Strike Action Needed To Save Jobs at Tesco Distribution Centres
Strike Action Needed To Save Jobs at Tesco Distribution Centres
Strike Action Needed To Save Jobs at Tesco Distribution Centres
Tesco have been in the news recently for all the wrong reasons. Firstly, the horsemeat scandal, which we covered in the previous issue of the Activist, but now also the tagging of warehouse workers in Ireland. Tesco has recently announced plans to close its Harlow, Chesterfield and Weybridge distribution centres as well as making job centres at two others. On the first two pages of the Activist we carry articles discussing how a campaign can be developed to stop the closure and defend all Strike action by Unite members at Tescos Doncaster depot forced jobs, as well as the threat from Tesco and Eddie Stobbart to concede more generous redundancy tagging. payments - action across the Tesco network could force more...
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7th annual conference takes place on Saturday 29th June, Camden Centre, Judd Street. London WC1H 9JE - 11-4 See www.shopstewards.net for info
Activist comment:
The points you make about Usdaws slavish support of partnership with the major retail companies was the reason Robbie and other on Usdaws left felt it was essential that John Hannett was challenged for the post of general secretary. The issue of the attacks against the well organised distribution centres was raised by the Soc ialist Part y supporters back in 2007, when all Tesco distribution sites were circulated with a leaflet calling for coordinated action to defend terms and conditions.
3. Closure of Weybridge affecting 562 staff 4. Reduction in staff numbers at Magor by 146 5. Reduction in staff numbers at Welham Green by 70 Usdaws response is to examine the business case for these proposed changes. Our members have the right to ask is that all we are going to do. And, surely we already know the business case.
Usdaws leaders in 1998 argued for a partnership strategy that declared, It During the 2008 Usdaw general means the union is consulted on a secretary election, the matter was wide range of issues and Partnership again raised. Robbies warnings were means proper dialogue with the union ignored. before decisions are taken. A recent Usdaw press release, giving the latest number of job loses, illustrates the dangers of Hannetts passive attitude towards all Tescos actions: Clearly, Tesco have a long term strategy of weakening our members T&Cs in distribution centres and over the last decade have been slowly implement it, Whereas, Usdaws response is to examine the business 1. Closure of Harlow affecting 562 staff case. As the emalier rightly points out Your partnership strategy is failing. 2. Closure of Chesterfield affecting 343 The Activist considers it is about time the industrial approach of partnership staff is reassessed by the ADM.
In the last five years the average number of employees in a 40,000 foot Tesco superstore has fallen by 18%. This is partly due to them replacing cashiers with self-service tills and the introduction of schemes The staff can turn it off when on their such as the dreaded SYA (in 2004), lunch break but then it keeps rolling its sickness and absence policy the while you take a toilet break, drink of most common reason for disciplinary
hearings, a scheme piloted by Tesco and then introduced into the public sector. The workers are organised in SIPTU but pressure needs to be put on Usdaw to be on watch for similar practices spreading to the UK.
Woolworths entered administration, Newsnight contacted Usdaws leadership to comment on what was going on. However, they refused to do so as not to upset the then Labour government. Instead, Robbie was contacted to appear and instantly did so to offer a point of view from retail workers that is too
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Labour Vote Defends Workfare
After rulings in the courts condemned the Tories workfare legislation they have rushed legislation through parliament to retrospectively change the law to rule out repayments of money taken from jobseekers in often arbitrary sanctions. Labour abstained , on the basis they had extracted a measly concession from the Tories of a report to parliament . Only one of the Usdaw group of MPs joined 43 other Labour rebels to oppose the bill. We print a letter we received a copy of on this subject below only adding that the Activist believes there is an alternative the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coaltion (www.tusc.org.uk) who recently beat a Labour-backed candidate in a town council election in Maltby near Rotherham. Dear Mr Esterton MP, I'd like to thank you for being the only one of the 29 MPs Usdaw sponsors that actually voted in opposition to the governments rushing of the Job Seekers (Back to Work) Bill through parliament that is stopping the rebate of sanctions taken from job seekers, often for the most spurious reasons. I have many friends who have suffered at the hands of this, frustrated on being sent on pointless courses to teach them how to write CVs etc, when the problem is that there simply isn't enough permanent, full time jobs out there where people earn enough money to live off.
Needless to say, I'm disappointed that the other MPs sponsored by my union didn't vote the same way as you. When the workfare scandal broke, members of our union were pretty clear at the divisional conference I attended around that time that we thought what the government was doing, in trying to make young people work for their dole instead of creating real, permanent jobs for them, was disgraceful. The benefit sanctions to bully unemployed people into acceptance of this state of affairs is equally so. A political party that wants to represent trade unions and ordinary working people should have voted in the same way you did, but instead I feel Labour as a whole have let me and many other people down once again as on other issues like tuition fees, the Iraq war, 10p tax rate, not repealing the anti-union laws and several other issues that matter to me.
the
In 1972 building workers held a national strike for better pay and conditions. 5 months later, out of the blue, 24 activists in that strike were dragged into court and six were sent to prison, including actor Ricky Tomlinson who was then a plasterer I was enraged by the fact that there was no consultation with the This was trade union victimisation membership and that the short of workers in dsipute, and since ballot would not allow me to then have been fighting for justice. They currently have an e-petition campaign against this pay cut. I to gain access to documents realise 2% may seem good, but to showing this was a fit-up at http:// our low paid members this is 13 e p e t i t i o n s . d i r e c t . g o v . u k / pence an hour. When you couple petitions/35394 - they need this with the fact that the company 100,000 signatures before June made an 65million profits of then 27th. Please sign it. the workers deserve much better.