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STRIKE VICTORY AT DUBLIN STORE
from Workers Solidarity No 45
(1995)
At a time of increasing attacks on workers' rights and
conditions throughout both the public and private
sectors, it is refreshing to report a victory for a
group of workers who had the guts to stand up to their
boss's intimidatory tactics. On Friday February 17th,
following a 3-week strike in defence of a colleague who
had been unfairly dismissed, eight MANDATE members at
Knightingales store in Dublin's ILAC Centre returned to
work victorious.
With management refusing to even talk to the union at
the outset of the strike, the workers faced an uphill
battle. However their determination and the tremendous
solidarity shown by other shopworkers in the city centre
and by the general public forced the re-instatement of
the sacked worker. In addition management was forced to
concede union recognition and to recognise that issues
such as working hours, conditions and low pay need to be
addressed.
These workers have shown the way in which unscrupulous
bosses must be tackled. In the coming weeks and months
as they follow up this victory with negotiations to
improve their working conditions, they will need the
full backing of their union and of fellow trade
unionists.
The strike at Knightingales has served yet again to
highlight the deplorable wages and conditions endured by
thousands of workers employed in the services sector.
Trade union leaders would be better employed backing
their members in a vigorous fight against such
exploitation instead of stitching up workers through
"rationalisation" plans, redundancy deals, national
programmes and the like - all of which are designed to
break union organisation and increase exploitation.
The Workers Solidarity Movement wish to extend hearty
congratulations to the Knightingales strikers.
Gregor Kerr
Trinity College SIPTU
Spy cameras, worthless pensions and censorship
SPY CAMERAS and pensions that give you no money were on
the agenda when the SIPTU members in Trinity College met
for their annual general meeting in March. The college
management want to install eight 'security' cameras on
the campus, with a possible 24 more to be added in
future.
Security guards fear that jobs will be replaced by
electronic surveillance. Management denials are not
believed given that six vacancies have been left
unfilled. Just 23 staff are expected to cover the city
centre campus around the clock. An additional fear is
that staff could be spied upon, as could student
protests.
The local SIPTU are asking for a detailed statement of
who will have the right to monitor the cameras, who will
have access to the recordings, and on what terms. They
are looking for formal guarantees that the recordings
can not be used in any inquiry into staff or student
behaviour, where it is not directly concerned with a
crime.
But, as the union newsletter says, "even with a lot of
written guarantees and procedures in place, there is no
getting away from the uncomfortable reality that the
cameras would mean that 'big brother' is watching you".
PENSION ...LESS THAN A PITTANCE
Full-time staff get a pension equal to two thirds of
salary. Part-time staff get nothing. A claim for the
same pension rights in proportion to the hours worked
has been on the table for years. Management, in keeping
with government policy, want to 'co-ordinate' pensions.
This means that the value of the social welfare old age
pension is subtracted from the workplace pension. For
part-time staff this will mean getting absolutely zero
from Trinity after a lifetime of work as a cleaner,
secretary or catering assistant.
A one-day 'warning strike for part-time pension rights
last year was well supported, not only by SIPTU but also
by other unions and some non-union staff. If proper
pensions are not granted the mood is for a serious
fight.
NO DEBATE WITHOUT PERMISSION
A motion to the meeting condemning the Industrial
Relations Act and calling for a campaign to repeal it
was proposed by the local union President, Jim Larragy,
and seconded by WSM member Alan MacSim?in. While
expressing his agreement with the spirit of the motion,
Education branch president Jack McGinley quoted rule 62
of SIPTU which prevents a local section from even
discussing an issue not directly related to their
workplace unless they ask permission first! The meeting
was then asked to vote on whether to vote on the motion.
Amidst a lot of confusion the meeting narrowly voted to
obey the rule book's censorship.
When SIPTU was formed through a merger of the ITGWU and
the FWUI we were stitched up when we were given a ready
made rule book that members had no input into. The only
choice we had was to accept it in its entirety or to
reject it, which would have made it impossible for the
union to function or even legally exist.
A rules revision conference is planned for 1997.
Oppositionists within the union should start identifying
the worst rules and begin encouraging their branches to
discuss what rules we want in what is supposed to be our
union.
SOME PEOPLE ARE DOING ALL RIGHT
Bosses Get -> Highest Growth Rate
-> Highest Productivity
Workers Get -> Shortest Holidays
-> Second Longest Working Hours
and
-> Highest Long Term Unemployment
IRISH WORKERS enjoy fewer holidays than anyone else in
the European Union, work longer hours than workers
anywhere else apart from Britain, and suffer the highest
rate of long term unemployment in the countries of the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development
(OECD).
Total Annual & Public Holidays
Germany 40
Belgium 38.5
Spain 38
Luxemburg 37
France 36.5
Greece 35
Denmark 35
Portugal 35
Italy 33.5
Netherlands 32.5
Britain 31
Ireland 29
Source: Dept. of Enterprise & Employment, Holiday
Legislation Discussion Document
Yet we are told that we must keep making sacrifices to
become more "competitive". We are expected to put up
with wage restraint, redundancies, de-skilling, and
worsening conditions. The more we give the bosses the
more they demand. Showing weakness only encourages a
bully.
After all the sacrifices, all the years of wage
restraint/no-strike deals (PNR, PESP, PCW), all the
"rationalisations", all the cutbacks, the bosses should
be happy. Ireland has the fastest growing economy in
Europe, productivity shot up by a massive 50% between
1987 and 1993. Ireland broke all previous EU records
when industrial output in 1994 increased by 11.2%.
Thanks, you're fired!
And what about the workers? In payment we got nothing
unless you count yet more closures, threats and
management aggression like has happened at Silverlea,
Sunbeam, TEAM, Dunnes Stores and a multitude of other
employments.
With 50% of the unemployed out of work for more than one
year (the official definition of long term
unemployment), Ireland has condemned a higher proportion
of its workers to a poverty line existence than any of
the other 23 countries in the OECD. At the same time
the economy is doing very well for most employers.
Cut hours, not jobs
In Ireland we work an average 53 hours longer in a year
than the EC average. Even if only those extra hours
worked by the 200,000 industrial employees were
distributed among the unemployed there would be
10,600,000 additional work hours available each year.
At the average 1,813 hours worked in the EU this would
mean almost 6,000 new jobs.
Annual Working Hours
Belgium 1,692.26
Italy 1,744.05
Denmark 1,746.00
Germany 1,746.80
Luxemburg 1,770.62
France 1,774.59
Netherlands 1,792.70
Spain 1,802.64
Greece 1,822.50
Portugal 1,858.50
Ireland 1,866.48
Britain 1,987.72
Source: Eurostat 1/95, Working Time in the EU
Irish workers produce all the country's wealth. We
should seek to win further reductions in the working
week, without any loss of pay. Ultimately, however, we
will be stuck with the contradiction of a rich economy
but a poor workforce until we get rid of the present
system and set about reorganising society in the
interests of the great majority. Anything less than
that combination of socialism, freedom and workers
control (what we call anarchism) will leave our living
standards at the mercy of employers and state
bureaucrats. The reality of capitalism is the best
argument for its abolition.
Irish Building workers ripped off in Germany
Thousands of Irish building workers have gone to work in
Germany over the last few years. As European
integration proceeds, German contractors are
increasingly turning to foreign workers. They want
foreign workers because they are cheaper, unorganised
and easier to push around. Some are beginning to fight
back.
Spanish building workers at the 'Bonum-Immobilien' near
Berlin worked for several weeks without getting paid
before striking on August 3rd of last year. These
workers were employed by Levant, a Dutch temporary
employment agency, which rented them to contractor
Wolfgang Sturm. The workers signed contracts with
Levant for DM26 per hour (skilled German building
workers average DM65 per hour), which then sold their
services for DM40 per hour and kept the difference.
Agencies such as this do not pay social insurance or
taxes, claiming that the workers are "self-employed".
Subbies skip out
The strike ended when the company paid a portion of the
back wages. It refused to pay the balance on the
grounds that the customer was dissatisfied with the
work. The Spanish builders were left with just enough
money to pay for their digs. Such disputes are becoming
more common.
The Portuguese firm SOMEC got a contract for the
Friedrichstadt-Passagan in Berlin's city centre. 200
Portuguese worked twelve hours a day, six days a week.
SOMEC has 12,000 Portuguese workers on sites in Germany.
They get DM2500 for a six day week which includes many
hours overtime. A worker with a German passport would
get up to DM6,000.
In September, twenty of these workers went on hunger
strike in Leipzig because they had not been paid. They
lived in miserable conditions, three to a container.
They worked a six day week, fifteen hours a day, for
DM20 per hour. Last July, Italian workers blocked a
crane in Pankow to demand payment of their wages. Three
months later, two more cranes were blocked by English
workers demanding payment of their wages.
Cowboy agencies
There are more than 6,000 Irish and English building
workers in Berlin at the moment. Many were hired
through Dutch agencies. Workers often are not paid, as
subcontractors disappear with their pay packets. The
workers thought they would be earning good money but
find they have to work 60 or 70 hours a week to get it.
The employment agencies charge both the employer who
hires workers, and the workers who have to pay part of
their hourly wage as commission. Many agencies are not
registered and operate illegally or just refuse to pay
wages, leaving workers to survive on their own without
money.
Many workers end up living out of their cars or the so-
called "cockroach" hotels. Every month between 100 and
200 Irish and British workers turn up at their
consulates without money or a return ticket home. This
is what the "free market" means, the bosses are free to
do whatever they can get away with. The way to stop
them is organisation, joining a trade union and creating
building workers' committees to stop the unions
backsliding and stop the job where bosses are ripping
people off.
Sources: Industrial Worker and Building Workers
Newsletter
- *****************************
PART TIME WORKERS IN NORTH SACKED BY TORIES
TEMPORARY STAFF working for the Department of Employment
throughout the six counties are being thrown out of
their jobs. A leaked circular, publicised by Labour MP
Richard Burden, tells personnel managers to end workers'
contracts just before they qualify for their employment
rights.
The document, entitled Dept. of Employment ES Personnel
Notice 5/95, states "all new temporary appointments in
the Employment Service will be limited to 51 weeks to
avoid workers qualifying for full employment rights".
The document, which was never intended to be made
public, goes on to say "if it is not checked, we might
later find that the individual has already worked for up
to two years and might now be in the position of having
enough service to qualify for a wide range of employment
rights".
The Tories obsession with denying people job security
means they will sack good, proven staff rather than
allow them basic legal rights. Hurrah for free
enterprise!
- ***************************************************
From WS 46
** WE ALL WANT EARLY RETIREMENT **
** Teachers claim should be taken up by all! **
ON TUESDAY May 23rd, approximately 15,000 teachers
marched through Dublin as part of their campaign for
early retirement. The June 1995 issue of Tuarascail
(magazine of the Irish National Teachers
Organisation - INTO) said that this was "...merely
the initiation and not the culmination of a
campaign. The outstanding issues must be addressed
and resolved. They will not go away. Now is the
time to deal with the issues." Rather than
pledging further strike action however (INTO members
had voted by an 86% majority for limited industrial
action), Tuarascail went on to say that the teacher
unions "...are ready to re-open negotiations."
By 13th July, the unions had called off any threat of
further action following agreement with the Department of
Education that talks on early retirement would resume in
September. The union leaderships have agreed that no more
than 300 teachers will be allowed to take early retirement
annually and that the overall cost of the early retirement
claim will be kept within the terms of the Programme for
Competitiveness and Work (PCW). The government agreed to
set up a commission to report on public service pensions,
examining in particular voluntary early retirement. This
commission is not expected to report until 1998.
Show of submission
Yet again the teachers' union leaders - with the
connivance of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) -
have managed to turn a show of strength into meek
submission.
Talks on the teachers' claim have been going on since
early 1994. It was launched amid a barrage of statistics
from the Departments of Finance and Education which were
designed to prove that the productivity of Irish teachers
compared unfavourably with the educational systems of other
EU countries and that - by extension - the claim could not
be afforded. These statistics were blown out of the water
however by an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) report "Education at a Glance" published
in March of this year.
Working Conditions
This report (based on a survey carried out in 1992)
showed that Irish teachers are faced by the largest classes
in Europe. Of the countries surveyed, only Turkey with a
Pupil-Teacher Ratio (PTR) of 29.3 exceeds the Irish ratio of
25.6. (The average PTR in EU countries was 18.5). Total
teaching hours in Irish primary schools (951 per annum) was
third highest in the survey, well above the EU average of
882. Finally, the survey showed that the Irish primary
education system is grossly underfunded with average
spending per pupil of only $1,770 compared to the EU average
of $2,902.*
The teachers' claim for an early retirement scheme
which would help ease some of the stresses caused by having
to work in overcrowded and underfunded classrooms, and to
deal with the social effects of poverty and unemployment is
thus entirely justified. While the final outcome remains
unclear, their action has had the effect of placing the
issue of early retirement firmly on the agenda.
Crazy anomaly
It is one of the crazy anomalies in the capitalist
system that huge numbers of people (approximately half a
million on this small island) are placed under huge stress
by being without a job or adequate income while others are
stressed out through having to work harder and for longer
hours. The average worker spends roughly 90,000 hours of
his/her life at work - if he/she is "lucky" enough to have a
job.
Over a hundred years ago, when the American Federation
of Labour issued its call for an eight-hour day (see
Anarchist Origins of May Day in Workers Solidarity no.45),
workers came together in large numbers to fight for the
right to spend more time with their families. Now is the
time for the trade union movement to raise the call for
shorter working hours, longer holidays and earlier
retirement - with of course no loss of pay.
Why should we all have to wait until we are too old to
enjoy it before being allowed to retire? Why should we be
expected to work at least 39 hours per week (plus overtime
in may cases) in order to be able to survive? The
achievement of early retirement and a shorter working week
would have many benefits - reducing stress and pressures in
the workplace, giving workers more time for leisure
activities and creating work for those who are presently
written off by the system.
Golden Handshakes
Politicians and business leaders have no difficulty
funding huge salaries, "golden handshakes" and enhanced
pensions for themselves. In 1994, five executives at Allied
Irish Bank gave themselves an average wage increase of
?162,500 per annum each. When Matt Russell - the legal
officer in the Attorney General's office who was responsible
for the delay in responding to extradition warrants for
child sex abuser Fr. Brendan Smyth - was forced to take
early retirement earlier this year he was given a golden
handshake of ??138,000. Government ministers can qualify
for full pensions after only three years of service.
Teachers have nothing to apologise for in looking for
early retirement. It is an issue which should be taken up
by the trade union movement as a whole.
Gregor Kerr
- All figures are taken from INTO magazine Tuarascail,
April/May 1995 and refer to the 26-County State.
- ******************************
THERE IS A new mood out there. It is demonstrated
by the magnificent support for the Dunnes Stores
strike, and the occupations at Sunbeam and the Irish
Press. As management push ahead with redundancies,
yellow pack jobs, contract working and
casualisation, workers are pushing back. When your
back is against the wall you have to push back or be
squashed.
However this should not be confused with a fight for a
better life. For many, expectations of job security and a
decent standard of living are being shattered. And some are
determined not to take it lying down.
Not only do we all need to hang on to our jobs, wages,
promotional outlets and all the other things that we won
over the last twenty five years, we also need to rebuild the
solidarity and strength that allowed us to win these things
in the first place.
Victories achieved in defensive battles will encourage
others to resist the bosses? offensive. They will also
contribute to rebuilding the confidence needed to fight for
more of the good things in life. If you can not defend what
you already have, it is much harder to believe that you can
win improvements. But if you win on one issue, then you are
open to the idea that you can win a lot more.