Reports coming in from picket lines suggest a solid response from postal workers, with near 100% turnout in Bromley By Bow and Nine Elms, London, few in at Bristol and similarly tiny numbers crossing lines at Middlesborough.
Photographers have been down at Mount Pleasant and Bromley by Bow sorting offices, where they report good spirits from the strikers despite the early start and very few people crossing the picket lines.
At Mount Pleasant freelance Jonathan Warren caught one manager on camera throwing the post into the back of his Audi and union deputy general secretary Dave Ward showed up once it was light to talk to strikers.
Guy Smallman meanwhile was down at Bow, where he says there was a 100% solid strike.
On the Urban75 bulletin board, 4thwrite said the response has been positive: "Just got back from the Middlsbrough picket. Only a tiny number had gone in and there was a pretty good response off the vans going past. The office is pretty central but just off the main road so you don't get many people walking past, but those that did were pretty supportive."
At Bristol, it was reported that 7 out of 400 staff had crossed in the early morning, with strikers in fairly good spirits.
Portsmouth sorting office has counted it at 194 out of 197.
The Guardian has suggested that at Birmingham there has been a "steady flow" of mail vans with about 40 on the picket, though it is not explained whether this is mostly made up of managers.
NOTE: These are only initial impressions from people at the picket lines. Updates should be forthcoming
Comments
Pilger on the strike: The
Pilger on the strike: The postal strike is our strike
On the picket line in
On the picket line in Gateshead there was a very welcoming atmosphere. Supporters form other unions, such as an FBU official who brought £500 for the hardship fund, were particularly welcome.
Pickets were enthusiastic to be supported by political organisations; they will pick up some compies of the Morning Star; they were reading the Socialist Party leaflet on their dispute and will supply speakers for a Love Music Hate Racism gig tonight and a meeting on Saturday at 1pm in Gateshead Civic Centre. They were concerned that there would be "Labour Party officials from all over the country" at the meeting on Saturday so were pleased when I told them it was the SWP!
I was told that the Royal Mail scab centres are all in the South of England although one might be opened up in Washington, Tyne & Wear, as the strike progresses.
It was confusing that the picket line was completely porous. Royal Mail, UPS and private vehicles crossed it quite regularly but this was mostly not to scab; the staged; rather than all out; nature of the strike means that delivery drivers were able to cross the picket line without scabbing! One official explained that they were acting to minimise the effect of the strike in order to encourage public support! He also said that there will be one days strike next week but that he couldn't tell the pickets which day because the company hadn't been told yet.
Solidarity on tomorrows picket lines will be particularly useful. Here are the locations in the North East
Obvious differences with the
Obvious differences with the 84 miners' strike, but some parallels: one is that this group of workers is being taken on by the state to be used as an example to the working class generally. The other is that the managers, like the pit deputies, are in a different union. The twelve thousand RM managers are in the union Unite, which is not supporting the strike. A clear example of the division imposed by the trade unions.
There was a great atmosphere
There was a great atmosphere down at East London Mail Centre (Twelvetrees Crescent, Bromley by Bow) this afternoon. Get down there next week for a beer, a chat, and see scabs getting a hard time :twisted:
Looks like there will be another three days of strikes called to commence Thursday 29th: http://tamebay.com/2009/10/cwu-announce-another-3-day-strike.html
By the way, a couple of us have set up www.supporttheposties.net. It basically has very little on it now (tho I have been given a leaked document I'm putting up tomorrow ;) ), but if others around the country (postal workers, solidarity activists) want to help make it into something by adding content (e.g. news, info on local strike support activities, mainstream news analysis, etc.) then let me know and I'll sort you out a login.
I should be able to make one
I should be able to make one of the days in Bromley by Bow next week
Yeah, did a collection
Yeah, did a collection outside my office today with a couple of co-workers, taking that to picket line tomorrow.
At the union branch meeting we voted to give them £1000 as well.
anyone know where you can
anyone know where you can find details of collections or where donations are sent for a strike fund?
Quote: The other is that the
I don't think that one can really expect the management to support the strike. As far as I remember, it the miners strike it was NACODS, the pit deputies (a sort of supervisor or foreman's) union.
In the Post Office all grades of managers are in the same union, plus if the trend is the same as when I worked there, PEDs do not come from the floor anymore, but are university graduates who are on their way up the ladder of management.
Devrim
The pit managers eventually
The pit managers eventually voted to join the miners' strike and their involvement would have been decisive, but their union, Nacods, blithely ignored the vote. Yet another example of the treachery of the trade unions.
It's been my experience that managers can be won over to the cause of the workers - they're not all high-flying fat cats. Why are twelve thousand of them at RM in the Unite trade union?
Fire workers strike in South Yorkshire tonight and Leeds binmen voted by a large majority to continue their strike (why aren't other council workers joining them?). Also South Yorkshire buses voted to strike today but it seems that their union called off the strike at the last minute.
We had a postman come to work
We had a postman come to work the other day to talk to us, he said that apparently the postal managers are complaining about being made to push through all these changes without consulting, and are beginning to turn against senior management. I suppose we'll see how it progresses...
Derry was not out yesterday,
Derry was not out yesterday, and there was a bit of hesitancy by the shop steward about the strike in general, but good turnout and good mood among workers when I was down there this morning. PSNI were called earlier to make sure some of the blocked scab trucks got out, and despite a half hour delay, another truck was let out while I was there. Talking to one of the workers, he said that there were only about half a dozen scabbing inside. I stuck a note over our letterbox on the front door this morning 'No Scab Post', suggest other people do the same.
Theres a picket set up in
Theres a picket set up in Reigate in Surrey, I'm going to go join it in my lunch break, seems good. Apparently there was a few DAM members in this sorting office back in the day.
Quote: I don't think that one
That seems to be the case in most places, there are a number of graduate systems in place in the UK these days, if you look at pretty much every company website it advertises graduate careers seperately from 'the rest'.
Just back from picket duty at
Just back from picket duty at London's N1 delivery office. Great turnout, and good spirits. Three scabs from the Mount Pleasant office turned up, they hace scabbed from the past 13 weeks. Local MP, Emile Thornberry, turned up and gave a supportive speech, although our office voted 99% to withdraw all funding from the Labour Party. The usual SWP and Socialist Party people came with the papers and leaflets, also Regional union reps. Next strike set for Saturday 31st.
Is a collection organised at the bookfair?
Was at the picket at Tomb
Was at the picket at Tomb Street this morning with a few other comrades from Organise! from just after 7am. About 80 plus posties there at any one time, there was a bit of coming and going - as we were leaving about 9 there were probably a few more than this.
Belfast Trades Council, ICTU Youth, Peter Bunting (ICTU), John Monks and Jack O'Connor (SIPTU?) arrived just after eight - Monks and O'Connor spoke after a local CWU rep.
Its two days strike action next week, not three, same format as this week. Got a short interview with a striker thats in our London Anarchist Bookfair special - if you pick one up please excuse the typos, we haven't had much sleep the past couple of days. Will post a typo free version, including the interview, on here after the weekend.
Great thanks, look forward to
Great thanks, look forward to it.
Right, I've heard it
Right, I've heard it suggested that it's likely that Royal Mail will offer ACAS talks before next week's dates. And that due to the very public statements Billy Hayes has made offering to go to ACAS, CWU will accept and, in consequence, call off strikes next week in order to be seen to be reasonable. I am not privy to any private information: this was said on a picket line by someone who is in a reasonably good position to guess.
Cheers for info guys.
Cheers for info guys.
About 20 people in the picket
About 20 people in the picket at the Walthamstow delivery depot this morning. Brief discussion in answer to my question about why the union is calling out different categories on different days. They agreed it was confusing with some people going in and others on the picket line, but they thought that it would cause the maximum disruption with minimum loss of pay. One postie said he had already been out 17 days in the recent period. It seems to me that the union has already significantly 'wet the powder' with the series of earlier strikes, making it much easier for them to sell their line to the membership. In terms of the possibility of real unity and open discussion during the strike, there is nothing positive about the 'tactic' of striking on separate days.
The SWP is setting up a local strike support group which they claim is open to all.
Alf wrote: The SWP is setting
Alf
this is happening here too, although the main SWP guy involved is fairly sound and we've worked with him on stuff like Vestas support without compromising on principles, so we'll see what happens. previously the Trots we've been working with (individuals from the SP, SWP & AWL) have been open to the idea of spreading the struggle, and we co-organised a public meeting with speakers from Vestas, Lewisham Bridge and the Brighton binmen to push the idea of linking struggles with joint industrial action, directly by workers since the unions won't do it. of course i'm not niave about the role the Parties will play when push comes to shove, but i've been pleasantly surprised with a lot of the individual members i've come into contact with of late so i don't think it's worth dismissing such intiatives out of hand if it's possible to make arguments and win them rather than participate in a classic stage-managed SWPfest.
Quote: Theres a picket set up
I don't remember DAM postmen in Reigate though it could be after I was a member. In the London area they had people in LOMO, South West London, and Romford.
Devrim
Quote: Pictures of Pedal
Scope for extending the
Scope for extending the struggle?
http://www.atherstonerecorder.co.uk/100258-tnt-workers-protest-over-pay-cuts.html
baboon wrote: Also South
baboon
- A bit of a late reply, but where did you get the info about the union calling the strike off from? They actually extended it for another two days, and have called another day of action for this weekend. I'd definitely have noticed if I was passed by any buses during my lengthy walk into town that day. ;)
Gateshead, North East
Gateshead, North East England, Thursday 29th October
Strong picket line with a brazier. Good level of support from passing workers in this industrial estate.
In last years strike, a lad was sacked for throwing burning wood from the brazier into a scabbing van.
Last Friday one lad demonstrated with a banner reading "Scabs Rule". This will lead to a disciplenary by the employer.
Cupar, Fife, Saturday 31st October
They are not allowed a brazier here since the picket line is on a footpath, so the palets I'd brought stayed in my car, but they were glad to be brought cake.
The workers brought up the history of Industrial Unionism and the need to organise across the communication industry.
They're not allowed to call strike breakers "scabs" under harrassment rules.
They said the employer had tried to discredit this website for the militant attitude of some of it's contributors:
Royal Mail Chat
I remember reading about supporters of a strike in Barcellona spraying "scab" on the windscreens of scabbing busses but can't find a record of it on the web...