Pamphlet about the UK rank-and-file Building Worker Group within the UCATT union, published as issue 8 of the series Revolutions Per Minute.
Issue 8 is dedicated to the 3,000 building workers who have lost their lives in so-called ‘site accidents’ since the advent of the Health and Safety at Work Act in 1974. In the year 2000/1 there were 120 deaths on site.
Murder, in fact, would be a better word.
It gives me great pleasure to welcome readers to issue 8 of RPM, particularly as it is so good. As secretary of the Building Worker Group Brian Higgins has been involved in many of the struggles waged by building workers in the last 25 to 30 years for better pay and conditions.
As a result he has been maligned and attacked by the building employers, both large and small, agencies of the State and the trade union bureaucrats, not to mention many of their supporters on the ‘revolutionary left’. A the struggles waged by building workers in the last 25 to 30 years for better pay and conditions.
As a result he has been maligned and attacked by the building employers, both large and small, agencies of the State and the trade union bureaucrats, not to mention many of their supporters on the ‘revolutionary left’. This issue of RPM gives Brian, and the building workers he represents a chance to put ‘their side of the story’.
As such whilst it is a historical document it is also a ‘call to arms’, for action now to prevent injuries and deaths on building sites, improve pay and conditions and ultimately, for workers self control of the building industry.
Whilst primarily aimed at building workers the issues raised in the following pages affect all workers and as such the reader will find RPM 8 invaluable.
Mark Metcalf
Comments
All up. Related material: The
All up. Related material:
The Lump: An heretical analysis (Dave Lamb)
Reflections on The Lump by Dave Lamb (Wildcat) + a critical introduction (Dave Walton)
Nice one, thanks!
Nice one, thanks!
Sad to say that Brian Higgins
Sad to say that Brian Higgins died last weekend.
I’m sad about this. I liked
I’m sad about this. I liked him.
Devrim
Aye, sorry to hear that.
Aye, sorry to hear that. Political differences aside, I liked him too.
I liked him too, and I met
I liked him too, and I met him on quite a few occasions, most recent being the sparks actions, a couple of years ago. The SWP put his name in lights when he was with them, and that affected him a bit, cos they made him believe that he was some sort of Tom Mann figure, nevertheless he was a genuine class struggle fighter.
Northampton Chronicle article
Northampton Chronicle article and Union News article / BSG tribute.