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Students: support the postal workers! Don't be used as scabs!

Education Not for Sale | 20.10.2009 12:17 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

The Education Not for Sale network is mobilising student support for the postal workers' dispute.

For the version of this text with active hyperlinks, see here.

Students: support the postal workers! Don't be used as scabs!

In 2007, ENS took the lead in organising support for the national postal workers’ dispute within the student movement. As postal workers prepare another national strike (starting this Thursday and Friday), we are preparing to provide solidarity again.

ENS steering committee member Katherine McMahon is submitting this motion to her SU. Other SUs should feel free to adapt and pass it. Some of it is based on a policy passed by the University of Sussex SU in 2007, which is available here. For the statement ENS released at the time of the 2007 dispute, click here.

See below for our statement in support of the strike.

Support the postal workers! Don’t be used as scabs!

Postal workers organised in the CWU union have voted overwhelmingly (76% on a turnout of nearly 70%) for national strike action against ongoing attacks by Royal Mail management against workers. The first days of strike action are scheduled for Thursday 22nd and Friday 23rd.

The strike is in response to “modernisation” plans by Royal Mail, which essentially involved making postal workers work harder, longer and for less. There has been an increase in “cross functioning”, whereby managers make workers of one grade do the work of another grade with no increase in pay. Local post offices still face closure, resulting in potential further job losses. Workers’ routines are being disrupted, as postal workers are reallocated to new walks at no notice and the number of casual workers increases.

Students should support the postal dispute not only out of basic solidarity with people fighting for their livelihoods but also because it is, in essence, a dispute for the heart-and-soul of the notion of public services. The dispute poses the question of whether the postal service should be run democratically by workers and users, in the interests of public need, or by unaccountable managers in the interests of profit. Precisely the same question, in fact, which is posed over and over again in the education sector by student struggles around issues like fees and course cuts. If the postal workers win, it will drive back the New Labour project (which is certain to be continued by a future Tory government) of swallowing up and privatising what remains of public services in Britain. The “inconvenience” suffered by people who may receive their mail a little later than unexpected is unfortunate but hardly a reason to oppose the strike; withdrawing their labour is the only real weapon available to workers who want to assert their right to have a say in how their industry and workplace is run. Constant media focus on the “inconvenience” caused by the strike - rather than the management attacks that motivated it - indicates nothing except the ruling-class bias of the mainstream press.

There is also a significant likelihood that, as Royal Mail attempts to break the strike and ultimately smash the power of the union within the company, students may be used as scab labour. Reports indicate that Royal Mail are in the process of recruiting (mainly through agencies like Manpower) an army of up to 30,000 casual workers in order to act as scabs. It is in fact illegal for managers to hire casual staff to do the work of striking workers, but Royal Mail intends to get around this fact by claiming that the 30,000 are just the normal casual workers they hire every year to cope with increased seasonal demand around Christmas. Except this year, they’re hiring them in October. Suspicious…

Although the pressure to get part-time work of any kind to fund ourselves through our studies is increasing, students should not allow themselves to be used as pawns of Royal Mail management in their effort to break the strike and smash the union. Do not take casual work for Royal Mail and, if you’re already working as a casual in the postal service, join the CWU and refuse to cross picket lines! Student Union-run job shops should not advertise casual vacancies for Royal Mail, or promote the agencies (such as Manpower) being used to recruit scabs.

The postal strike is a battle between two different visions of society and whether the needs of people or profit should come first. Students have a very immediate interest in taking a side. We should side with the postal workers.

What you can do

1. Take a student delegation to your nearest picket line - starting this Thursday or Friday. If you would like to find out where your nearest picket line is, or get in touch with other activists to go down with, please email us at  education.not.for.sale@gmail.com

2. Move a motion in your student union or campaigning group.

3. Get a speaker. We can put you in touch with CWU activists who will be more than happy to come to your group. Email us for more info.

4. Do a collection at your meeting or round your college. As the strikes go on, the union will need money for its national strike and hardship funds. Even £5 or £10 will be much appreciated. If you can organise a benefit gig or other fundraising event, even better!
Again, get in touch if you want to know where to take it or send it.

Education Not for Sale
- e-mail: education.not.for.sale@gmail.com
- Homepage: http://www.free-education.org.uk/?p=636

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

Lack of support

20.10.2009 13:05

Might already be too late, I know tens of people that have already applied for them. It's gotten to the point where unemployment is so high amongst young people that many are willing to shit on their fellow citizens for a bit of cash.

Support for the strikers seems limited amongst students, most blaming them for delays in post reaching the student loans company earlier in august and september when there was the rolling strikes.

It's going to be difficult to mobolise much support from students, the student body really isn't as 'radical' as it once was.

Leeds Student


Yes

20.10.2009 13:26

Funnily enough I have just sent off an email to a recruiter looking for mail sorters to apply for a position. I had forgotten about the postal strike and had not linked the job post to this, but was just informed by a friend that this was probably the case. I will certainly not be taking this job.

Hopefully more people will realise the significance. Cheers for the post.

Solidarity with the strikers!

Peat


Support at Sussex

20.10.2009 15:28

Don't have details yet, but there will be students from Sussex University joining the picket line on Friday morning.

Elliott


strike breakers

20.10.2009 16:04

Job Centres are being used to recruit strike breakers.

If you have to go into a Job Centre, pick up the leaflets and bin them.

Keith


How to help?

20.10.2009 17:59

What is best to bring to a picket line, food? Drink? Just solidarity?

Student


Comment

21.10.2009 14:34

Worth putting the Mark Steel comment from the Indy jusgt in case anybody is swallowing the rest of the mainstream media bullshit ( e.g BBC )

Mark Steel: Royal Mail is to blame for our broken society (obviously)

We can already see the 'modernisation' the Government wants from posties


Wednesday, 21 October 2009
( Post Office® Travel Cover All our policies cover UK holidays.Find out more and buy online!
www.PostOffice.co.uk/Travel - adf next to article!! )

"The Post office unions can't obstruct modernisation," insists Peter Mandelson. That must be why Mandelson has the thoroughly modern job title of Lord, because he's not afraid to modernise. And no one could accuse his place of work, the House of Lords, of resisting modernisation. Every member of staff is at the cutting edge of new technology, making use of the very latest developments in ermine gowns, and overmanning is unheard of as every single Lord is essential and oozes infectious youthful hereditary energy for the benefit of Britain.

If only the Post Office unions would agree to being that modern, then their sacks would be carried by equerries, and attendance would be around 5 per cent of the workforce, who would take it in turns to stand up with a parcel, shake it for a couple of minutes, then say "Am I delivering this or receiving it, I don't recall?" and sit down again.

Presumably, what is meant by "modernise" is privatised. Then, as they're delivering your mail postmen can say "Would you like a pastry with your bills this morning? No? In that case are you aware I could also supply you with gas?" And each postman could get sponsorship, and cycle along whistling 'You can't get quicker than a Kwik Fit fitter'. Eventually they'll be properly modern, like the water companies who were fined £12m for providing a dreadful service and lying to cover it up, or the hugely popular gas companies.

We can already see the types of modernisation the Government would like to apply. For example they got rid of that antiquated system in rural areas where the elderly would queue in a ramshackle old Post Office for their pension, by shutting the things down. And in a marvellous example of joined-up government, soon the elderly won't be any worse off because their pensions will be scrapped anyway, saving them a walk, and encouraging them to modernise because it's no good wandering about being 82 in a modern environment.

So the management at Royal Mail, and the Government, want to cut jobs, freeze pay and change the working conditions for the staff, which has led to the current strikes. And that means certain papers are already exploding with stories that start "Britain's 103-year-olds are to be targeted by callous striking union members. 'Christmas cards are all I have to live for', said Ethel Dibbet from her nursing home, 'But this year I suppose I'll have to go without, what with them blooming selfish postmen with their unrealistic demands and obstinate Luddite refusal to ruddy well modernise'."

The Times had a headline telling us the strike would "Lose £100m in revenues" for the Government, which seems a lot until they explain this is because they'll have to waive the £100 fine for late tax returns, that could have been imposed on a million people. But surely The Times, and David Cameron, should be delighted about this, praising the union for helping to stamp out the red tape that holds back business.

You can see why there's such enthusiasm for taking on the post unions, because these are the people whose excess has got us into such a financial mess. Ask anyone "Whose greed caused the economic crash"? and they'll say "Investment postmen, they're the bastards." And we've all heard tales of them gloating down the sorting office, about how they'd just finished Gresham Street when they heard about the run on the futures market in Hong Kong, nipped down the stock market on their bicycle, did three dings on their bell to signal "sell" to the traders, picked up £10m and nipped back just in time to finish Parsley Avenue.

There is one other possibility, which is the Royal Mail management and the Government are trying to break the union altogether, which would explain why they've drawn up plans to impose the changes without the union's agreement, leaving the management free to impose whatever sackings or pay cuts they fancied at any time. And to be fair, you can see why the head of Royal Mail, Adam Crozier, might consider a union unnecessary, as he managed to get himself a deal worth £9m over six years without one.

It might also explain their aggressive stance, which has gone as far as cancelling their annual anti-bullying week, although one-third of staff say they've witnessed bullying managers. Or maybe Mandelson has insisted the management modernises bullying, so instead of calling staff in to be told they're slow and useless, they'll now be told they're fat ugly pigs on Twitter.

And if Royal Mail get their way, we could find the local sorting office turned into modern themed apartments, and we'll have to collect all of our parcels from a centralised modern digital automated package centre in a retail park in Bangalore.

BlackandWhiteCat


@Leeds Student

22.10.2009 17:34

You should tell the students who take cross picket lines, that in most peoples eyes they are no longer students, they are scabs. When they finish their courses and the rest of their group become teachers or architects or whatever, they will remain scabs. It will be their defining attribute to their grave.

You should also remind them that it is self-serving sell-out idiots like them that makes common folk loathe all students - obviously with some justification.

Danny


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