The independent union the Industrial Workers of the World has today served notice for strike action of cleaners at the John Lewis Partnership’s flagship Oxford Street store. This is the first strike in the history of the Partnership only recently hailed by Deputy Minister Nick Clegg as a model for the British economy.
The campaign of industrial action will commence on Friday 13th July 2012. If a settlement is not reached the IWW has made clear it will announce further strikes in July and August, including through the Olympic period.
The members of the IWW Cleaners' Branch announced a resounding mandate from its members to take strike action, the strike ballot had an 80% turnout with 90% voting in favour of industrial action.
Cleaners at John Lewis Partnership at employed through a contractor Integrated Cleaning Management (ICM) who recently announced up to 50% cuts, comprising cuts in cleaners hours (wages) and jobs. ICM have refused to recognise the union for collective bargaining and rejected outright a claim for the London Living Wage of £8.30 per-hour, a rate set by the Greater London Authority and championed by Mayor Boris Johnson.
The London Citizens campaign has been engaged in several years of discussions with John Lewis to bring the cleaners into the Partnership and pay the London Living Wage, making no progress. The cleaners feel exasperated by a contractor who recently offered a mere 24 pence pay increase, conditional on 100% attendance.
IWW have been approached by numerous John Lewis partners have expressed sympathy with the cleaners and also have wondered why the cleaners have not been brought into the partnership.
This IWW dispute has had wide ranging support including various MPs from Labour and Plaid Cymru that have signed the Parliamentary Early Day Motion 301. The IWW and its supporters expect the cleaners to be treated with respect, paid fairly and remain employed in sufficient numbers to meet the demands of a flagship store on Oxford Street.
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Best of luck to them! Traffic
Best of luck to them!
Traffic wardens at contractors NSL in Camden will also be on strike shortly before that, tomorrow and Thursday, against low pay:
http://camdenunison.org.uk/2012/07/03/nsl-camden-unison-on-the-brink-of-action/
Come and show solidarity with
Come and show solidarity with the IWW John Lewis Cleaners' Strike Picket on Friday and Demo on Saturday!
On Friday 13th July the IWW Cleaners' Branch will start the picket line for the cleaners at John Lewis at 5:30am. This will be the first strike in the history of John Lewis!
Then at 1pm we will have a big rally.
On Saturday 14th July we will have a mass demonstration at 3pm at the John Lewis flagship store at 300 Oxford Street. Any one that is not in London can organize pickets of solidarity in their local John Lewis branches.
All come and stand in solidarity please. The national press will be there. This will be a huge victory for cleaners and precarious workers all over the country! Get involved!
London IWW Cleaners' and Allied Trades Industrial Union.
Are there any planned actions
Are there any planned actions elsewhere, does anyone know?
NLSF solidarity
NLSF solidarity statement:
http://solfed.org.uk/?q=north-london/solidarity-with-the-london-john-lewis-cleaners-strike
The North London Solidarity Federation would like to extend our deepest solidarity to the John Lewis cleaners engaged in a struggle to secure the London Living Wage. By exposing John Lewis' overt failure to live up to its proclaimed co-operative model, the cleaners have shown that company schemes are not the way to secure a decent wage. Instead, only collective struggle can force bosses to provide us with decent working conditions and respect on the job.
Members of North London SolFed will make every effort to turn out to support the cleaners at their upcoming strike and will encourage all our friends and contacts to do the same.
London Living Wage for All Cleaners! No Cuts to Hours! No Speed Up!
Some press coverage of the
Some press coverage of the strike so far:
Guardian (video):
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/video/2012/jul/13/john-lewis-cleaners-strike-video
Red pepper:
http://www.redpepper.org.uk/a-new-dawn-john-lewis-cleaners-strike/
Demotix:
http://www.demotix.com/news/1332005/cleaners-strike-oxford-street-john-lewis-store-living-wage?destination=search/context#slide-1
Support statement from PCS:
http://www.pcs.org.uk/en/commercial_sector/cs-news-and-events/solidarity-with-john-lewis-cleaners-fight-for-the-living-wage.cfm
Any personal reports from the
Any personal reports from the picket line? Or, even better yet, from a striking cleaner?
Thanks for the links Felix.
Heard that strike actions
Heard that strike actions been called off due to a new mgmt offer, anyone know the details?
Bump on that last post,
Bump on that last post, anyone have any sharable details?
Amazing
Amazing :)
Congratulations to the
Congratulations to the cleaners! :D
'There's just no more money
'There's just no more money I'm afraid, you'll all be laid off' 'There's just n-' *STRIKE* 'Here's a 10% rise and no redundancies'.
well done!
well done!
So, this relaunch as IWGB.
So, this relaunch as IWGB. What's that about then?
Quote: PRESS RELEASE CLEANERS
So this is a split from the
So this is a split from the IWW? Follow up post from the Cleaner's Branch below:
Edit: Cleaners Branch post was updated, see below:
I don't get why they talk
I don't get why they talk about a "rebirth of industrial unionism" when they are organising cleaners by trade.
IWGB press release
I wonder who those "other members of the labour movement" are.
Anyway, best of luck to the cleaners.
Fucking awesome for the
Fucking awesome for the cleaners. That much I'll say.
Very cool about the win. Can
Very cool about the win.
Can someone tell me if I understand some of the background correctly, please? (And apologies if this is off topic/needs to be split to a new thread.)
1. In the UK, workers in a registered union can legally strike at any time if they vote to do so. Yeah?
2. Workers in the UK who strike in that way have some legal protection. Yeah? If so, can someone tell me what those protections are?
3. Workers in the UK who are not in a registered union do not have any legal protections for striking. But striking is not criminalized. It's just a conflict between workers and employees and the state doesn't get involved. Yeah?
4. The cleaners have been organizing for a few years, prior to their affiliating to the IWW as a branch. Yeah? If so, is there anything written about any of that, or can people talk about that if they've got experience of it, preferably without bringing recent disagreements into it?
As far as I know 1. Yes but
As far as I know
1. Yes but there not quite "at anytime". There are rules about balloting etc.
2. & 3. A big issue is that one wildcat strike you can be held financially liable for losses incurred during a strike and you can be fired/victimised etc.
4. Awesome Dude's post here covers most of the details. Basically they were being organised in Unite (one of the two big unions) with support from the LAWAS and the Cleaners Defence Committee (CDC), most of them then split from Unite and joined the IWW and set themselves up as a seperate branch. A major issue here is that there has been a pretty consistent divide between the leaders of the cleaners and the cleaners themselves. Awesome Dude gives more details.
georgestapleton wrote: 1. Yes
georgestapleton
Basically there's no positive right to strike in English law. Official action is 'protected', which means dismissal for taking part is automatically unfair. For action to be official, afaik, it must be organised by a certified independent trade union (the IWW has this status), it must follow a secret postal ballot in accordance with the law, it must be in furtherance of a trade dispute with the workers' employer (i.e. not sympathy or political strike action ), the employer must be notified in detail at least 7 days in advance, it must be called by someone in the union with 'proper authority', plus several other legal conditions (can't be in support of workers sacked for unofficial action, can't be to enforce a closed shop). The government's summary is here. If any of those conditions aren't met, the action can lose its 'protected' status (this was behind the spate of legal challenges to ballots at British Airways, on the railways, and with the Sparks last year - specifically technicalities of whether ballots were sent to the right addresses of current members; invariably there were administrative errors which courts used to block strikes).
If action isn't 'protected', participants can be lawfully fired, and in theory sued for damages arising from breach of contract (e.g. lost revenue), though normally the union would be sued as they have more money than the individual striking workers.
This hasn't been so common lately, but in the 70s and 80s employers would often seek civil injunctions on various grounds to limit or disrupt strikes and picketing. I'm not sure of the current status of this, but stuff like protection from harassment, trespass etc are all civil torts which a court could make an injunction on. Breaching an injunction would then be contempt of court, which can lead to imprisonment 'until the contempt is purged' (theoretically there's no limit).
I'm also not sure how the Human Rights Act would effect all this (I'm not up on the latest case law). Article 11 guarantees "Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others, including the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests." But then immediately says this 'fundamental' right can be limited: "No restrictions shall be placed on the exercise of these rights other than such as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others [i.e. private property] ." So no restrictions, except whatever the state wants to legislate. It also exempts employees of "the armed forces, of the police or of the administration of the State" from these 'fundamental human rights'.
Thanks y'all. All of this is
Thanks y'all. All of this is quite different from the US, which makes it a bit harder to understand since I don't know how it works over there. In the US, unions can't strike most of the time during contracts unless management breaks the law. A lot of strikes are over getting employers to sign contracts or agree on some terms during negotiation. I also think the state gets involved less often on either side here - either enforcing employer side things, like having workers pay damages to an employer for the costs of an uncertified/illegitimate strike, or on the workers side of protecting workers from retaliation/replacement for striking. This article gets into some of the differences. I think when employers break the law and workers strike in response (an "unfair labor practice strike") it works roughly like in the UK, though I think the administrative agencies may move more slowly which can still hang workers out to dry because they go without income for a long time while stuff is sorted out through the courts, even if they ultimately get back pay. In a strike for improvements ("economic strike") strikers can be permanently replaced. I don't know about penalties like having to repay bosses for economic harm, though.