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Sunday, 29 December 2013

Follow Natalie Bennett and sign the TeacherROAR declaration

acknowledgements to martin francis posted on wembley matters Saturday, 28 December 2013


Follow Natalie Bennett and sign the TeacherROAR declaration

It was good to see that Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party, has signed the TeacherROAR
declaration,  Most of the demands are Green Party policy:
The teacherROAR movement wants: an educational landscape where teachers are not 
denigrated and attacked by politicians and in the press; where teachers are praised,
encouraged and supported to develop their practice; where education policy is evidence
-based and not used as a political football; where the need for social justice and equality
is placed at the heart of education policy; where the curriculum is progressive, broad,
balanced and fit for the 21st Century; where learning is child-centered; where we are
developing children to their full potential in all areas and not simply preparing them for
work; where education is not treated as a marketable product with customers, consumers
and products; where our children are not over-tested and among the most stressed in
the western world; where our pay and conditions are improving and not under constant
attack; and where teachers are respected and trusted professionals whose opinion is
valued and listen to by politicians.

We the undersigned declare ourselves part of the teacherROAR movement and pledge
to fight for a better, fairer education system.
To add your signature and comment follow this LINK

A parent who signed the declaration commented:
As a parent, I'd like my children to be taught by people who know that they are respected,
supported, and listened to. I'd like my children to be tested, when they are tested, in ways
which put their needs before the government's political need for league tables. I want my
children to be prepared to live lives as engaged citizens, not passive consumers, and I
want the education system to be ringfenced to protect it from the whims of successive
Secretaties of State and whatever political or personal agendas they may bring with them.
A teacher wrote:
Teachers are facing a concerted campaign of vilification and bullying. This government
(with the support of many in the media, right-wing think tanks etc) is determined to atomise
and demoralise teachers. They want to make us cheaper to hire and fire, because this will
render us more exploitable and education more profitable. Teachers must stand together
to resist these attacks, and we must support anyone else opposed to the increasing
privatisation and commodification of the public sector.

Posted by DON'T dis US at 11:25 No comments:

education question time 22/1/14

Why are teachers striking? Is OFSTED a political tool? Do we needSATs? Why is there a 
shortage of school places? Are standards fallingin our schools?
If you would like to propose questions for the panel to consider please use#edqtime @NCE2014
7pm, WEDNESDAY
22nd JANUARY 2014
CHAIR: Adrian Chiles ITV presenter and local parent
PANEL: Michael Rosen Children’s author and broadcaster 
Christine Blower National Union of Teachers General Secretary
Julian Bell Leader of Ealing Council
Government and local campaign speakers are invited
Everyone is welcome especially parents, governors and students
There is no charge for the event but please register for tickets at
 http://educationquestiontime.ticketsource.co.uk
Press contact: 07958 542872  Nickgrant2512@mac.com
Venue: St. Paul’s Church, Queen Caroline Street,Hammersmith, W6 9PJ 

Nearest tube: Hammersmith
Posted by DON'T dis US at 11:09 No comments:

Sunday, 22 December 2013

Controversy over Council, Police, UKBA action in Cricklewood

Sunday, 22 December 2013

Controversy over Council, Police, UKBA action in Cricklewood

Combined action by the UK Border Agency, the police and Brent Council on migrant workers has created controversy in Cricklewood which has spilled over intolively debate on the Streetlife forum of the Kilburn Times LINK

The local streets have long been a traditional picking up point for casual building labour in the early morning. It used to be mainly Irish workers but is now generally more recent migrants.

Mapesbury Safer Neighbourhood Team have cuiculated this notice via email, letters and the NW2 Residents' Association:


Some see this crackdown as partly a result of media hostility towards Eastern Europeans and point out that it was not raised as an issue in the past. It appears to reinforce prejudice and increase division when Brent Council was critical of the way UKBA raids on stations and the 'racist van campaign did just that. Nevertheless the Council are cooperating with UKBA in this case seeing it merely in terms of 'anti-social behaviour'.

A further point made is that while migrants are being attacked for living off  benefits they are also attacked when trying to get work.

Asking the public to note down vehicle registration numbers and pass them on to the police is likely to cause considerable controversy. 
Posted by Martin Francis at 4:35 pm on Wembley matters
Posted by DON'T dis US at 10:09 No comments:

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

people's assembly letter/petition


HANDS OFF OUR UNIONS – DEFEND THE RIGHT TO RESIST

The People’s Assembly has launched this statement with a letter to the Guardian following the governments recent attacks on the trade unions. Add your name below:

The government’s announcement of an inquiry into trade union tactics is further proof of its determination to undermine the right to protest against its austerity programme.
David Cameron’s speech at the recent Lord Mayor’s banquet has revealed the government is determined that there will be no end to austerity.
The trade union’s customary right to strike and the right to protest are fundamental liberties that have already been significantly restricted by anti-union laws and other legislation. This inquiry is a new Tory-Lib Dem assault on the unions, demonstrated by the fact that the appointed chairman is the former QC for British Airways who led the attack on Unite the Union during the previous dispute between Unite and BA in 2011.
As millions of people face falling real wages, unemployment, part time or casualised low paid work, and the rapid destruction or privatisation of the welfare state they stand in need of trade union organisation and the right to protest more than ever.
We pledge ourselves to resist this attack. The right to protest is a fundamental civil liberty. The right to join an effective trade union is the product of generations of working class resistance. We have no intention of relinquishing it to a Government with no interests in the needs of working people.

Initial signatories (add your name at http://thepeoplesassembly.org.uk/handsoffunions/)

Len McCluskey, Unite the Union, Mark Serwotka, Public and Commercial Services Union, Christine Blower, National Union of Teachers,Michelle Stanistreet, National Union of Journalists, Manuel Cortes, Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association, Billy Hayes, Communication Workers Union, Matt Wrack, Firebrigades Union, Mick Whelan, Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen, Ian Lawrence, NAPO, Tony Benn, Maxine Peake, Actress, Sam Fairbairn, Secretary, The People’s Assembly, Steve Turner, Unite the Union & Chair, The People’s Assembly, Romayne Phoenix, Co-chair, The People’s Assembly, Owen Jones, Journalist & The People’s Assembly, Jeremy Corbyn MP, John McDonnell MP, Caroline Lucas MP, Murad Qureshi, London Assembly Member, Cllr Rania Khan, Mark Steel, Comedian, Francesca Martinez, Comedian, Roger Lloyd Pack, Actor, Carolyn Jones, Institute of Employment Rights, Andrew Murray, Unite the Union, Dave Smith, Blacklist Support Group, Kevin Courtney, NUT Deputy General Secretary, Zita Holborne, Black Activists Rising Against Cuts, Lindsey German, Stop the War Coalition, Kate Hudson, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Lee Jasper, Black Activists Rising Against Cuts, Aaron Keily, Black Students Officer, NUS, Alex Kenny, NUT national executive, John Rees, Counterfire, Paul Mackney, former General Secretary, UCU, Salma Yaqoob, James Meadway, Senior Economist, New Economics Foundation, John Hilary, War on Want, Rob Griffiths, Communist Party of Britain,Hilary Wainwright, Red Pepper, Andrew Burgin, Left Unity, Roy Bailey, singer / songwriter, Mark Barratt, Occupy campaigner, Clare Solomon, former president, ULU, Fred Le-Plat, Socialist Resistance

Posted by DON'T dis US at 14:49 No comments:

Video:NHS/Care Bill/Clause 118 demo.(16/12/2013)

Video of yesterday's demo by Dave Plummer, newly elected London Fed
Campaigns Officer

This is the film from yesterday's NHS/Care Bill/Clause 118 demo.(16/12/2013)

http://youtu.be/abritFBRs-0

acknowledgements to Noel Lynch
Posted by DON'T dis US at 07:01 No comments:

Sunday, 15 December 2013

young greens support Laura Bannister

Green MEP candidate’s arrest is ‘attack on right to protest’

15 December 2013
The Young Greens have challenged Greater Manchester Police’s handling of Friday’s anti-fracking demonstration in Salford, after Green Party activist and MEP candidate Laura Bannister was arrested alongside two other campaigners.
The protest at Barton Moss was part of the growing anti-fracking movement in the UK, with sixty people peacefully demonstrating against lorry deliveries to the IGas drilling site. At the same demonstration, police arrested a pregnant woman while, according to the Salford Star, a disabled man was barged into bushes by police, and an elderly woman with a walking stick was removed against her wishes by police for `walking too slowly'.
Laura Bannister is a Young Green, a mental health worker and a North West European election candidate for 2014.
Clifford Fleming, Campaigns & Citizenship Officer at the University of Manchester Students’ Union and a Young Greens co-chair, said:
“The arrest of Laura Bannister and other campaigners at Barton Moss represents an attack on the right to protest.
“The Young Greens condemn the police’s handling of the protest. It is vital peaceful demonstrators are not scared off from exercising their democratic rights. As far as we understand, Laura and the other arrested activists – including a pregnant woman – were arrested for simply standing up for what they believe, without causing harm to anyone.
”We call on Greater Manchester Police to apologise for the heavy-handed nature of their approach, to deal with these cases fairly, and to launch an inquiry into their handling of protests such as those of the anti-fracking movement. As it stands, these arrests potentially mark a worrying attack on the right to protest.
“We stand in solidarity with activists across the country campaigning against the destruction of our environment and our communities by energy companies intent on drilling for shale gas at the cost of our futures.
Fracking fundamentally goes against attempts to create a clean energy future for this country and instead locks us in to yet more dirty gas production, polluting our water and ripping up rural areas in pursuit of profit.”
Speaking to the Manchester Gazette, Laura Bannister said:
”Along with other local Green Party members and activists I’ve been spending time at the Barton Moss protest camp in the last few weeks. Fracking won’t bring down energy prices or create many jobs, but investment in home insulation and renewable energy would.
“Fracking has significant potential to pollute the air and contaminate our water supplies, and it is certain to contribute to climate change. Fracking is therefore pointless and harmful. We don’t need it and we don’t want it – there are much better solutions to our energy crisis.”
Credit: Manchester Gazette
The Young Greens are the youth branch of the Green Party of England and Wales.
For further information or quotes, or for interviews and comment pieces email Josiah at press@younggreens.org.uk
Posted by DON'T dis US at 14:48 No comments:

Laura Bannister Solidarity Greetings from GL

Laura Bannister Solidarity Greetings from Green Left
Solidarity greetings to Laura Bannister - and all who put their time and efforts into campaigns for environmental and social justice and risk their liberty at times when doing so !
We need all campaigners to stand together because united we can win - the People's Assembly is showing how we can all work together in our communities - we need more people to stand with campaigners like our Green MEP candidate Laura Bannister so that we can run battles for our environment, our health service, our schools - our future !
GL
(see  http://gptublog.blogspot.co.uk/2013/12/gptu-sends-solidarity-to-laura-bannister.html fore more info on Laura's arrest for anti-fracking campaigning)
Posted by DON'T dis US at 08:00 No comments:

Saturday, 14 December 2013

GPTU sends solidarity to Laura Bannister,

GPTU sends solidarity to Laura Bannister,
From the Manchester Gazette (http://manchestergazette.co.uk/greater-manchester-police-swoop-green-party-mep-candidate/)  
"A Manchester Green Party member and a European election candidate for the North West Green Party was arrested this morning at the Barton Moss anti-fracking demonstration in Salford. Laura Bannister, 28, lives in Whalley Range and works in mental health in Greater Manchester. She is being held at Swinton police station.
Laura said:”Along with other local Green Party members and activists I’ve been spending time at the Barton Moss protest camp in the last few weeks. Fracking won’t bring down energy prices or create many jobs, but investment in home insulation and renewable energy would. Fracking has significant potential to pollute the air and contaminate our water supplies, and it is certain to contribute to climate change. Fracking is therefore pointless and harmful. We don’t need it and we don’t want it – there are much better solutions to our energy crisis.”
Acknowledgements to Charles Gate
Posted by DON'T dis US at 11:06 1 comment:

Thursday, 12 December 2013

Letter from Jason Moyer-Lee Branch Secretary University of London IWGB

11 December, 2013

Dear University of London, Balfour Beatty Workplace, and UNISON London Region management,
As it is becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish between your three organisations, this letter is addressed to all of you.  If you feel the need to respond, you might find it more efficient to issue a joint response than to put out three separate statements of near identical content.  
Although there is plenty to say to each of you regarding your treatment of the outsourced workers at the University of London, my comments in this letter are restricted to the manner in which you have tried to spin the workers’ recent victory on terms and conditions.  As you know, the evening of 28 November, 2013, after BBW employees were on strike for two days, the University of London and BBW announced improved sick pay and holidays for BBW employees.  BBW and the University of London attributed the improvement to UNISON.  The University of London even tweeted: “Yes great result for UNISON The voice of moderation and constructive two way dialogue succeeds over aggression”.  The next day, BBW managers and supervisors handed out UNISON fliers to cleaners and porters in Spanish and English, telling them that UNISON was “delighted” to announce the new deal.  Also on the 29th, the University of London tweeted a link to an article about the strike in the Independent, and wrote: “#3cosas credit goes entirely to BBW and UNISON for the agreement. Constructive dialogue vs. staff intimidation”.   Finally, UNISON topped off the spin-fest with a press release claiming credit for the concessions (read it here: http://www.unison.org.uk/news/articles/unison-secures-ground-breaking-deal-foruniversity-cleaners).  Ruth Levin, a paid UNISON “organiser” even went as far as to say: "Our members and stewards have always been very clear about what they need to improve their working lives…  …But now they can hold their heads high, they had faith in their union to deliver and we did.” If your tweets, fliers, and press releases were limited to the usual selfcongratulatory propaganda we see from you every time the London Living Wage increases, I probably wouldn’t have taken the time to write you this letter.  However, the public manner of your extremely misleading statements, your unapologetic attempt to re-write history, and the utter hypocrisy of your claims and accusations, do merit a response.         
Perhaps we should begin by refreshing your memory as to why outsourced workers decided to leave UNISON.  In the spring of 2011, the UNISON Senate House branch was dead.  There were a handful of University staff on the committee which met once per month to discuss conferences, the Christmas social, and other pressing industrial matters.  UNISON, to its credit and albeit with a fair amount of external help, financed and organised English classes and initiated a London Living Wage campaign.  These formed the basis for a massive recruitment drive among outsourced cleaners and porters which saw union membership for these workers sore from under 20 to over 100 in a matter of months.  Although the English classes continued, support for the Living Wage Campaign eventually dried up.  The workers continued however, and went on to win the Living Wage in July of 2012.  Of course you don’t need reminding that the University of London implemented the London Living Wage, as you remind the public of it at every opportunity possible.  In fact, the three of you have since told us that you are responsible for the Living Wage, and that it really had nothing to do with the cleaners banging on drums at Senate House.  In the summer of 2012, outsourced workers decided that the London Living Wage was not enough for decent employment, and that they should fight for sick pay, holidays, and pensions on par with direct employees.  From September, 2012 a group of workers started to meet up once per week to plan and execute what has become one of the most high profile outsourced workers’ campaign in the UK today.  The workers called their campaign 3 Cosas.
Despite receiving support from a number of local UNISON branches as well as from officials at UNISON’s national head office, the campaign never received support from the leadership of the workers’ own branch nor from our friends at UNISON London Region.  When it became clear that the lack of official support was having a negative impact on the campaign, outsourced workers’ reps (who were UNISON stewards at the time) presented motions at a November, 2012 committee meeting to support the campaign politically and financially.  With encouragement from a London Region official, the UNISON branch leadership didn’t allow the vote, and official support was blocked.  After this the outsourced workers seriously considered leaving UNISON.  They decided, however, to participate in the upcoming branch elections instead.  Joining forces with a number of UNISON members who worked directly for the University of London, they put together a slate of pro-3 Cosas candidates.  The main campaign pledge was to support the 3 Cosas Campaign.  I wouldn’t want to bore the three of you with all the details and irregularities of the election (for more on which see this article in the London Review of Books blog: http://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2013/04/09/harry-stopes/miembros-no-numeros/).  However, there are two points worth highlighting.  First, right off the bat half of the outsourced worker candidates were disqualified on technicalities, by none other than Ruth Levin (the person quoted in the UNISON press release above).  Second, and despite (or because of) the fact that we are quite confident on the election results, the ballot was annulled, again on technicalities (I know it sounds surreal, but give that LRB article a read for more information, or the following: http://bloomsburyfightback.wordpress.com/2013/04/03/unison-vs-theworkers/, http://www.workersliberty.org/story/2013/04/10/unison-officials-sabotagedemocracy, http://roarnews.co.uk/wordpress/?p=3425).  This is when the workers decided to leave UNISON once and for all.  
The three of you are always quite quick to attribute any improvement in outsourced workers’ wages, terms, and conditions to negotiations.  Of course, negotiations should play a role in any industrial dispute (more on which below).  However, it might be worth highlighting a few other things which happened in the past 15 months which I would guess had something to do with the recent decision of University of London and BBW.  First, outsourced workers, together with their student supporters, staged a series of loud and disruptive protests at Senate House (see this article in Times Higher Education: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/university-of-london-protest-seeks-rightsfor-outsourced-workers/2001333.article; coverage by City News: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnbDhdZWvik&feature=youtu.be; article in the Independent: http://www.independent.co.uk/student/news/london-students-clash-withpolice-in-defence-of-living-wage-for-university-staff-8903898.html).  Second, the campaign has received an enormous amount of publicity in the media (see the campaign web site for a list of press links: http://3cosascampaign.wordpress.com/press-reports/).  Third, the campaign has received support from innumerable trade union branches, NGOs, student unions, and other high profile supporters (for example read this article by Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party of England and Wales:
https://camdengreenparty.wordpress.com/2013/04/11/strong-support-for-university-oflondon-cleaners-3-cosas-campaign/).  Fourth, the campaign has received an enormous amount of support from individuals from all over the country, as evidenced by the fact that over 1,400 emails were sent to the Vice-Chancellor.  Fifth, the campaign has worked closely with the University of London Union and the students this union represents.  This student support has come in a variety of forms, the most creative of which include publicity stunts inside Senate House (for example see this video of students raising awareness on holidays: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epK3okUxUUg).  Sixth, the workers are united.  This is seen in the manner in which nearly all of them transferred over from UNISON to the IWGB, and in their 97% vote in favour of industrial action.  Seventh, the workers have won the moral argument.  Very few people disagree with the notion that outsourced workers should be entitled to decent terms and conditions.  Of course, it would be quite difficult politically for UNISON to disagree with this, and even though the University of London started out by saying that the statutory terms and conditions were good enough, they quickly changed approaches.  Eighth, and perhaps most importantly, BBW workers went on strike for two days on 27 and 28 November, 2013.  This strike for all intents and purposes shut down the Central Administration of the University of London.  Delivery trucks and students alike were turned away.  For some of the coverage of this strike see: http://londonstudent.net/news/11/29/outsourced-workers-senate-house-win-concessions-followingstrike/, http://www.independent.co.uk/student/news/victory-cleaning-staff-strike-atuniversity-of-london-wins-major-concessions-on-pay-and-conditions-8972785.html, http://www.independent.co.uk/student/news/suds-and-solidarity-down-on-the-picketlines-with-university-of-london-cleaning-staff-8970658.html,
http://www.theguardian.com/education/abby-and-libby-blog/2013/nov/27/universitycleaners-strike-royal-visit, http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-8dcb-Cleaners,-catererssecurity-and-porters-out-for-equal-rights#.UqdfDPRdXLJ, and
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/cleaners-to-continue-outsourcingfight/2009463.article.  If the concessions on terms and conditions were due merely to negotiations with UNISON (a union that didn’t support the 3 Cosas Campaign!) rather than any or all of the reasons I have listed above, surely this recent victory constitutes one of the biggest coincidences in the history of the UK trade union movement.
Having established the absurdity of your claims that this was a UNISON victory, let’s move on to your accusations.  In short, the University of London is attempting to dismiss the IWGB as being aggressive, for intimidating staff and students, and for rejecting dialogue.  Putting aside for the moment the hypocrisy of the accusations (more on which below), let’s just take them at their face value.  Of course, the basis for these accusations is not factual but rather political.  Knowing that it has lost the moral argument against sick pay, holidays, and pensions, the University of London has found it more fruitful to attack the proponents of the argument rather than the argument itself.  However, facts are important.  The campaign has never engaged in, and has always deplored, the use of physical violence.  Many of the IWGB members at the University of London are security guards who are on patrol during 3 Cosas protests.  Ironically, despite the University of London’s supposed concern for the health and safety of these security guards, it is these very workers who will most benefit once the 3 Cosas Campaign is entirely won.  Most of these security guards are on the same terms and conditions as cleaners and other outsourced staff currently.  I’m not sure what intimidation the University of London refers in their tweets about the strike, but perhaps this video of the cleaners dancing on the picket line might help clear it up: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvlLuQbdsh0.  It’s a good thing we didn’t put on the much faster-paced samba music- the University of London might have called us terrorists!
With regard to the suggestion that the IWGB is opposed to dialogue and negotiation, nothing could be further from the truth.  We are just opposed to the way you do it.  Shortly after setting up the University of London branch of the IWGB, the branch Chair, Vice-Chair, Recruitment Officer, and I met with senior management at BBW in order to ask them for a recognition agreement.  Our arguments for the recognition agreement centred on the fact that through proper negotiating structures we could resolve a number of workplace issues without the need to turn to more formal procedures such as grievances, industrial action, and employment tribunals.  Our request for recognition was denied.  
Following on from the request for recognition, in the summer of 2013, Sonia Chura, the Vice-Chair of our branch, wrote to Vice-Chancellor Adrian Smith, asking that the VC meet with the outsourced workers to discuss their terms and conditions.  The VC denied the request, saying: “It would not be appropriate for us to meet as the IWGB is not a recognised Trade Union of the University of London.”  The VC also insisted on the importance of the dialogue with UNISON.  Sonia responded by requesting a meeting which would be open to any outsourced workers (both UNISON members and non-unionised workers in addition to IWGB).  The request was denied.  Read the full correspondence here: https://docs.google.com/a/soas.ac.uk/document/d/1sdF_-bnf_pmaWL6GdQKr1w7oDzk51g5xgvkOSXrmi4/edit.
However, the IWGB did not give up on dialogue.  On 23 September, 2013, the IWGB informed BBW of our dispute over terms and conditions, union recognition, and job losses.  In the letter notifying dispute, the union offered to meet with BBW (either directly or through ACAS) to discuss the dispute.  The offer was not accepted. On 14 November, 2013, the IWGB once again wrote to BBW, this time to inform them of the industrial action ballot result.  Once again, the IWGB offered to meet up to try and resolve the dispute through dialogue.  This time, and after seeing a 97% vote in favour of industrial action, BBW agreed to meet us at ACAS.  The week before the strike, we spent 4.5 hours at ACAS in mediated discussions with BBW.  However, we found out rather late in the game that BBW had no intention of discussing the areas of dispute, but was rather there to discuss our “general relationship”.  In particular, BBW complained that we often use formal procedures such as grievances and an employment tribunal, and that we often cite employment law in our emails to BBW management.  
It is also perhaps worth highlighting, once again, that one of the areas of dispute is union recognition.  We want recognition so that we can engage in proper negotiations and dialogue!  BBW and UoL’s position appears to be: “We won’t talk to you because we don’t recognise you.  And we don’t recognise you because we don’t talk to you.”  I must say, for such a prestigious academic institution, the University of London’s circular reasoning is a bit concerning.
In addition to your accusations of aggression being unfounded, they are also particularly ironic coming from you.  Indeed, the word “aggressive” doesn’t do justice in describing how UNISON attempted to silence the voice of outsourced workers and the campaign they ran.  However, I have more to say about BBW and the University of London’s aggressive tactics.  Whilst we deplore physical violence, BBW and the University of London appear to promote it at every possible occasion.  For example, check out the 8th, 11th, and 12th pictures in this article: http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/students-protested-to-save-their-universityyesterday?utm_source=vicefb.  In these pictures you can see Andy Combe, BBW general manager of the University of London contract, using physical force, gripping a student by the throat, and pulling up a young woman’s shirt as he drags her off her own campus.  Indeed, during our two day strike, Mr. Combe told me we had to move away from in front of the entrance to Senate House or he would have the police come in and remove us by force.  The police did come but on this occasion had different thoughts about removing a bunch of cleaners dancing in a conga line and waving flags.
 In addition, just in the past 6 months, the University of London has attempted to ban peaceful protests on campus (threatening to prosecute staff and students for trespassing), had a student arrested for chalking a slogan in support of 3 Cosas (see http://www.independent.co.uk/student/is-student-politics-alive-and-kicking-8717772.html, as well as the video of the brutal arrest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kahUH7JaFRE), and called police at nearly every protest that has occurred.  The President of ULU has been arrested for organising a demonstration, peaceful student occupiers of Senate House were removed by force, and police beat student protesters (see this Guardian article and video of a police officer punching a student in the face: http://www.theguardian.com/uknews/2013/dec/05/three-arrests-student-protest-university-of-london.  The University of London has refused to condemn the police brutality.  Finally, the University of London has obtained an injunction to ban protests for the next 6 months (see
http://www.channel4.com/news/university-of-london-student-protest-ban-senate-houseoccupy).
In closing, it is perhaps worth asking that the three of you reflect on the unsustainable nature of your current policies.  Despite your desperate attempts to move the outsourced workers back into UNISON, this will not happen.  No amount of bribery, intimidation, or dishonesty will be sufficient to compensate for the manner in which UNISON treated these workers prior to their leaving.  Also, as a free piece of advice for my UNISON colleagues, when the two main workplace reps are the Cleaning Services Manager (in charge of 140 cleaners and porters) and an openly xenophobic post room worker who says the cleaners are lucky to have jobs, you’re unlikely to build much credibility in the workplace.  Furthermore, the IWGB is here to stay.  This is the union that outsourced workers have overwhelmingly chosen to represent them.  It is also a union that they lead.  Our membership is also growing larger and larger, with an increasing amount of direct university employees signing up.  I don’t see this trend changing.  The University of London has lost the moral argument on terms and conditions and it will shortly lose the moral argument on the criminalisation of protest.  Likewise, BBW’s policy of ignoring the union that workers have chosen in favour of negotiating with their own mangers and unelected bureaucrats, simply cannot last.  Finally, it is worth bearing in mind that this dispute is far from over.  Whilst the new sick pay and holiday entitlements are a welcome improvement, we are still a ways away from achieving equality of terms and conditions with in-house workers.  Also, BBW has offered nothing on the other areas of dispute, i.e. union recognition and job losses at the Garden Halls.  For these reasons the IWGB has served notice to BBW that workers will be on strike again on 27, 28, and 29 January, 2014.      
In sum, despite the University of London’s and BBW’s aggressive tactics of intimidating staff and students, we are fully prepared to engage in constructive dialogue.    

Kind regards,
Jason Moyer-Lee
Branch Secretary
University of London IWGB

Acknowledgements to Linton North
Posted by DON'T dis US at 07:58 1 comment:
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GPTU COMMITTEE 2015-6


CHAIRPERSONS
Charlotte Fletcher, Noel Lynch

CAMPAIGNS & EVENTS OFFICER:
Simon Hales/Rachel Blackman/ William Quick

SECRETARY:
Peter Murry

MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY:
Thom French

TREASURER:
Sue Tibbles

EQUALITIES OFFICER:
Clara Allen/ Charlotte Fletcher

YOUTH & STUDENTS´ OFFICER: to be co-opted

INTERNATIONAL OFFICER: to be co-opted

REGIONAL CO-ORDINATOR:
Roy Sandison

The GPEX Trade Union Liaison Officer, Romayne Phoenix co-option

Pages

  • Home
  • Video: Climate Change and Fuel Poverty: PCS & the Green Party
  • Get Organised! Getting a new generation organised and unionised: Fringe at Green Party conference 7/9/2014
  • Videos: Stand Up for Education: NUT & the Green Party
  • 2 GREEN LEFT MEETINGS IN BRIGHTON
  • gptu reports to gprc
  • Minutes GPTU meeting 18/11/2015
  • Minutes GPTU meeting 7/10/2015
  • CONSTITUTION & RULES
  • Minutes GPTU meeting 27/1/2016

COMMITTEE 2014/15

COMMITTEE 2014/15

CHAIRPERSON:Noel Lynch

CAMPAIGNS & EVENTS OFFICER: Sue Tibbles

SECRETARY: Peter Murry

MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY : Noel Lynch

TREASURER: Sue Tibbles

GPTU DISABILITY SPOKESPERSON:Roy Sandison

YOUTH &: STUDENTS´ OFFICER: Thom French

INTERNATIONAL OFFICER: Romayne Phoenix

TU Liason Officer (GPEX): Romayne Phoenix

WE need a Female Co-chair and Regional reps

Please contact P.Murry at yrrumuk@googlemail.com if you are interested.

GREEN LEFT FRINGE AT AUTUMN CONFERENCE 2012

Both Green Left and the Green Party Trade Union Group applied to have fringes at the Green Party Conference September 7-10 2012, Conferences Committee turned down both these requests. Green Left decided to mount a fringe outside conference at 6-8pm on Saturday 8th September GPTU agreed to support this meeting and contribute towards costs of room hire. Video clips at http://greenleftblog.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/green-left-fringe-fringe-at-green-party.html

Video Clips from Green Party Conference autumn 2011

  • Fringe on the working class and the Greens
  • Finge on 1 million climate jobs
  • Fringe on Greens and Capitalism
  • Fringe on Free Schools

Video clips from Conference Spring 2012

Green Left Fringe on Brighton Cuts
http://greenleftblog.blogspot.com/2012/02/green-left-fringe-at-gp-conference.html

Coalition of Resisitance plenary on "Crisis in the Eurozone"
http://gptublog.blogspot.com/2012/03/crisi-in-eurozone-coalition-of.html

GPTU Blog List

  • WEMBLEY MATTERS
    'No to austerity 2' Chalkhill Community Centre, Wednesday 18th June 7pm
    1 day ago
  • GREEN LEFT
    Heart of Gaza
    2 days ago
  • The Corner House
    Nigerian Groups Denounce Proposed Shell Share Sale that Would Be Undertaken without a Full Cleanup
    6 months ago
  • GREEN SENIORS
    This is just a test to check the blog functionality
    4 years ago
  • Another Green World
    Vote No Heathrow
    7 years ago
  • Kilburn Unemployed Workers Group
    7 years ago
  • United LEFT
    HP PageWide Enterprise Color 765 Easy Start For Mac
    7 years ago
  • Benefit tales
    Universal credit’s hidden cut pushes disabled people into poverty
    7 years ago
  • Hulme Green Party
    In the Running
    8 years ago
  • Noel Lynch
    The Department for Work and Pensions has admitted...
    9 years ago
  • Haringey Green Party
    Mike Shaughnessy Now Blogs at...
    9 years ago
  • UNISON UNITED LEFT
  • GreenFeed
  • Phelim
  • tigmoo.co.uk aggregator

GPTU Blog

A blog for and about the GREEN PARTY TRADE UNION GROUP.

To post to this blog, send posts (verbal or pictorial, but not liquid, please) to GPTU Secretary at yrrumuk@yahoo.co.uk.

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GPTU links

  • Ian's blog: GP member visiting Gaza
  • Steve Durrant's blog
  • hulme green party
  • hulmegreenparty
  • Martin Francis' blog
  • Campaign against Climate Change TU group
  • green left news pdf
  • Cabbages and Kings (Joseph Healy)
  • GPTU Facebook
  • Re-elect Jean Lambert blog
  • GREENFEED
  • GPTU facebook
  • Tigmoo (TU blogs)
  • another-green-world
  • Green Left Blog
  • Quadraoptica (artwork)
  • greenleftwindfarm
  • GPTU website
  • La Lutte Continue!
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