Category: Economy

Save our Steel

RMT CALLS ON GOVERNMENT AND NETWORK RAIL TO SPEED UP RAIL RENEWALS WORK TO EASE PRESSURE ON UK STEEL INDUSTRY

 

RAIL UNION RMT today called on the Government and Network Rail to work up an urgent plan to bring forward rail renewals work to help ease the pressure on the UK steel industry.

 

Rail infrastructure projects are an area where the Government, working with the publicly owned Network Rail, can make an immediate and decisive intervention in support of UK steel and there is no shortage of renewals work backlogged throughout the system. Renewals has been one area systematically hit by Government attacks on the NR budget through its agents the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR).

 

Meanwhile, new RMT research shows that the spend by NR with TATA steel is actually in decline – just at the point when UK steel is under the most pressure.

 

In the financial year, 2014-15, Tata Steel UK Ltd supplied Network Rail with £98,022,077 worth of goods (accounting for 1.3% of Network Rail’s spend).

 

This has fallen by 14.6%, (from £114,865,267 or 2.1% of spend) in the year 2012-13.

RMT General Secretary Mick Cash said:

“Britain’s rail infrastructure is under massive pressure and is creaking under passenger demand and it would be a win-double for the British tax-payer to see the bringing forward of rail renewals work benefitting UK steel at this pivotal time for the industry.

“There is no excuse for the Government dragging its heels as they control the publicly-owned Network Rail and could intervene right now to make a decisive move that would have huge long-term benefits for the twin industries of rail and steel.

“RMT is deeply concerned that the NR spend with Tata Steel has tailed off and that needs to be addressed urgently and decisively by Government ministers from all departments involved.”

March Inflation Figures

New Inflation Rates

The Office for National Statistics has published inflation figures for the twelve months to February 2016.

The Retail Prices Index (RPI) stood at 1.3% for the year to February 2016, the same as for the year to January 2016.

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) stood at 0.3% for the year to February 2016, the same as for the year to January 2016.

I would be grateful if you could bring this Circular to the attention of all Branch members and further information will follow in the Pay Bulletin presently.

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.

 

 

December 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 1.1% for the year to November 2015, up 0.4% on the figure for the year to October 2015.

 

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

 

I would be grateful if you could bring this Circular to the attention of all Branch members and further information will follow in the Pay Bulletin presently.

 

Yours sincerely

 

 

Mick Cash

General Secretary

 

Government Cuts

 DESPITE GOVERNMENT RAMMING TRANSPORT FOR LONDON BILL THROUGH COMMONS LAST NIGHT, RMT PLEDGES TO CONTINUE FIGHT

 

 

The Transport for London Bill passed through its latest stage in the Commons last night after a hard-line Tory whipping operation and will now go to the report stage with transport union RMT pledging to continue to work with Labour MPs to oppose it as it heads towards its third reading. The bill is designed to help TfL fill the funding gap arising from impending cuts in the grant it receives from central government, by allowing it to use offshore companies to develop its property.

 

Leaks show that, from the turn of the decade, the government will cut £700 million a year from its contribution to TfL’s budget. In return for accepting this reduction without a fuss, last night the government lined up its pet MPs to ram the bill through Parliament.

 

With its property development focused “Transport for London Bill”, TfL is trying to jump head first into the worst kind of corporate structures – “Limited Partnerships”. That is development orchestrated via opaque offshore investment vehicles that pay little tax and are magnets for crooks from around the world engaged in stealing money from their own public purses.


TfL is pinning all its hopes on filling the gap created by government cuts to its budget by leasing out land to offshore companies. It should not have been put in this position by government – TfL is struggling to run a transport network, let alone a property portfolio.

 

Their press office spins this as TfL’s contribution to tackling the housing crisis but RMT says it is nothing of the kind.

 

Even if Transport for London were to allow the building of giant residential towers above every one of its stations, the cost of housing in the capital will remain unaffordable.

 

While the provision of vital services such as housing continues to be dominated by corporate interests, the chief winners will remain the financiers. With ordinary working people left competing against each other to see how much money they can borrow for ever more miniscule and remote dwellings.

 

RMT General Secretary Mick Cash said:

 

“The Transport for London Bill may well have been whipped through the Commons last night but the fight is far from over.”

 

“TfL needs to be saved from itself and from a government indifferent to the growing financial crisis facing services in the Capital city as we saw from the transport department funding settlement agreed last week.

 

“Speculative property gambles benefit global finance capital and open the door to a barrage of dirty money and the warehousing of residential units that turn whole areas into ghost towns. TfL should have no part of that.

 

“TfL needs to be properly funded by government and not encouraged to gamble its financial future and the safe provision of transport services on shadey property deals straight out of The Long Good Friday.”

 

 

New Inflation Rates

New Inflation Rates

 

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

 

The Retail Prices Index (RPI) stood at 0.7% for the year to October 2015, down 0.1% on the figure for the year to September 2015.

 

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) remained at -0.1% for the year to October 2015, the same figure for the year to September 2015.

 

I would be grateful if you could bring this Circular to the attention of all Branch members and further information will follow in the Pay Bulletin presently.

 

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