating industrial action. This will extend the period of validity to midnight on 11 December 2008, allowing your colleagues and officials to take forward discussions to address the concerns that form the basis of your current dispute.

Sir Gus O'Donnell, KCB
Secretary of the Cabinet and Head of the Home Civil Service

http://www.pcs.org.uk/en/ministry_of_defence_group/ministry_of_defence_group.cfm

Friday 7 November 2008

Strike Action Suspended.

The planned strike for Monday 10th November 2008 has been suspended.

More information to follow.

A message from PCS General Secretary & President

Dear colleague,

We are writing to urge you to support the one day national strike on November 10.

It is always a hard decision to take industrial action, especially when money is tight. But PCS members would lose much more in the coming years unless we stand together now for fair pay.

We have been campaigning, alongside other unions, against an unfair government pay policy that caps pay deals below the level of inflation.

Importantly, we are also trying to end the double disadvantage for PCS members. For most of us, unlike the rest of the public sector such as Education and Health, progression up pay scales is funded from within annual pay settlement budgets. This makes the situation worse because there is even less money for basic pay. This unfairness must stop.

An agreement on these issues is achievable. Our demands can easily be afforded. Fair funding of progression would only cost approximately £300 million, about 2% of the total national paybill. That’s a drop in the ocean compared to the billions spent bailing out City bankers, the millions wasted on consultants, and the millions spent on five figure bonuses for the most senior civil servants.

We are making every effort to talk to Ministers and senior officials to find a solution to the dispute. The more united and determined we are on November 10, the greater the pressure on the employer to sit down with us and work out an agreement. The one day strike will be followed by a national overtime ban. If necessary our campaign will continue.

Since 2004 we have protected pensions, won agreements on avoiding compulsory redundancies and on privatisation, and stopped attacks on sick pay. By acting together we’ve shown campaigning works. We now need to stand together on pay.


Mark Serwotka General Secretary
Janice Goodrich President

Wednesday 5 November 2008

Forty Acres: a poem for Barack Obama from Nobel winner Derek Walcott

Out of the turmoil emerges one emblem, an engraving —

a young Negro at dawn in straw hat and overalls,

an emblem of impossible prophecy, a crowd

dividing like the furrow which a mule has ploughed,

parting for their president: a field of snow-flecked

cotton forty acres wide, of crows with predictable omens

that the young ploughman ignores for his unforgotten

cotton-haired ancestors, while lined on one branch, is

a tense court of bespectacled owls and, on the field's

receding rim — a gesticulating scarecrow stamping with rage at him.

The small plough continues on this lined page

beyond the moaning ground, the lynching tree, the tornado's

black vengeance, and the young ploughman feels the change in his veins,

heart, muscles, tendons,

till the land lies open like a flag as dawn's sure

light streaks the field and furrows wait for the sower.


(As published today -

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/us_elections/article5088429.ece)


Tuesday 4 November 2008

Great News - Staff in MoD Receive a Pay Award in 2008!!!

Now for the bad news.... if you are one of the 1.496 staff in the MOD who got the rise, you did so because without this increase the MOD would have been paying less than the minimum wage and breaking the law.

In the meantime, after 6 years of imposed deals, which in the last two years have meant a real terms pay cut for half our staff, we are waiting yet again for negotiations to start on our pay increase.

At the same time we work alongside service personnel who have had their increment on their pay scale, their cost of living increase, and an increase in their X factor.

Not surprisingly therefore, with great reluctance, members have taken a democratic decision to go on strike on 10th November and I hope that you will all support this action. When you are in trouble you expect the union to be there for you. Well, it’s a two way pact. The union, or rather its members, are expecting you to be there, or rather away from work and not here, on November 10th.

Unfair, discriminatory, low pay systems are bad for us, bad for the MOD and bad for the country. We have waited long enough. Please support the action on November 10th. If you are not only prepared to be on strike but can help us on the picket line, then please let me know.

Ian Melvin
VA(NB)PCS Secretary
Ext 69081