Thursday 30 April 2009

City bankers on course for £7bn in bonuses...

...meanwhile the maximum pay for E grades is cut?

The next poet laureate, possibly.

Today I am going to kill something. Anything.
I have had enough of being ignored and today
I am going to play God. It is an ordinary day,
a sort of grey with boredom stirring in the streets . . .

. . .There is nothing left to kill. I dial the radio
and tell the man he’s talking to a superstar.
he cuts me off. I get our bread-knife and go out.
the pavements glitter suddenly. I touch your arm.


Carol Ann Duffy
From Education for Leisure

Wednesday 29 April 2009

Tories Promote Women? Yeah, Right!















http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/cartoon/

Get fit free with the army.

The British Army is offering a free fitness course and training programme online. To take advantage, click on the attached link... but be warned, it is not for the faint hearted... http://armyfit.mod.uk/
Numerous other web based fitness related sites can be found in the following article; ttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/wellbeing/5214756/Wellbeing-on-the-web-the-12-fitness-websites-you-need-to-bookmark.html

Tuesday 28 April 2009

MoD Pay Offer – PCS’s Ballot Result Pay Update 14

As you will be aware the PCS ballot on the MoD Pay Offer closed at Noon today 28th April.
The outcome of the ballot is as follows:


Q1
Do you wish to accept MoD proposals to cut the pay band maxima at E1 and E2 and freeze the pay band maxima at B1?

Numbers voting yes 657 (12.6%)
Numbers voting no 4531 (87.4%)

Q2
In light of question 1 do you wish to accept the MoD departmental pay offer for 2008-2010?

Numbers voting yes 1054 (19%)
Numbers voting no 4508 (81%)

Therefore, our union is now in dispute with MoD on pay.

We are also seeking assurances that status quo will apply whilst we are in dispute, in particular in respect of MoD proposals to cut the pay band maxima at E1 and E2.

Yours sincerely

Paul Barnsley
Negotiations Officer

Workers Memorial Day 28th April


Every year more people are killed at work than in wars. Most don't die of mystery ailments, or in tragic "accidents". They die because an employer decided their safety just wasn't that important a priority. Workers’ Memorial Day commemorates those workers.

Worker’s Memorial Day is held on 28 April every year, all over the world workers and their representatives conduct events, demonstrations, vigils and a whole host of other activities to mark the day.

The day is also intended to serve as a rallying cry to “remember the dead, but fight like hell for the living”.

Monday 27 April 2009

Budget 2009 – MoD Job Slaughter

The budget announcement set out the biggest expenditure cuts and programme of privatisation in the history of our country.

Laughably the Government has described this as a ‘budget for jobs’ and yet buried in the report are plans to destroy thousands of civil service jobs. MoD is particularly badly impacted and thousands of our jobs are at risk.

The Chancellor announced yesterday that MoD has committed to deliver a further £3.15 Billion of cost savings. These are in addition to the job cuts and savings already announced under the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review. The details of how MoD plan to achieve this are vague but it is already clear that: thousands of our jobs are at real risk of cuts and/or privatisation.

The Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP is a Treasury review – led by Gerry Grimstone the former Head of Margaret Thatcher’s privatisation Unit) has opened up the likely possibility of:

· The sale and privatisation of the Defence Storage and Distribution Agency (DSDA) and possibly the Defence Support Group.
· The sale and privatisation of the UK Hydrographic Office (UKHO)
· The sale and privatisation of the Defence Estate's SecurityServices Group.
· The sale and privatisation of the Defence Animal Centre
· £100 million of job cuts from extending the Civilian Costs Programme which will reduce support costs across the department; and
· An additional £6 million cut through ‘continued pressure for efficiency on the Shared Services’
· The entire Defence Estates TLB itself is potentially under threat from the proposal within the OEP to establish: “a central property function to provide assistance and expertise and oversee the efficiency and rationalisation agenda for property across the whole public sector”.

Next Steps

PCS has, encouragingly, had very early dialogue and engagement with the Department on the OEP via a Corporate Service Steering Group. We have also engaged already with management and MPs on the areas likely to be tested for outsourcing. We will be stepping this work in the next period.

We will also, over the coming weeks, arrange PCS members meetings to discuss proposals directly with our members. In some areas, such as PPPA, this planning is already well advanced.

Our position on this senseless job slaughter is clear. We will demand from MoD an agreement that guarantees:

· No compulsory redundancies
· The most generous severance terms for those who choose to leave
· No compulsory relocation
· An end to outsourcing – protect our public services
· Full MoD adherence to the national agreements our union has concluded with the employer – the protocols on jobs and the agreement on privatisation and outsourcing.

Remember - behind the talk about targets and savings are real people and real lives. These disgraceful proposals will wreck lives and cause misery to thousands.

Now more than ever we need stand together and to build PCS, so that we are strong and able to resist the coming attacks.

Members Action Plan

PCS is asking every member to do 4 things:

Recruit a friend – and make sure everyone in your office/area is a member of the union. We appeal to everyone to join us and our fight to save jobs.
Sign up to receive future PCS briefings – so that you know what is going on and can tell other members. Please email paulbba@pcs.org.uk
Attend your local PCS meeting to discuss our response to the cuts.
Get active – PCS needs members to help us build our union.

Over the next period PCS will be the only force strong enough, and with the political will, to challenge this jobs carnage. As ever, our strength comes from the active participation of members.

Yours sincerely

Paul Barnsley
Group Secretary

'Thrift?' At Our Expense it seems!

Dodgy David Cameron has told the Tory spring conference that he will establish a "Government of thrift", if elected. But what does that mean?

It seems he means to go after our salaries and our pensions. His attack is disguised in language that targets the highest earners, consultants and quango chairmen but the real savings will only come from attacking us all... our pay and our pensions.

A vote for the tories is a vote for an Eton Mess!


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/5225786/David-Cameron-to-crack-down-on-public-sector-pay.html

No Such Thing As A Simple Flu Jab

With the news of a possible pandemic arising from the outbreak of Swine Flu in Mexico, it might be well to keep things in perspective.

The article linked from todays Times demonstrates that caution is perhaps the watchword; http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article6175186.ece

Thursday 23 April 2009

Northwest BNP Candidate reveals true colours!

Nick Griffin, the leader of the BNP who is standing for the European Parliament in the Northwest this June, is challenged over his parties Language and Concepts Discipline Manual in todays Guardian.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/apr/23/bnp-nick-griffin-race

If you think you might of heard something similar before, I will remind you of George Orwell's 1984:

Doublethink

The keyword here is blackwhite. Like so many Newspeak words, this word has two mutually contradictory meanings. Applied to an opponent, it means the habit of impudently claiming that black is white, in contradiction of the plain facts. Applied to a Party member, it means a loyal willingness to say that black is white when Party discipline demands this. But it means also the ability to believe that black is white, and more, to know that black is white, and to forget that one has ever believed the contrary. This demands a continuous alteration of the past, made possible by the system of thought which really embraces all the rest, and which is known in Newspeak as doublethink. Doublethink is basically the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them.

– Part II, chapter IX - chapter I of Goldstein's book

National pay update: HM Treasury pay guidance finally issued

Last year, following a national campaign and ballot on action, PCS reached an agreement with the government on pay. The agreement meant that extra money from efficiency savings could be used to improve pay in civil service departments and other public bodies.

The government also said that there would not now be a 2% cap. This represented an important change in policy.

The national executive committee (NEC) decided that the agreement would need to be tested in pay bargaining in individual departments and linked bodies, to see if this resulted in more money in members pockets, which remains the key test of any agreement.

To take this forward, at the end of January, PCS and other unions met ministers to discuss the new Treasury remit guidance, which are the rules on pay that every department and other public bodies have to follow.

Serious delays from the government ensued and we exerted maximum pressure during this period on politicians by lobbying hard and by making direct representations to ministers. As a result the guidance was finally published 31 March.

The guidance as it stands is unacceptable as it assumes that the average base pay rise would be 1.5%. This takes no account of cuts in living standards that members experienced last year. It is less than the 2.33% pay settlement MPs have awarded themselves and also less than most other parts of the public sector.

The remit does however conform to the agreement reached with ministers last December in that it includes the possibility of using efficiency savings to improve pay awards, on top of the basic pay rise. The union’s position is that these savings can be made from cutting the use of consultants and other sources, not job cuts or office closures.

In past weeks there had been speculation that the government was considering reneging on all existing multi-year pay deals in the public sector and imposing a pay freeze.

The government’s actual position suggests that it is still seeking to proceed by negotiation. This will now be tested in practice to see whether use of efficiency savings will mean improved pay in reality.

PCS pay negotiators will now approach management as a matter of urgency in every department and employing organisation to open talks on the terms of the detailed pay remits that will be submitted to the Treasury.

These talks will clarify details of any efficiency savings that can be recycled into pay on top of basic pay awards. This will allow us to decide by the time of our annual delegate conference in May or possibly earlier, whether the government is fully honouring our agreement or whether we will need to consult you on measures which would continue our campaign.

We thank members for their support for the campaign to date. The NEC will continue to work to ensure members do not pay the price of an economic crisis not of their making.

Mark Serwotka, General Secretary
Janice Godrich, President

Inflation

The gap between the headline inflation figures and what our members experience is highly significant. Whichever measure of inflation you look at the reality is that food prices are soaring – milk is up 12%, fruit up 14%, and vegetables up 22%. Such increases hit the poorest hardest. An independent analysis shows that inflation for the poorest 20% of households is 5.3%. Many people have not benefited from interest rate changes as they are either on fixed rate terms or don’t have a mortgage. Council house rents are up 6%.

Pay

Wages have fallen behind prices in recent years. In the three years up to June 2008, prices went up by 12.8%, but basic pay for PCS members went up by only 6% on average.

Civil Service Compensation Scheme

As has been reported to members in past months, talks are under way between the civil service unions and the Cabinet Office on "reform" of the Civil Service Compensation Scheme which includes funding for redundancy payments and early retirement. These talks are still continuing so it was surprising that the Prime Minister has decided to state, in his pay review bodies announcement, that the CSCS is inflexible and expensive. He claims that changes to the scheme could save £500m over the next 3 years! PCS disagrees with his analysis and is determined to protect terms for members facing compulsory redundancy. If the government want to save money there are simple way to do this which PCS would fully support: stop the job cuts programme, stop paying billions to consultants, and lift the threat of redundancy from civil and public services workers. There will be a full discussion on where we are with the CSCS talks at the union’s annual delegate conference in May.

The economy

There is no doubt that the economy is in trouble but decent pay could be afforded.
Billions were found to prop up the banking system. There is a tax gap of £25 billion owed in unpaid taxes, while tax avoidance is estimated at £100 billion by experts. Closing the loopholes and collecting what’s owed could fund decent public services and public sector pay.

Public and private sector pay

The press emphasise differences between average pay in the public and private sectors. But for many years, private sector pay was, on average, higher than that in the public sector. According to independent research, in 2008 public sector pay increased by 2.7% and private sector pay by 3.8%.The union opposes false divisions between public and private sector workers. The real issue is the injustice of making the low paid, wherever they work, pay for a crisis not of their making.

Monday 20 April 2009

Members Pay Meeting Tuesday 21st April

There will be a members pay meeting on Tuesday 21st April at 10:00am in Tommies to discuss the MoD pay offer as outlined in Pay Update 10.

Paul Barnsley, MoD Group Secretary for PCS, will be here to explain the offer and answer any questions. You may remember that Paul was guest speaker at this years AGM.

Facility time of one hour has been requested for members to attend this meeting.



Friday 17 April 2009

Pay Update No 12: 60 Second digest – The spin and the truth

At a time when the media is full of stories of spin, it seems the Ministry of Defence senior management do not wish to be left out.

The recently issued 12 page ‘60 second digest’ (which takes about 10 minutes to read!) is full of misleading information.

Our union is happy to let all staff know the truth:

MoD management Claim:
The Facts
Page 2 “Key aim to move all staff from long pay spine to short pay scales applicable to all"
Since 1998 the department had been busily lengthening pay scales to the extent that min to max for E grades took over 40 years. Over the same period our union has been bargaining for shorter pay scales and only the hundreds of equal and age pay claims PCS has lodged has brought about the proposed shorter pay scales. Campaigning and action by PCS members has forced MoD to shorten pay scales to avoid future liability. MoD has repeatedly told PCS that it will not guarantee progression after 2010.

Page 3 “Those on pay scale minima will get even more since minima significantly increased”
Minima’s have increased, though not very significantly. An E2 at the bottom of the new proposed spine will earn £13,881. This equates to £6.36 per hour. This is well below the living wage figure for 2009 (which is £7.45). The PCS pay claim was for a minimum for all of £8.00 per hour. .

Page 3 “Prospect and FDA have voted overwhelmingly in favour of the offer”
What other unions do is a matter for their members. However it is worth remembering that PCS represents more members than all of the other MoD unions (industrial and non-industrial) put together. We represent almost all of the staff in the E1 and E2 pay band who are facing a disgraceful attack on their pay and pensions.

Page 4 “Before 2006 it could have taken 36 years to reach Band E maxima
Pay scales reduce to 6 scale points for both.”
Before 2006 – and before we lodged our equal pay claims - MoD was quite happy to have 36 year pay scales. Now MoD wants to shorten the scales by cutting of the top of the scales and attacking our pay.

Page 4 “New pay scale maxima from 1 May 2009 to better reflect the market”
This claim refers to Cabinet Office pay club data that MoD tabled at the end of 2008. However, MoD has selectively used this data to claim that E1 and E2 staff in their words are “overpaid”. For example at the top of E2 the pay of MoD staff is comparable to thousands of other civil servants in HMRC, DEFRA, Highways Agency, Treasury Solicitors, DIUS, British Council DSA and many others.

Page 4 “Staff currently being paid at or above new maxima will have their pay protected”
This is also untrue. The MOD has consistently refused to give our union any guarantees on pay protection after 2010. In addition we believe that all staff in E1 and E2 will suffer a detriment on the day that MoD impose their proposals.

Page 5 “All Band E staff will receive an increase in take home pay during the life of this Award.”
True, but for some members this will literally be a few hundred pounds of non-consolidated pay over the period. As stated above there are no guarantees beyond 2010 that pay protection will continue and it also has pension implications.

Page 6 “There is no detriment for Band E staff”
If you are above the current max as an E grade, you will not receive a 3% consolidated, pensionable rise like all other members of staff. You will also miss out on the length of service payments that MoD has proposed. This is clearly a detriment!

Page 10 “Higher pay awards than will not be permitted under 2009 Treasury Guidance.”
How does the MOD know this? They refused to wait till the 2009 treasury remit guidance was published! The Treasury remit guidance has now been published and includes, as expected, provision to use savings from efficiencies to improve the pay of staff. This was part of the national pay agreement between PCS and the Cabinet office in November last year. We wanted to test the Guidance to see if we could improve the pay of all staff in MoD. The Department, negotiating in bad faith, has potentially cost every member of staff in MoD money through its tactics and behaviour.

Page 11 “Why are you reducing the band E maxima?
Benchmarking data indicated that MOD pay rates were out of kilter with market and other Government Departments.”
See above regarding MOD pay against similar outside markets. As regards other government departments, we are very much on a par with most other government departments.

We suspect the truth is that MoD has agreed with the Treasury to impose reduced pay as part of an attempt to define national pay rates for civil servants without negotiation or agreement with PCS.

Page 12 “Has MOD broken the Pay Bargaining Agreement? No. MOD and the NITU’s agreed a set of bargaining principles in 2008. The Department held a large number of pay bargaining meetings with the TUs in 2008 and worked hard with the TUs to develop a set of pay proposals to meet TU demands as well as MOD business requirements and affordability. As a result of those negotiations, MOD agreed to significantly increase the level at which the pay band E maxima were set above those originally proposed by the Department.”
MoD has negotiated in bad faith. The Department’s own pay offer states “For staff affected by the creation of the new generic E pay group maxima, during the offer period, we propose further talks with the trade unions to find an agreed way forward on pay protection. A project plan will be devised under the aegis of the Pay Forum and agreed with the Trade Unions by March 2009.” MoD has failed to keep that promise.

We are raising our concerns with the Treasury and Cabinet Office. We have also invited to the MoD Personnel Director and Ministers to intervene and stop this attack on our pay.


Please VOTE NO in the pay ballot.

Yours sincerely

Paul Barnsley Chris Dando KC Jones
Group Secretary President Vice President

Thursday 16 April 2009

Pay Update No 11: MoD Pay Petition

PCS Pay Update No 10, asked all members to write to John Hutton, the MoD Secretary of State regarding the potential imposition of the MoD pay offer from 1 May 2009.

We have also arranged pay meetings across MoD so that we can discuss with members the latest developments on pay and urge members to Vote NO in the pay ballot. Please contact your branch secretary for details of your branch’s meeting.

We have now also set up an online petition to the prime minister and would urge all members with Internet access to sign this petition. The petition is available at http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/MoDpaycuts/

For those members without Internet access, the petition is replicated below at Annex A. We would ask that members sign this and pass it to PCS colleagues around your workplace.

The MoD pay offer is unacceptable for many reasons. These include:

· An attack on the pay of the lowest paid staff with huge cuts to pay at the E1 and E2 pay band maxima.
· A disgraceful attempt by MoD to cut the future pensions of all staff, particularly at pay bands E1 and E2.
· A series of cuts to the pay and allowances of civil servants serving overseas
· MoD scale shortening has pushed many members back down to their pay band minima – this after member’s have spent years moving away from it.
· Freezing pay band maxima at senior pay bands
· The offer is divisive and does not meet the terms of the PCS National and Group pay claim.

PCS is asking every member to VOTE NO in the pay ballot. We are actively considering legal action, possibly on behalf of all members at E1 and E2, if our legal advice is that the MoD imposed cuts are potentially unlawful.

We also need to make the department aware that bad faith negotiations are totally unacceptable. The MoD pay offer stated “For staff affected by the creation of the new generic E pay group maxima, during the offer period, we propose further talks with the trade unions to find an agreed way forward on pay protection. A project plan will be devised under the aegis of the Pay Forum and agreed with the Trade Unions by March 2009.” MoD has failed to keep that promise.

We cannot accept a pay cut now – if we do MoD will have carte blanche to cut our pay again and again in the future,

Please Vote No in the ballot and look after your own pay now and in the future.

Yours sincerely


Paul Barnsley Group Secretary
Chris Dando President
KC Jones Vice President

PCS MoD Pay Ballot 14-28 April

The MoD pay offer is unacceptable for many
reasons. It:

• Attacks the lowest paid staff with huge
cuts to pay at the E1 and E2 pay band
maxima.
• Threatens to cut the future pensions of
all staff.
• Pushes many members back down to
their pay band.
• Is divisive and does not meet the terms of
the PCS national and group pay claim.
• Does not include provision to use savings
from efficiencies to improve the pay of
staff as per the national pay agreement
and the Treasury remit guidance.

Please vote NO in this ballot.

Wednesday 8 April 2009

MoD pay update number 10

7 April 2009 - MoD/MB/23/09

Pay update no 10: MoD Pay Offer - PCS GEC recommends ‘no’ vote in forthcoming ballot


As outlined in MoD/MB/20/09 there was an emergency meeting of the PCS MoD group executive committee (GEC) on 6 April. At that meeting the GEC received a report from pay negotiators on the recent meeting on pay that PCS had with MoD.

On the basis of that report the GEC has agreed to proceed to an immediate ballot of members on pay – with a unanimous GEC recommendation to urge members to vote NO in the ballot. The ballot will run from 14 April until 12 noon on 28 April.

Negotiations

Members will be aware that PCS noted the implementation of some elements of the first year of the MoD pay offer in February.

We did not ballot members at the time for two reasons. Firstly so members could receive additional money and back pay immediately and secondly to allow us to seek to resolve serious concerns our members had with the offer on the table. We set out plans to engage with MoD and promised to ballot members on any final offer.

We have, since then, sought to engage MoD in serious negotiations. However we have now reached the point where our union has had to conclude that MoD has been negotiating in bad faith and has no intention of trying to address the legitimate concerns of our members on pay. PCS negotiators have put forward a series of proposals particularly on the pay/pension cut at E1 and E2 but MoD has failed to negotiate seriously around these.

Despite assurances to the contrary MoD has decided to impose the cuts at E1/E2 on 1 May and in advance of the Treasury remit guidance for 2009. This guidance has now been published and allows department to make the case for using efficiency savings to improve pay. MoD has effectively prevented us from doing this by rushing to impose pay and pension cuts.

Why you should vote ‘no’ to this offer

The MoD pay offer is unacceptable for many reasons. These include:

  • An attack on the pay of the lowest paid staff with huge cuts to pay at the E1 and E2 pay band maxima. A disgraceful attempt by MoD to cut the future pensions of all staff, particularly at pay bands E1 and E2.

  • A series of cuts to the pay and allowances of civil servants serving overseas

  • MoD scale shortening has pushed many members back down to their pay band minima – this after member’s have spent years moving away from it.

  • Freezing pay band maxima at senior pay bands

  • The offer is divisive and does not meet the terms of the PCS national and group pay claim.



  • Other issues

    1. We are aware that MoD and other discredited elements are claiming that, unless PCS members agree the pay cut, then the MoD or the Treasury could take the money already on offer away. This is untrue – the recently published Treasury remit guidance makes clear that all multi year deals (including the MoD pay offer) will be paid.

    2. Another lie being peddled is that PCS members will have to pay back the money paid in back pay in February and other elements of the 2008 pay offer which have already been paid. This is nonsense.

    3. Please note that a series of briefings on pay and members meetings are being arranged. You may wish to cast your vote after hearing what we have to say at these meetings. The Norcross pay meeting is scheduled for Tuesday 21st April, in Tommies at 10AM – with guest speaker Paul Barnsley, facility has been applied for. VWS staff are recommended to contact the MoD Group at PCS HQ for details of the geographically closest pay meeting.

    PCS is asking every member to vote ‘no’ in the pay ballot. We are actively considering legal action, possibly on behalf of all members at E1 and E2, if our legal advice is that the MoD imposed cuts are potentially unlawful.

    After the vote what happens next?

    A massive NO vote will mean that MoD cannot claim that MoD staff are collectively agreeing to a pay cut for the lowest paid staff in MoD. PCS will be seeking to invoke ‘status quo’ meaning that no changes can be made to the E1 and E2 Max whilst we are in dispute.

    We will also be seeking meetings with MoD ministers to ask them to overturn the appalling proposals on the table. Nationally we are raising MoD pay proposals with the Treasury and Cabinet Office.

    In the meantime we need to alert ministers to our concerns. Attached to this circular is a letter that we urge you to send to the secretary of state on behalf of all members.

    When you vote, please consider not only your own but other members circumstances.

    Not only is an injury to one an injury to all but if the MOD gets away with slashing max’s now, it could be your pay that suffers next. In the current economic climate we need to protect our pay, our future earnings and our pensions – all of which are under threat from these proposals.

    Paul Barnsley, group secretary
    Chris Dando, president
    KC Jones, vice president


    Text of PCS members letter to John Hutton

    April 2009

    Rt Hon John Hutton MP
    Secretary of State
    Ministry of Defence
    Main Building
    Floor 5, Zone B
    London
    SW1A 2HB

    Dear Mr. Hutton,

    MoD Non Industrial Civil Service Pay 2008-2010

    I am writing to you to express my concern at the MoD proposals to cut the pay and pensions of the lowest paid staff in MoD.

    As you might be aware the Department intends to reduce the pay band maxima for non-industrial civil servants at E1 and E2 pay bands. I understand that MoD plan to impose these cuts on 1st May 2009.

    I believe that it would be completely unjust to penalise the lowest paid staff in the department by cutting their pay in such a manner. I am dismayed that my employer would propose to cut consolidated – and contractual – pay and replace it with a non-consolidated allowance.

    It is equally wrong to force thousands of hard working staff to accept non consolidated pay awards and also miss out on proposed additional progression payments based on length of service that staff with less service will receive.

    The proposed pay ‘protection’ allowance is only guaranteed until 2010 and many staff are extremely worried that these proposals will have a detrimental impact upon their future earnings and pensions.

    I ask that you personally intervene in this process so that we can find an acceptable solution to this problem. I know that my union, PCS, has proposed a number of ways to resolve this issue and I would hope that my employer would seriously consider these. I hope that you will agree that low paid government employees should not have to take a pay cut.

    Yours sincerely

    Thursday 2 April 2009

    G20: Unions must show their muscle

    There is an interesting article in todays Guardian in which Gregor Gall highlights the position of unions in the UK in relation to the G20 demonstrations and against the backdrop of the activity of our opposite numbers in Europe, his article ends;

    "Unions in Britain could learn a lot from their mainland European cousins. In France, Greece, and Italy in particular, the unions do not just call demonstrations of hundreds of thousands (although that would be a start in Britain). Rather, they organise general strikes – sometimes consecutive general strikes – from which the demonstrations then allow the power of the strike to be clearly made visible and its demand loudly articulated. This means their arguments become a force to be reckoned with.
    And, although not all these general strikes have won all their demands, their success rate should be enough to make workers in Britain sit up and take notice. Certainly, our European cousins' actions make the welcome initiative by Unite to hold a "massive" demonstration in Birmingham on 16 May 2009 against job cuts look like child's play. Unions need to understand there has to be obvious and demonstrable muscle behind their arguments. Isn't it about time unions in Britain took a leaf from their French, Italian or Greek counterparts' book?"
    The full article can be viewed here;

    Pay Update No 9 – Emergency Group Executive Committee Meeting on MoD Pay

    Many of our union’s members have contacted us asking what is happening with the pay negotiations. The majority of these members are at the E1 and E2 max who face getting their max’s slashed on 1st May 2009.

    What does all of this mean for members in the MOD?

    A special PCS MoD Group Executive Committee (GEC) has been called for Monday 6 April. At this meeting the GEC will receive a detailed report on pay negotiations in MoD and will discuss what action should now be taken. The GEC will also receive an update on the status of national agreement that was agreed in December last year. The national agreement allowed money from efficiency savings to be put back into departmental pay pots to improve pay.

    MoD negotiations

    Members are starkly aware that in 2002 and 2006, the MoD imposed their pay offers on our union’s members. As you know our members were so angry we felt the need to take strike action in March 2007. This was the first such strike action, outside of national action, in MoD history.

    When our union negotiators started the 2008 pay negotiations, we insisted on a set of principles in which these negotiations were conducted. This is called the Pay Bargaining Agreement. The Agreement should mean that both sides conduct the negotiations in good faith. The department agreed to this set of principles as it is in all parties’ interests to work together.

    As part of the process MoD gave PCS assurances that they would engage with the union – in good faith - on a number of issues where we were not in agreement:. On that basis the Department proceeded to pay the first tranche of 2008 award. The areas our union have sought to make progress on since then are:

    · Pay proposals for E1 and E2 max and the pay protection allowance
    · Removal of ILW for overseas Staff
    · Agreed process for ongoing pay discussions
    · Additional progression and the application of the payments
    · Equal pay and age discrimination issues
    · MoD admin costs budget
    · 2009 Treasury Remit guidance

    Our GEC will receive a report back from our pay negotiators against these headings next week. We will report back to members following that meeting.

    What can I do?

    Pay is the one issue in the MOD that is generic to all members. PCS wants all union members to get involved in our union and especially in our pay campaign. There are many ways that you can get involved and it doesn’t have to take up a lot of your time:

    Attend all members meetings – Our union will always be a democratic organisation. Once we have further news on MOD pay, as well as issuing pay circulars such as this, we will be convening all members meetings in MOD branches. Please contact your branch secretary for details of your branch meeting.

    By being an active member - maybe you don’t want to get too involved. You can still play a really important part in your union by just being an active member and recruiting others into our union, attending union meetings and have your say, and by telling us about problems in your office and ask what you can do to help.

    As a workplace union rep - being a PCS rep in your workplace is not as complicated as you might think. The main jobs of a rep are to listen to members and make sure that their views are represented, to keep members informed and to tell new staff about the union and ask them to join.

    As you gain experience and confidence you can get more involved in dealing with management and helping members with problems if you want to. You would get time off work and full support and training from PCS.

    As a contact or a distributor - You don’t have to give up too much time. You can help, get involved and keep yourself up to date about what is going on by just being a contact point or a distributor and giving out some union circulars in your work area. You will get time off away from your desk to do this.

    As a young member’s rep - PCS has a young member’s network. All branches are being asked to elect a young members rep. If you are 27 or under and have ideas about building a better union this could be for you.

    As an equality rep - PCS campaigns on a wide range of equality issues.

    As a health and safety rep - Union heath and safety reps do a really important job. Carrying out workplace inspections and risk assessments. You would have to be trained and get time off for training.

    As a union learning rep - Union learning reps get time off to help staff develop and take up learning opportunities. ULRs cover everything from basic skills to computer skills and CV writing.

    Next Steps on MoD Pay

    As we have stressed on numerous occasions: our union has not accepted the MOD pay offer. The current position therefore is that nothing has changed - the pay offer has not been accepted by PCS and once we believe negotiations can go no further, we will ballot members at that time.

    A further update on pay for PCS members will be issued immediately after the 6 April GEC.

    Yours sincerely

    Paul Barnsley Group Secretary
    Chris Dando Group President
    K C Jones Vice President

    Wednesday 1 April 2009

    200,000 WILL DIE IN ASBESTOS TIMEBOMB

    Can you please check that you have signed the petition below which is being sponsored by the Daily Mirror but comes from the Asbestos Victims Support Group Forum, and that you circulate it widely to members, to friends, to any networks you have, urging people to sign up. Please remember that we have worked many of us, on sites such as Norcross and Ilford Park in buildings that have in the past, and in some cases still have contained asbestos in their structures.
    http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/AsbestosTimebomb/

    Your petition reads:

    "We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to Support the aims of the Daily Mirror's Asbestos Timebomb campaign. We urge the Prime Minister to work towards implementing the five campaign demands. These are: A £10 million National Centre for Asbestos Related Disease to find better treatment, alleviate suffering and find a cure for mesothelioma. Compensation reinstated for victims of pleural plaques scars on lungs caused by asbestos after it was scrapped two years ago. Fair and equal compensation for asbestos disease sufferers who can't trace the insurers of the bosses who exposed them, through a new Employers Liability Insurance Bureau paid for by the insurance industry. A public register of all asbestos surveys carried out on public buildings. The Health and Safety Executive must be given the resources to meet its own targets for inspecting asbestos removal work."