Author: Paul

‘London Recruits’ documentary

‘London Recruits’ documentary – Appeal for Branch and Regional Council Funding

In the 1960s and 1970s a number of NUS and NUR activists (as well as members of other British unions) were recruited to perform secret work in apartheid South Africa on behalf of Nelson Mandela’s banned ANC.

RMT, as the successor of NUS/NUR, is supporting the work of Cardiff-based production company Barefoot Rascals, to bring this story to the screen through a documentary entitled London Recruits, inspired by a book of the same name published in 2012.

Among the stories featured will be the daring attempt to secretly land returning ANC activists off South Africa’s coast in a boat crewed by NUS members from Merseyside. A plaque honouring these brave men was unveiled in Liverpool last year.

In a separate mission, NUR members were among those involved in dangerous propaganda work distributing banned anti-apartheid literature within the country. They faced lengthy imprisonment and torture if arrested.

RMT donated £2,000 last year to help with the film’s initial costs, as did a number of other unions. The project is backed by the TUC and a growing number of its affiliates, Ffilm Cymru Wales and anti-apartheid veteran Peter Hain.

The producers have just launched their second phase of fundraising in order to complete the film and our Council of Executives agreed in December 2015 to circularise Branches and Regional Councils encouraging them to contribute from their own funds as a legitimate expense.

  • Branches, Regional Councils (and individuals) can contribute by visiting www.londonrecruits.com/support Various rewards are listed, including private screenings of the completed film, depending on the size of the donation.

LGBT HISTORY MONTH

LGBT HISTORY MONTH

Further to a request from the RMT LGBT Members’ Conference last year, the Council of Executives agreed to promote LGBT History Month (February).  A rainbow logo and new badge have been produced to support this.  LGBT History Month will also be highlighted in an article in the next RMT News. Branch Secretaries are asked to:

  • Encourage members to update their details on the membership system including gender and sexuality
  • Offer the new rainbow badge to any member who wishes to support LGBT history month
  • Nominate LGBT members to attend the National LGBT Members Conference, 13-14 May in Nottingham
  • Nominate LGBT members to go on the two day course in Doncaster 26-27 February to encourage LGBT activism within the union
  • Support having LGBT and/or Equality Representative positions in the Branch
  • Use the logo during February

LUL Cuts

RMT blames “poisonous cocktail of cuts and overcrowding” for huge rise in injuries on London Underground

 

Tube union RMT today blasted the “poisonous cocktail of cuts and overcrowding as an FOI request by the website London Loves Business revealed an increase in over 400% in platform injuries on London Underground.

The research shows that in 2003, a grand total of 56 “Platform/Train Interface” incidents were recorded. This number has increased every year to 2014 (the last full set of figures available), when an astonishing 298 such incidents were recorded.

This is an increase in the number of accidents of 432% overall.

The shocking new figures correspond with a surge in passenger numbers and a programme of staffing reductions to meet a package of cash-led cuts.

According to TfL’s figures, since 2003 there has been a 34% increase in passengers on the Tube and that number is set to continue to surge ahead as the population of London grows and more workers are forced to travel in from greater distances.  Early in February LU are planning to bulldoze through the axing of over 800 safety-critical station staff jobs – jobs that are critical at the platform/train interface. RMT is holding a week of action to correspond with the introduction of those cuts.

RMT, which has led a long fight against LU’s job cuts programme, has responded angrily to the figures obtained by London Loves Business.

RMT General Secretary Mick Cash said:
“These shocking figures can be put down to the poisonous cocktail of station staffing cuts and severe overcrowding which is wrecking the safety culture on London Underground.

“RMT has warned that passenger safety is being compromised but the Mayor and his officials have ignored us. These figures should be the wakeup call that forces those running the tube to halt their cuts programme and should nail once and for all the call for driverless trains.

“RMT will continue to fight the station jobs cuts plans including a week of action starting on the 7th February. ”

 

TORY ANTI-UNION LAWS

Transport Union RMT responds to news that transport is one of the sectors targeted for new wave of Tory anti union laws.

General Secretary Mick Cash said;

“This morning the Tory Government confirm that transport is one of the sectors that they will be targeting with their new wave of oppressive anti-union laws as they seek to ban strikes by the back door.

“RMT will stand alongside our colleagues in health, education and the fire service to fight this outrageous attack on our basic human rights.

“It is no surprise that the Tories are resorting to the policies of General Franco to try and tighten the noose of the anti union laws around the necks of those workers in the front line of the fight against austerity. They will have a battle on their hands. “

WORKERS MEMORIAL DAY – 28th APRIL 2016

WORKERS MEMORIAL DAY – 28th APRIL 2016

 

Workers 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 for the living”.

 

In 2016 the theme for the day is “Strong Laws – Strong Enforcement – Strong Unions”.  Across the world we are seeing growing attacks on health and safety protection, including in Britain where the Government have removed protection from millions of self-employed workers, and across Europe where the European Commission are pursuing a dangerous de-regulatory strategy. However strong laws are not enough if they are not going to be enforced. That is why we need proper inspections and enforcement action against those who break the law. Here in the UK the number of inspections has fallen dramatically in the past five years, however in many other countries enforcement has always been non-existent. That is why we also need strong unions. Unionised workplaces are safer, yet the Government is trying to stop unions protecting the health and safety of their members by restricting the right of health and safety representatives to take time off to keep the workplace safer, and also trying to reduce our right to strike when things go wrong.

 

https://www.tuc.org.uk/workersmemorialday

 

Winter Legal Update 2016

Winter Legal Update 2016

  1. Conciliation Officers

 

  It has come to my attention that members are putting their reps and Regional Administrators forward as conciliators for ACAS conciliation; please remind all branch activists and reps that the Unions approved Conciliator’s are Regional Organisers. Members can act for themselves in ACAS or nominate their Regional Organiser. If in any doubt as to who the Regional Organiser is they should contact their Regional Office.

 

  1. ACAS Certificates

 

These are extremely important as receipt of a certificate starts the limitation clock running. Members also cannot begin a Tribunal claim without one. When a certificate is received by the member or Regional Organiser provided the Legal Claim is current and ongoing it should be sent to the Legal Department immediately so that limitation can be recalculated and member advised.

 

 

  1. Zero Hours Contracts

 

In May 2015 the Employment Relations Act 1996 (ERA) was amended to include at s.27A a provision which made unenforceable any requirement in a zero-hour contract that the worker could not work elsewhere or could do so only with the employer’s consent. This was regarded as toothless because many zero-hour staff are not employees nor have the necessary two year qualifying period to claim unfair dismissal. This has now changed.

 

The Exclusivity Terms in Zero Hours Contracts (Redress) Regulations 2015 came into force in January and changed the provision in favour of the employee.

The 2015 Regulations provide that where a worker is dismissed for working elsewhere or doing so without the employers consent, the dismissal will now be unfair. No minimum length of service is required and workers without employee status can claim the same level of compensation as those with employee status. Where the worker is not dismissed but is subject to a detriment that is now actionable in the same way as the other detriment provisions contained in the ERA.

The Regulations shift the burden of proof on the employer from the outset. Regulation 3(6) provides that it is for the employer to establish that the dismissal or detriment was for something other than that breach and if it cannot do so it will lose.

  1. Right to Rent Scheme 

Under the Immigration Act 2014 (IA) the Right to rent scheme will be extended across the whole of England. It has been piloted in the West Midlands since 1st December 2014. From 1st February 2016 all private landlords will have to check whether prospective tenants have the right to occupy their premises before granting a tenancy.

The intention of the scheme is to prevent those unlawfully in the UK from accessing housing. Right to Rent is based on immigration status. Under the IA landlords must ensure that prospective tenants are not disqualified from occupying their property. A person will be disqualified if they are not a:

  • British citizen
  • National of an EEA state
  • National of Switzerland; or
  • Person who has a right to rent in relation to the premises.

A tenant will not have the right to rent if they require leave to enter or remain in the UK and do not have that leave, or they have obtained leave but it is subject to conditions that prevent them from occupying the premises.

Landlords must also ensure that someone’s right to occupy does not lapse.

Breach of the Act can result in penalties of up to £3,000 per tenant.

Landlords must:

  • Obtain original versions of one or more documents;

o   UK/ EEA passport

o   National ID card

o   Permanent Residence Card

  • Check the documents validity in the presence of the prospective tenant holder
  • Make and retain a clear copy
  • Record the date the immigration check was made

Landlords will need to notify any concerns to the Home Office and ensure that their immigration check does not flout anti-discrimination laws.

If landlords use an agency they can pass on these obligations in writing to the agency.

This scheme designed to stop unscrupulous landlords could will give them an avenue to exploit the vulnerable. It remains to be seen whether it will crack down on unscrupulous landlords. It will make it more difficult for those with no right to be in the UK to rent private accommodation. All of our members will be subjected to these checks when they rent given the requirement to avoid discrimination claims.

  1. Striking Workers

The Government recently responded to its consultation on tackling intimidation of non-striking workers. It has confirmed that it will drop a number of proposals including plans:

o   To require unions to publish their plans for industrial action, pickets and social medical campaigns in advance;

o   For a new criminal offence of intimidation on the picket line, and

o   To require unions to report annually on their industrial action and picketing activities.

It will however continue with proposals to introduce a legal requirement for unions to appoint a picket supervisor who will be responsible for the conduct of the picket.

The Government has also confirmed that it will update the Code of Practice on picketing to clarify the legal protections already available to those who suffer intimidation in relation to industrial action and introduce new guidance on how to seek redress if intimidation takes place using social media.

  1. Changes in 2016;

 

o   Greater protection for zero hours workers (see above)

 

o   Introduction of the National Living Wage, introduced in April applicable to employees aged 25 and other. The rate will be £7.20 per hour, rising to at least £9.00 per hour by 2020.

 

o   The Trade Union Bill is currently progressing through Parliament, it is expected that the Bill will complete its passage through Parliament this year.

 

o   Changes to the taxation of termination payments. The Government has been consulting on the future of taxation of termination payments, including the current exemption from tax of the first £30,000 of any termination payment. The Governments response to the consultation is expected this year.

 

o   Consultation on grandparental leave is scheduled to take place this year on proposals to extent shared parental leave and pay to working grandparents with the proposals to be implements in 2018.

 

o   Gender Pay Gap Regulations due. The Government is to require all private sector employees with 250 or more employees to publish gender pay gap information. Regulations to implement the legislation were scheduled to come into force by the end of March 2016, but they have not been published yet.

 

o   Modern Slavery Act 2015 statutory statement. All commercial organisations carrying on business in the UK with a turnover of £36m or more from October 2015 have to complete a slavery and human trafficking statement for each financial year. The provision is for large business to publicly state each year the actions they are taking to ensure their supply chains are slavery free.

 

The statement must be formally approved by the organisation. Failure to do so may lead to enforcement proceedings being taken by the Secretary of State by way of civil proceedings in the High Court.

 

o   New Health and Safety sentencing guidelines issued on 3rd November 2015 which will apply to sentencing in all health and safety and corporate manslaughter prosecutions. It will be mandatory for all courts to follow the guidelines for all sentences passed after 1st February 2016 regardless of whether or not the offence took place before that date.

 

Current guidelines provide fines for health and safety offences resulting in death should not normally be less than £100,000 and for corporate manslaughter not less than £500,000. Under the new guidelines fines will be calculated in a staged process having regard to the level of harm, culpability and the organisations turn over.

 

For the most serious Health and Safety offences, fines of up to £10 million are envisaged for large organisations (I.e. those with a turnover greater than 50million), £4million for medium organisations (turn over between 10-50 million) up to 1.6 million for small organisations (2-10 million) and up to £450,000 for micro businesses (turnover of less than 2 million).

 

 

  1. Territorial Jurisdiction: Seafarers


In R (Fleet Maritime Services (Bermuda) Limited) v The Pensions Regulator the High Court ruled that UK courts had jurisdiction to hear a case if the seafarer  work from a ‘base’ in Britain, but that this will not be the case if they do not habitually begin and end their tours of duty from a British port.

The Regulator issued the Bermuda-incorporated Claimant with a compliance notice for failing to auto-enrol British-domiciled seafarers regularly working aboard its cruise ships. The Claimant brought a judicial review because its ships operated principally outside of British territorial waters.

The Court concluded that the Lawson v Serco approach to determining a peripatetic worker’s ‘base’ for the purposes of unfair dismissal jurisdiction was also applicable to the 2008 Act. The Court further determined that, irrespective of duration aboard, seafarers are, under the 2008 Act, based at the port from which their tours of duty generally begin and end not aboard the ship itself or under its flag state. For the Act to apply some degree of regularity is also required, a single tour cannot establish a base.

Days spent traveling between Britain and foreign ports of embarkation, whilst remunerated, were also properly treated as commuting, not work. As such the Regulator had erred in finding a duty in relation to those of the Claimant’s employees whose tours did not habitually commence from British ports.

 

 

  1. Carry forward of holiday pay during sickness

 

EAT in Plumb v Duncan Print Group Ltd decided that the carry over period for annual leave is subject to an 18 month temporal limit.

Reg 13(9) of Working Time Regs 1998 requires a worker to take annual leave within the leave year it was due. This may not be replaced by a payment in lieu except where the employment is terminated.

The Court decided (NHS Leeds V Lawer) that where a worker was unable or unwilling to take paid annual leave during a period of sickness absence they were entitled to take their leave when they were not sick.

In Plumb, Mr P was a printer who had an accident in April 2010 and was certified unfair until Feb 2014 when his employment was terminated. He did not take paid annual leave for 2010, 2011 and 2012.In Aug 2015 he requested 20 days paid annual leave for each of these years. His request was refused. He bought a claim for holiday pay for these years. EAT dismissed his claim.

LUL Pay & Night Tube: Acas Update

Dear  RMT members

Today myself with senior RMT reps met LUL at acas for the second day in this week’s talks

A new proposal for Train Operators ref Night tube working / reduced hours /pilot for 4 day 36 hour week / Freeze on weekends working was placed on the table.

Stations…. a lengthy discussion also  took place on outstanding issues on FFFS. Some new proposals were made and we  have made some progress on these matters,but serious issues on rosters remain

We further discussed Service Control outstanding matters relating to work life balance

At 1900 hours LUL made a revised Final  offer on Pay

2015 1% +:£500 consolidated on all salaries

2016 RPI or 1% whichever is the greater

2017 RPI or 1% whichever is the greater

2018 RPI +0.25% or 1% whichever is the greater

 

One off payment of £500(non consolidated)  to all staff who deliver night tube at the launch of  night tube

One off payment of £500 (non consolidated) to station grades upon the implementation of Fit for the future stations model

The previous package of work life balance  measures  were also tabled on 4 day 36 hour week for all grades were reiterated.

A Closing dispute resolution letter is being sent to the trade union general secretary’s

I am submitting a report to the General Secretary and NEC who will consider the unions response and next steps .

Thanks

John Leach

RMT Regional Organiser

London Transport region 11

LUL Pay & Night Tube

Talks will continue tomorrow, Wednesday, 20th January regards the LUL Pay and Night Tube dispute under the auspices of ACAS.

John Leach, LT Regional Organiser, stated the he expected talks to be ‘frank and constructive’ and we all hope that LUL come back with a more realistic offer that satisfies our members aspirations.

It is a shame that talks, that as LUL have said, have been extensive and lengthy, seem only to become constructive on the threat of Industrial action

NOMINATIONS FOR RMT POLITICAL SCHOOL

NOMINATIONS FOR RMT POLITICAL SCHOOL

SUNDAY 15 MAY – FRIDAY 20 MAY 2016

Please nominate by Tuesday 1 March 2016

The next school will take place from Sunday 15 May to Friday 20 May 2016 (not in March as previously suggested) at the National Education Centre at Doncaster. Participants will be expected to arrive by the early evening of 15 May to meet fellow students at an evening buffet and to ensure a prompt start on the Monday.

With the assistance of guest speakers and our parliamentary group the purpose of the school is for participants to be equipped with a sound understanding of the political role of trade unions, the RMT’s political activity, our international work and how Branches and Regions can effectively support RMT national campaigns and develop local campaigning initiatives.

Branches are invited to nominate one representative but in doing so please ensure that your nominee will definitely be able to attend the school. In the event of applications exceeding places available, the Council of Executives will determine the successful applicants.

Branches are actively encouraged to nominate for the school including, applications from women members. All applications from Branches will be placed before the C of E for consideration.

 

New Inflation Rates

New Inflation Rates

The Office for National Statistics has published inflation figures for the twelve months to November 2015.

The Retail Prices Index (RPI) stood at 1.2% for the year to December 2015, up 0.1% on the figure for the year to November 2015.

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rose to 0.2% for the year to December 2015, up 0.1% on the figure for the year to November 2015.

 

 

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