Knights of the road

May 18th, 2007 by admin

Congratulations to the drivers (though not the management by the sounds of it) of Eddie Stobart’s haulage firm. The Edinburgh Evening news reports that they refused extra payments of £500 each for a special assignment, when they found out that it was to strike-break against the UNITE-T&G distribution members at Tesco in Livingstone, Scotland.

UNITE-T&G’s Tony Trench said: “We think that this is an appalling way to do business - throwing large sums of money to get people to strike-break instead of sitting down and negotiating with us in an orderly fashion. We are humbly grateful to these guys who have turned down such large sums of money to support their comrades.”

Eddie Stobart always used to demand the highest standards of conduct from his drivers, wanting them to be ‘knights of the road’, to help him build a brand as industry leaders (and collect a huge fan club of strange people who like to count lorries along the way). It looks like they’ve passed the conduct test with flying colours, though maybe not in quite the way he intended.

All together now… “I want to be an Eddie Stobart driver…”

PS - Indisputedly the most useless bit of trivia I know (after ringing Stobarts’ unneccessarily helpful customer services for a bet 15 years ago) is the reason Stobarts lorries display a small Italian flag on their side. Apparently, their main contract was an Irish run when they were a small firm, and they wanted to put an Irish flag on the side, but didn’t have any orange paint, so they used red, and stuck to the wrong colour ever since out of quirky tradition. There - now don’t go saying there’s no exclusives on this site…

Twits 4 Johnson 4 Deputy

May 17th, 2007 by admin

twitterThanks to Roger for pointing out this piece in the Graun today about Alan Johnson’s political twitterering.

I can see the attraction of microblogging for putting your worthiness about, without the efforts of writing a full-on short-term leadership blog. As Alan’s e-Campaigner Stuart Bruce says:

“Being secretary of state for education and employment is a critical job and there is no way Alan could do a blog properly. It’s better to not blog than to do it badly. Most people don’t have a clue what senior politicians do. Using Twitter gives a real insight and clearly shows that he’s an ordinary guy.”

I’m not so sure about his other suggestions on how Twittering is a more inclusive format than blogging:

“Only 60 % of UK households use the internet regularly. Mobile phone penetration is nearly 100 %. Twitter is a way of making the campaign much more accessible to most people.”

In principle, sure, Twitter is great for letting those of us without a computer keep in the loop. But I’d question not just how many people have ever heard of Twitter in the UK that don’t already have internet access too, but how many people outside of the bloggerati - that least representative group of Labour members - have the faintest whit what all this is about in the first place.

This is where I think the lovely democratic potential of web2.0 often falls down. It can spread like lightening through people who are already linked in to it, but new services lack the marketing money or revenue shares to get into the places they need to be to be seen by Jo/e Punter - on the sides of London buses, or integrated into the phone networks’ portals.

Any hint of a glorious dawn of 1-1 communications with our elected leaders should be grabbed at whilst we can though - it looks to be winding down already in the USA. Facebook have a special category for US politicians now. You can’t be a friend of John Edwards (Alan’s comrade in twittering) any more, but instead get the chance to register yourself to support him - something a fair way different!

However it’s good to see that Alan & Stuart are taking their gimmicks seriously and are on the ball on keeping things updated - my facebook friend request was reciprocated much quicker than from most of my real friends ;)

My gimmick tip to Stuart (tho he’s most likely doing it already) - a well-touted MyBlogLog profile. Most political bloggers would be disproportionally well flattered if it looked like Alan had been reading their pages!

5p for a sovereign?

May 14th, 2007 by admin

I noticed last week that the Sun were promoting an online 81st birthday card for the Queen, which they are extolling their readership to sign up to, and adorn with symbols of Britishness. The idea is to give the old dear a record breaking birthday greeting. I had a go, but unfortunately found I could only wish Her Madge one of the pre-set fawning greetings, not something a little more personalised to my own republican sympathies.

Amusing this week then to see that one month in to the two month run, and with only 19,000 signatures to show from their 3 million readers, the Sun have now resorted to bribing people to sign it. The Ipoints online loyalty scheme are running a promotion for the card, whereby anyone who clicks through to sign gets 10 Ipoints (worth roughly 5p) in their account.

Encouraging to see this (admittedly extremely nicely executed) viral not exactly setting the web on fire, despite the best punts of one of the most influential media outlets around. Those of us of a republican bent are likely to want to ignore the papers for a while soon, when Harry succeds in pulling an Andrew and remaking his playboy tosser image by wandering about in uniform, so this is a rare opportunity for a little chuckle - Happy Birthday Ma’am!

A Country That Works - book review

May 8th, 2007 by admin

Andy Stern
Free Press, 224 pages

America seems like a worrying place to be a leftie, and SEIU President Andy Stern lays out a formidable list of obstacles to progressive politics in this book. Global forces have changed the American economy to the point where the American dream that hard work can be valued and rewarded just isn’t a possibility any more. Income inequality has rocketed, job security is a distant memory, pensions and healthcare are imploding. Stern believes that the natural way to tackling this breach lies in trade unions, but that they will need to change themselves dramatically too in order to seize the opportunity.

Stern is well placed to tell us about change in unions. He talks at length about the transformation of SEIU from 7th placed “SEIwho?” to become the largest AFL-CIO affiliate – a process started by his own mentor John Sweeney, now President of the AFL. The union was reorganised to focus on clear industries – transferring members in illogical sectors (such as utilities workers) into other unions that could better represent them. Coherent branding was adopted across a very diverse organisation. Union dues were ramped up to double, and staffing numbers in services provided to locals cut dramatically, building Stern a huge war chest to spend on growth - organising new workplaces and new sectors. Stern doesn’t flinch from detailing some of the difficulty of this process – including the protests of the large numbers of SEIU office staff he laid off. In the end though, the numbers tell the story, and SEIU’s rise (albeit aided by sectoral mergers) makes for a compelling case.

There’s a lot of detail about the logical conclusions of this - the labour movement split of 2005, when SEIU led other unions to break from the AFL-CIO and form the Change to Win Coalition. Stern is understandably rather anxious to justify his role in the process, and he doesn’t go too far into critiques of his actions, which would have been very interesting – though arguably outside the scope of this fairly slim volume.

The core of Stern’s position seems to be a serious swing towards partnership in industrial relations, albeit a version of partnership with very large teeth (in the form of major and very innovative shaming campaigns for employers who won’t play). To enable SEIU to organise new sectors, they have signed deals, which on the face of it run counter to the traditional union approach. Recognising that most employers won’t sign with them if it means they will become uncompetitive, SEIU offer no-bargaining deals. The union agrees not to bargain for increased pay until they have also signed up a majority of the rest of that sector. SEIU are clear from the outset that the union is seeking to raise the employer’s costs, but this way no employer opens themselves up unilaterally to undercutting from others if they do up their pay rates. SEIU have managed to cover huge numbers of staff in building services and healthcare who might never otherwise have been organised, but those members have needed to sustain the fight for years before they’ve seen much of the benefits.

Unions, Stern believes, need to change their image, and renounce the traditional class-based rhetoric, transforming themselves from organisations that are seen to create problems into organisations are seen by members and employers to be in the business of solving problems. A union really focused on developing new personal services will be able to support members in all areas of their working lives - with employers even potentially outsourcing benefits provision to the union, so that members will be able to get continuity of service.

Stern’s political strategy is expounded in some detail – breaking away from straight partisanship to endorse both Democrat and Republican candidates, based on their individual records on labour issues. Surprisingly, SEIU chuck a lot of money at the Republicans, and so far don’t seem to have anything to show for it (and the section about inspiration from Newt Gingrich will make many of us shudder). Also controversial have been Stern’s plans to get the membership more politically engaged in choosing the candidates they want to support – hence SEIU’s powerful drive behind the ill-fated Dean campaign (the only time I saw Stern, he was sporting an almost parodically huge Dean booster badge), and several state races where SEIU have backed other candidates against traditional labour movement favourites.

Cynics might wonder throughout how much ‘the interests of working Americans’ really means ‘the opinions of Andy Stern’. Indeed, the space devoted to his own biography and the fact that the book’s co-writer isn’t mentioned until after the end notes would seem to further suggest that this may be as much about the man as about the movement. I’m convinced though that much of the megalomania jibes are unfair, and he’s on the level with this serious attempt at a manifesto for labour – tackling questions head on that others would rather not think too hard about. This is very challenging but ultimately inspiring stuff, with its call for the labour movement to cast off the habits which have put it into decline and to ante up for some really big ideas. Some of it is certainly just for the US politics nerds amongst us, but there are a lot of challenges here for the UK too – especially as we seem to be only a little behind the States with some of the problems we’re facing.

You can buy it online from Amazon, through the tigmoo book club, which is trying to siphon off the anti-union bookmongers’ profits into promoting unions on their own doorstep.

More from Andy at www.acountrythatworks.com

Welshing on the ratepayers?

May 8th, 2007 by admin

A gift-horse “unions in political correctness gone mad” story for the tabloids today. Call centre staff will now no longer be obliged to issue a greeting in Welsh when they answer the phone for Vale of Glamorgan Council. Call me a linguo-fascist, but I think the CWU have a point here – though not just the one being made in the story.

Staff are understandably trying to cut down voice strain, and for some non-native speakers, the phlegmy rasp that is their best approximation of the lilting tones of their fathers is apparently doing their vocal chords no good at all. As a keyboard jockey, my 6 months of RSI a while back were only a small glimpse at the huge problems that damaging your voice could have for people who speak for a living.

Dave Joyce, CWU H&S officer, said: “Call centre work can be very intense and target driven and workers spend a large proportion of their day on the telephone. Vale of Glamorgan council call centre staff undoubtedly have a justified case which deserves support.”

Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg, the Welsh Language Society, are protesting the decision, as going against the council’s obligations. A spokesperson said (presumably in translation): “The Vale of Glamorgan council has a Welsh language scheme, which requires them to deal bilingually with any correspondence with the public.”

Except, how much help precisely is a chirpy “Bore da” going to be when a Welsh speaker wants to order a new hywellybin? Everyone likes a friendly greeting, but people don’t tend to ring the council to just say hello in passing. If the call centre staffer can’t actually deal with the whole enquiry in Welsh, isn’t it just a little bit (a rare bit even) of window dressing, and probably more likely to annoy than help?

The council’s proposed solution, to include Welsh in the normal recorded greeting people hear, would seem to make sense – Hopefully though also employing more Welsh-speaking CWU members to deal with the Welsh questions, and giving people a chance to press 1 for English, 2 for Welsh.

Happy May Day

May 1st, 2007 by admin

Unite flags in Trafalgar Square

First outing for the Unite banners at the London May Day march - something tells me we’re going to be seeing a lot of these ;) Read the rest of this entry »

Logo-a-gogo

May 1st, 2007 by admin

UNITE logoSneak preview - Ooh! Isn’t that pretty? Very modern, but with the fluttering red flag / flames of protest merged in there too. Simple enough to resize small on the web or blow up large on a banner - only weakness might be small on black like it is in this snap.

The branding consultants have done them proud. I like - lots! Good luck to T&G & Amicus at the merger announcement later on today.

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