bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 21, 2023 13:11:39 GMT
Royal Mail pay offer accepted by Communication Workers Union leaders...By Jemma Dempseyichef.bbci.co.uk/news/240/cpsprodpb/7637/production/_129436203_royalmail_gettyimages-1021694036.jpgPostal workers are being recommended to accept a new pay deal that would end the long-running dispute with the Royal Mail. If members of the Communication Workers Union (CWU) accept a 10% pay rise over three years it will signal an end to the row over jobs and conditions which led to a series of walkouts last year. Union members will be balloted on the offer in the coming weeks. Both the Royal Mail and the CWU said it was a "good" deal. Royal Mail said the agreement included a 10% salary increase and a one-off lump sum of £500. This includes a previous 2% pay rise from April 2022, a consolidated 6% pay rise from April 2023 and a 2% increase next April. Royal Mail's parent company, International Distributions Services, said if the deal was approved by the CWU membership it would represent a "good outcome for customers, employees and shareholders". Dave Ward, the general secretary of the CWU, said: ''We are completely satisfied that if people look at this agreement in the context of the magnitude of this dispute they will see this as a good agreement that will stand the test of time.'' The agreement also includes a commitment to no compulsory redundancies and covers later start times, changes to sick pay, attendance standards, ill health retirement and revised contracts for new starters. New employees will also be required to regularly work on Sundays. Around 115,000 CWU members working for Royal Mail have been in dispute over pay since the spring of 2022. The CWU said the offer made last year was not enough, with workers being squeezed by inflation and the cost of living crisis. The union also objected to proposed changes to working conditions. Royal Mail workers staged a series of walkouts last year, including in the lead-up to Christmas. Earlier this month, Royal Mail said a return to industrial action could result in the postal service going into administration. It said the strikes had cost the company £200m in lost business and in covering striking staff.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 21, 2023 18:02:13 GMT
Court may need to decide if nurses' strike is legal..
NHS leaders have written to the health secretary asking him to check with the courts if the next nurses' strike in England is legal.
The Royal College of Nursing is planning a 48-hour walkout starting at 20:00 BST on Sunday 30 April.
NHS Employers says it has received legal advice that the timing of the industrial action would be unlawful.
The RCN disagrees, saying the strike falls within the required six-month period from when votes were cast.
If the RCN is wrong, the whole strike may need to be called off.
NHS Employers says it believes ballots closed at midday on 2 November 2022, meaning action on 2 May - the last day of the planned strike - would not be covered by the strike mandate.
In his letter to health secretary Steve Barclay, NHS Employers Danny Mortimer said: "The advice that we have received makes clear it is highly likely that if the notices for industrial actions are incorrect in one respect, then they are incorrect in total and that the strike action for the entire period of 30th April to 2nd May is illegal."
RCN General Secretary and Chief Executive Pat Cullen warned that "bullying" nurses and dragging them through the highest courts "would not be a good look" for government.
"It would show utter contempt for nursing staff. We will make the case for the legality of our action in all forums."
The BBC has approached the Department for Health and Social Care for comment.
The planned walkout from 20:00 BST on 30 April to 20:00 on 2 May will involve NHS nurses in emergency departments, intensive care, cancer wards and other wards.
Nurses have already walked out twice this year - on 6 and 7 February and on 18 and 19 January - but on those dates there were exemptions, so that nursing cover was maintained in critical areas.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 27, 2023 20:10:16 GMT
Nurses' strike in England to be cut short after court ruling..By Nick Triggle and Sophie Hutchinson.ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640x360/p0fk3ghv.jpgA 48-hour strike by nurses in England over the Bank Holiday weekend will be cut short by a day after a High Court judge ruled it was partly unlawful. The walkout in a row over pay by the Royal College of Nursing, due to start on Sunday, will now end on Monday. RCN chief Pat Cullen said this was "the darkest day" of the dispute so far and the government needed to negotiate. Downing Street said it was "regrettable" the government had to go to court and it had tried to avoid it. The judge ruled the RCN's six-month mandate for strike action would have lapsed by Tuesday. Health Secretary Steve Barclay took legal action after NHS Employers said the last day of the planned strike was not covered by the mandate as the ballots closed on 2 November at midday. The judge Mr Justice Linden ordered the RCN to pay the costs of the hearing, saying the union had showed "a high degree of unreasonableness", the outcome was "inevitable" and "instead of grasping the nettle and conceding" it had forced the case to court. After the hearing, the RCN's general secretary Ms Cullen said: "They [the government] have won their legal battle today. But what this has led to is they have lost nursing and they've lost the public. "They've taken the most trusted profession through the courts, by the least trusted people." She levelled her criticism at Mr Barclay and the government for clapping for nurses only to leave the NHS to "crumble" and said they should be negotiating with nurses rather than taking them to court. She said it was with a "heavy heart" that strike action could continue in the lead-up to Christmas, adding: "If Steve Barclay continues to stay in the tunnel that he's in, we will end up with strike action for the next six months because nursing staff are not going to step back now." Mr Barclay said: "I firmly support the right to take industrial action within the law - but the government could not stand by and let plainly unlawful strike action go ahead. "Both the NHS and my team tried to resolve this without resorting to legal action." 'Patients at risk'The strike was called earlier this month after RCN members rejected a government offer for England of a 5% pay rise for 2023-24 and a one-off payment of at least £1,655 to top up last year's salary, depending on staff grade. The union announced its members had rejected the offer by 54% to 46%. The walkout will involve NHS nurses in emergency departments, intensive care, cancer wards and other wards. Nurses have already walked out twice this year - on 6th and 7th February and on 18th and 19th January - but on those dates there were exemptions, so nursing cover was maintained in critical areas. The government has said strike action with no national exemptions would put patients at risk. The RCN has said it would ballot members for further strike action once its current mandate expires. Other unions are also consulting members on the pay deal, which is being offered to all NHS staff, other than doctors and very senior managers. Shortly after the High Court judgement the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy announced its members had accepted the deal by 65% to 35%. The biggest health union, Unison, has also backed the deal, as has the midwives' union. But the union representing radiographers has rejected along with the Royal College of Podiatry. All the health unions will meet with ministers on Tuesday to reveal whether a majority of staff back the Agenda for Change pay deal.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jun 14, 2023 7:35:10 GMT
Hot weather adds to NHS pressure as doctors strike..By Nick Triggle and Katharine Da Costa, BBC News.ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/240/cpsprodpb/D5D2/production/_130083745_tunicpa.jpgHealth bosses are warning of major disruption and pressure on the NHS in England, as the hot weather combines with the latest junior doctor strike. British Medical Association members will walk out for 72 hours from 07:00 on Wednesday. It is the third strike in the pay dispute and is expected to lead to the cancellation of much routine care. And with the heat placing extra demands on A&E units, bosses urged people to use services sensibly. Junior doctors, nearly half the medical workforce, will walk out of both routine and emergency care. NHS England said the health service would have to prioritise emergency and life-saving care. The hot weather was already causing high demand for urgent services - and people should avoid the sun at the hottest time of day and drink plenty of fluids. Alongside heat-stroke, hot weather also brings an increase in heart failure and kidney problems as well as high rates of sprains and fractures and respiratory problems. Consultants are being drafted in to provide cover during the strike but the amount could be lower than during previous junior doctors' strikes, in March and April. Rory Deighton, of the NHS Confederation, which represents health bosses, said a particular challenge this time was "securing the level of consultant cover" - because of the amount consultants were asking for overtime payments - creating uncertainty over how many appointments would need to be postponed. The four-day April walkout saw about 196,000 hospital appointments and treatments postponed. And the hospital waiting list, growing since the start of the pandemic, has now hit a record 7.4 million people. "Each wave of strikes chips away at the NHS's resilience, impacting on staff, internal relationships and their ability to deliver on government pledges to reduce the elective backlog," Mr Deighton said.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jul 5, 2023 7:51:38 GMT
Train firms plan mass closures of ticket offices..Train companies are planning to press ahead with mass closures of ticket offices across England. Industry bosses are expected to confirm a public consultation on the gradual closures of hundreds of ticket kiosks over the next three years on Wednesday. Some will remain in large stations, but elsewhere staff will be on concourses to sell tickets, offer travel advice and help people with accessibility. Rail unions are opposed to the plans and have warned of further strikes. About three out of every five stations has a ticket office. The move to begin a consultation on the future of ticket offices has been made by the Rail Delivery Group (RDG), which represents train companies, after talks with the RMT union failed to reach an agreement. The industry body has said only 12% of tickets are currently sold at station kiosks on average, compared with 85% in 1995, with passengers now buying more tickets online or at machines. It argues that its changes will enable staff to come out from behind the glass of station offices and be free to help more passengers. A small number of stations already operate under the new model. "The industry has always been open and honest about the need for the railway to evolve with its customers so it can better meet their needs, and secure a thriving long-term future for an economically vital service," an RDG spokesperson said. But Mick Lynch, general secretary of the UK's largest rail union, the RMT, has previously said his union would not "meekly sit by and allow thousands of jobs to be sacrificed or see disabled and vulnerable passengers left unable to use the railways as a result". Peter Pendle, interim general secretary of the TSSA rail union, said the government would "soon realise that the public have no desire to see their rail network diminished in this way". Some disability campaigners have also long opposed the idea, arguing it would hinder accessibility. ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/240/cpsprodpb/BD04/production/_130288384_train-index-getty.jpg'Mind-bogglingly complicated'Stewart Palmer is director of Rail Future, which represents passengers and campaigns for better rail services, and is a former managing director South West Trains. He said the consultation was "putting the cart before the horse". "One of the root causes of this issue is that the present ticketing system on the rail network in Britain is mind-bogglingly complicated," he told the BBC's Today programme. "People want versatile, knowledgeable staff, not necessarily behind a glass screen, but they also want to be knowing they're buying the right product at the right price." Mr Palmer, who has 38 years experience on the railways, said whatever the outcome of the consultation it was important that a commitment to customer service was "hardwired" into rail operators' contracts for years to come and that this was "policed and enforced". The issue is the latest flashpoint between train companies and unions, who have been in a long-running dispute over pay, jobs and working conditions, which has resulted in several strikes in recent years. The rail industry is under pressure from the government to cut costs after being supported heavily during the Covid pandemic.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jul 5, 2023 7:54:43 GMT
Teachers' strikes: School disruption as NEU members walk out again in England..By Hazel Shearing, Education correspondent.
Many schools in England are likely to close on Wednesday, as teachers walk out again over pay.
It is the sixth national strike by members of the National Education Union (NEU) in England since February - and another is planned for Friday.
As well as lessons, end-of-term events such as sports day, concerts and school trips could be disrupted.
And with more strike ballots taking place, schools are bracing for further disruption in the new school year.
It has been more than five months since teachers first took to the picket lines in woolly hats, clutching takeaway coffees between gloved hands.
They received a 5% rise for the year 2022-23.
This time they are calling for above-inflation increases, plus additional money to ensure any pay rises do not come from schools' existing budgets.
The weather may have improved since that first strike on 1 February, but relations between the two sides in this dispute remain as frosty as ever.
There are no talks under way between the unions and the Department for Education (DfE), and there is no obvious resolution in sight.
There have been crunch points in recent months.
After intensive talks in March, the government offered teachers an additional one-off payment of £1,000. It also offered a 4.3% pay rise for most teachers next year - with starting salaries reaching £30,000.
The NEU, and three other unions involved in the dispute, rejected the offer - which means the one-off payment is now off the table.
As schools returned for the summer term, all four announced they would join forces to co-ordinate any future strike action.
More strikes have taken place since then.
The most recent walkout, on 2nd May, affected more schools than previously - with less than half, only 45.3%, able to fully open.
Some teenagers we spoke to at the time were worried revision classes would be affected, as they prepared for exams. The NEU has said it did everything it could to make sure school was as normal as possible for those year groups taking examinations this summer.
Two things will determine what happens next.
The first is the announcement of how much teachers will be paid next year. The matter has been considered by the independent pay review body, and its recommendations are currently being appraised by the government.
We don't know when any announcement will be made on pay. If previous years are anything to go by, we can expect it to come in late July, as children prepare to break up for the summer holidays.
The other thing to watch will be the results of strike ballots, which are currently under way in all four unions.
It is the second time that members of the NEU, teachers' union NASUWT and the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) have been asked whether they would be prepared to strike over pay. Last time, only the NEU received enough votes for industrial action to go ahead.
In addition, the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) - another head teachers' union - is also balloting members, for the first time in its 150-year history. Head teachers have told the BBC, they are concerned about the effect pay has on recruitment and retention of staff.
With those ballots set to close in mid-to-late July, we could see a flurry of activity in the coming weeks.
Online tool Teacher Tapp quizzes thousands of primary and secondary teachers, in both the state and private sector, about their daily experiences in the classroom. One recent survey suggested almost four-in-10 Year 6 students had visits to their new secondary schools booked on strike days this week.
These could well be disrupted.
And if enough union members vote for further strike action, those same pupils could see their new Year 7 teachers walk out in the autumn term too.
Dr Mary Bousted, joint general secretary of the NEU, said Education Secretary Gillian Keegan's "refusal to re-enter negotiations" had "united the teaching profession in its anger towards a government that is failing to recognise the serious challenges that need to be addressed in our education system".
The DfE has not yet responded to a request for comment, but has previously said its pay offer was a "fair and reasonable offer" and schools would receive an extra £2.3bn over the next two years.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jul 11, 2023 19:08:02 GMT
Royal Mail workers end long-running row over pay..i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article28579340.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/1_Royal-Mail-strike.jpgPostal workers have accepted a deal to end a long-running row over pay and conditions, a union has said. It comes after some 115,000 workers held 18 days of strikes last year, causing postal delays across the UK. The Communication Workers Union (CWU) said that workers "overwhelmingly" backed the deal but warned anger at the firm "doesn't end with today's result". Royal Mail, which lost millions of pounds through the strikes, said the deal would help it to stabilise. "The agreement provides Royal Mail a platform for the next phase of stabilising the business whilst continuing to drive efficiencies and change," a spokesman for Royal Mail said. "The three-year pay deal agreed provides certainty for employees and ensures Royal Mail remains the industry leader on pay, terms and conditions." The CWU said the agreement was backed by 75% of voting members. Royal Mail said that the three-year agreement includes a 10% salary increase, some of which was given in 2022, and a one-off lump sum of £500 for CWU members working for Royal Mail and Parcelforce. Median pay at Royal Mail is £32,465 a year, and the average pay for a postal delivery worker is £25,777. The company said the deal also includes a commitment to no compulsory redundancies during its duration. CWC general secretary Dave Ward said the dispute had been the "most challenging period in both the history of the union and the company". He added that the result will be the "start of the union reconnecting in every workplace". "We all know what is going on in workplaces across the UK and we are going to deal with it", he said. Several industries across the UK have experienced strikes in recent times as workers seek pay rises in line with the soaring cost of living. Walkouts have also taken place in sectors such as the railways, nursing, the civil service and Border Force. Royal Mail has previously said it is moving from its traditional business of delivering letters - which is no longer profitable - to the fast-growing world of parcel deliveries, driven by the increasing popularity of online shopping. But the company faces fierce competition from other couriers and in February it claimed it was losing about £1m a day.
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oldie
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Post by oldie on Jul 11, 2023 19:20:52 GMT
Imagine All the crap in this world, we then are antagonised by a pay disputed.
Small minds and all that
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Aug 26, 2023 8:35:00 GMT
Rail services across England hit as 20,000 staff begin strike..i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2022/06/07/18/58797603-10893537-Rail_strike_is_just_the_latest_disruption_to_hit_travelling_Brit-a-44_1654623569369.jpgRail passengers across England face disruption on Saturday (26.08.23) as 20,000 staff begin a strike over pay and working conditions. The action comes the same day as events including the Notting Hill Carnival and Reading and Leeds festivals. Mick Lynch, head of the RMT union, said the strikes would continue until a new settlement for workers was reached. i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2022/06/07/18/58784955-10893537-Pictured_Mick_Lynch_boss_of_RMT_union_which_is_planning_a_wave_o-a-39_1654623569364.jpgMick lynchThe Department for Transport said the government had made "fair and reasonable pay offers". Workers from 14 train operators are taking part in Saturday's strike, which is its 24th since last summer. The action will see a reduced timetable in place in much of England, with some journeys into Scotland and Wales also affected. Around half the usual train services will run and in many areas they will start late and finish much earlier than usual. i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/08/25/12/70896873-12445153-Platforms_at_London_Paddington_were_empty_on_Friday_12_May_as_As-a-13_1692962782555.jpgFurther action is planned for 2nd September, while member of the train drivers union, Aslef, are set to walk out on 1st September. As well as a new pay deal, the RMT is demanding an end to job losses resulting from the closure of hundreds of ticket offices. Speaking to the BBC, Mr Lynch said that "there will be more strikes if there's no change". "Our members don't want to be on strike," he said. "But they understand that if they want to defend our service against all these mass closures…, if they want job security and decent conditions, they are going to have to campaign and fight for those things. So our members remain determined." "We are fully prepared to see this through until we get an agreement." Earlier this year, the Rail Delivery Group (RDG), which represents the train operators, made an offer that would have seen rail workers receive a backdated pay rise of 5% for 2022. A further pay rise for 2023 would then have been conditional on reforms to services. On 5th May, RMT members voted to extend the strike mandate for another six months. The rail industry was badly impacted by the pandemic, and industry figures have argued changes to ways of working will be necessary in order to finance any pay rise. Ahead of Saturday's strike, the RDG said the action had been "designed to deliberately target passengers who want to enjoy various sporting events, festivals, and the end of the summer holidays". A Department for Transport spokesperson said: "The government has played its part to try and end these disputes by facilitating fair and reasonable pay offers, but union leaders refuse to allow their members to vote on them. "By cynically targeting the bank holiday weekend, and driving more passengers away from train travel when our railways are already losing £10m a day even without industrial action, the RMT's strikes are damaging its own industry's future."
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Sept 20, 2023 14:36:01 GMT
Doctor paid £3,000 for shift as new strike begins..By Nick Triggle and Rob Sissons, BBC News.i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30980712.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_24000-NHS-Hospital-Consultants-Commence-Three-day-Strike.jpgThe NHS is having to pay millions of pounds to plug holes in front-line staffing left by striking doctors. In one case, a consultant in Plymouth was paid more than £3,000 to cover a 12.5-hour junior-doctor night shift. Paying for cover is costing hospitals three times more than they save in the wages deducted from striking junior doctors, hospitals are reporting. The finding comes as junior doctors in England walk out again, joining consultants already on strike. It is the first time junior and senior doctors have been on strike at the same time - action that looks set to cause significant disruption. For full details on this item follow the link:www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66861960
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Post by Nobbygas on Sept 20, 2023 14:39:53 GMT
Doctor paid £3,000 for shift as new strike begins..By Nick Triggle and Rob Sissons, BBC News.The NHS is having to pay millions of pounds to plug holes in front-line staffing left by striking doctors. In one case, a consultant in Plymouth was paid more than £3,000 to cover a 12.5-hour junior-doctor night shift. Paying for cover is costing hospitals three times more than they save in the wages deducted from striking junior doctors, hospitals are reporting. The finding comes as junior doctors in England walk out again, joining consultants already on strike. It is the first time junior and senior doctors have been on strike at the same time - action that looks set to cause significant disruption. For full details on this item follow the link:www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66861960 You are aware that striking Doctor's are signing up with the Agency's, then working but being paid a shed load more to do their normal job, which is just heaping extortionate costs onto the NHS!
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Sept 20, 2023 14:54:09 GMT
Doctor paid £3,000 for shift as new strike begins..By Nick Triggle and Rob Sissons, BBC News.The NHS is having to pay millions of pounds to plug holes in front-line staffing left by striking doctors. In one case, a consultant in Plymouth was paid more than £3,000 to cover a 12.5-hour junior-doctor night shift. Paying for cover is costing hospitals three times more than they save in the wages deducted from striking junior doctors, hospitals are reporting. The finding comes as junior doctors in England walk out again, joining consultants already on strike. It is the first time junior and senior doctors have been on strike at the same time - action that looks set to cause significant disruption. For full details on this item follow the link:www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66861960 You are aware that striking Doctor's are signing up with the Agency's, then working but being paid a shed load more to do their normal job, which is just heaping extortionate costs onto the NHS! Yes, But can you really blame them ?.. Deputy chief executive Saffron Cordery said: "We need government and unions to sit down and talk to stop strikes becoming business as usual,".. And The BMA say the rates reflect the "market value"... A spokeswoman said: "The rate card has been developed to address the fact that for too long trusts have been continually leaning on consultants to work many extra hours in excess of their normal contracts, not just during strike days but in the face of rota gaps and chronic workforce shortages. "Crucially, the principle is to ensure that NHS trusts adopt a fairer and more consistent approach with rates based on those already being offered in parts of the country to reflect the market value of doctors' work." The union also pointed out the estimated £1bn cost would have been enough to fund for this year the 35% pay rise junior doctors are after.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Sept 25, 2023 19:06:05 GMT
NHS strikes: More than a million appointments cancelled in England..By Nick Triggle and Elena Bailey, BBC News.
More than one million NHS treatments and appointments have been cancelled in England due to strike action by staff.
All the details at the link below:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66918525
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jan 7, 2024 19:15:42 GMT
London Tube strikes called off as more pay talks planned..By Liz Jackson & PA News, BBC News.upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/Underground.svg/150px-Underground.svg.pngupload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c5/Farringdon_station_MMB_22_S-Stock.jpg/225px-Farringdon_station_MMB_22_S-Stock.jpgStrikes by London Underground workers which would have crippled Tube services this week have been suspended, the RMT union has announced. Little or no service was expected across the capital's entire network from Sunday evening to Friday morning. Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union had previously voted to take industrial action over a below-inflation pay increase of 5%. The union said "positive discussions" meant further talks could take place. The 5% offer was described by Transport for London (TfL) as "the most we can afford". But it said an "intervention" by London's mayor had allowed pay talks to be reopened. The RMT's general secretary Mick Lynch said: "Following further positive discussions today, the negotiations on a pay deal for our London Underground members can now take place on an improved basis and mandate with significant further funding for a settlement being made available." He described it as a "significantly improved funding position" which meant scheduled strike action would be suspended "with immediate effect". "We look forward to getting in to urgent negotiations with TfL in order to develop a suitable agreement and resolution to the dispute," he added. TfL said as the strike had been suspended so late there would still be some disruption on Monday. It advised people to check for the latest travel information. London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was "delighted" the industrial action had been called off.
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ltdgas
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Post by ltdgas on Jan 8, 2024 5:05:26 GMT
As someone who’s been under nhs for last 3 years for various illnesses I’ve not had 1 appointment cancelled , are these 1 million appointments urgent , I thought they had to see you within a 2 week window if urgent , that’s certainly how it’s been with me
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jan 24, 2024 9:15:29 GMT
Royal Mail could deliver on three days, regulator says..By Michael Race..Business reporter, BBC News.i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/01/20/11/80253087-12986203-image-m-31_1705751225210.jpgRoyal Mail could reduce the number of days it delivers letters from six per week to five or even three, under proposals to reform the service. A report from the regulator said the postal service was "getting out of date" and action needed to be taken. Ofcom said another option would be extending the number of days it takes for most letters to be delivered. Royal Mail said its current delivery network was "not sustainable" and that reform was "urgently needed". The company, which was privatised between 2013 and 2015, is legally obliged to deliver a universal service, which means it currently has to deliver letters six days per week, Monday to Saturday, and parcels Monday to Friday. But in recent years, the volume of letters being posted has plummeted, with half the number being sent compared to 2011 levels, while parcel deliveries have become more popular - and more profitable. Dame Melanie Dawes, Ofcom's chief executive, said the options for reform were being put out for "national discussion", with an update scheduled for the summer. "Something's got to give, or the service is going to be too costly and either stamp prices will go up or it will become unsustainable," she told BBC Breakfast. The government said earlier this week that it would not support Royal Mail scrapping postal deliveries on Saturdays, with the prime minister's spokesman arguing they were "important for businesses and particularly publishers". Ofcom estimated the company could save between £100m and £200m if delivery days were cut to five per week, and between £400m and £650m if there were just three postal days. i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2024/01/20/11/80253083-12986203-image-a-1_1705751995546.jpgHowever, reforming the postal service by cutting delivery days would require the government and parliament to change the current legislation. An alternative option would be to to reduce the speed of delivery for most letters to within three days would save £150 to £650m, Ofcom said, but the regulator said there would still need to be a next-day service available for any urgent letters. Under Ofcom's current rules, each year Royal Mail is required to deliver 93% of First Class post within one working day and 98.5% of Second Class within three working days, but in 2022/23 the company only delivered 73.7% of First Class and 90.7% of Second Class mail on time. In the first half of the current financial year, Royal Mail posted a £319m loss and the business, which is owned by International Distribution Services plc, has been calling for urgent reform since 2020. It has said previously that it would like to go from delivering six days a week to five, from Monday to Friday only. Martin Seidenberg, Royal Mail's group chief executive, suggested the UK was "being left behind" in having not yet reformed its postal service, adding that the company had been "calling on government and Ofcom to tackle this issue for four years". "The lack of action means that we are now facing a much more serious situation," he said. But the Communication Workers Union (CWU), which represent posties, said the union would not sign up to a three-day delivery service, claiming it would "destroy" Royal Mail and "impact thousands of jobs". Ofcom said Royal Mail's recent poor performance, which led to the company being fined £5.6m in November last year for missing delivery targets, showed that "people are not currently getting a reliable service". The regulator said its research, conducted in 2020, showed people valued affordability and reliability the most when it came to letter postage.
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oldie
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Posts: 7,516
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Post by oldie on Jan 24, 2024 13:58:40 GMT
Of course none of us could have read that, without you copying and pasting it to this forum without comment or opinion. And before you revert to your Dick Emery Act "Oh Les.....: giphy.com/explore/you-are-awful
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Post by lostinspace on Jan 24, 2024 14:04:33 GMT
Of course none of us could have read that, without you copying and pasting it to this forum without comment or opinion. And before you revert to your Dick Emery Act "Oh Les.....: giphy.com/explore/you-are-awfulYou are such a bore.....why bother reading if you already know what it consists of..just gives you something to grizzle at..time for your Farley's Rusk I think..
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trymer
Joined: November 2018
Posts: 2,543
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Post by trymer on Jan 24, 2024 14:46:54 GMT
Of course none of us could have read that, without you copying and pasting it to this forum without comment or opinion. And before you revert to your Dick Emery Act "Oh Les.....: giphy.com/explore/you-are-awfulYou are such a bore.....why bother reading if you already know what it consists of..just gives you something to grizzle at..time for your Farley's Rusk I think.. I am sure that he would like people to send every post that they want to make to him and he can approve them, seems to think that he is so important.....supposed to have been in USA for 3 weeks I didnt notice him making less posts (unfortunately) sad behaviour.
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bluetornados
Predictions League
Joined: June 2014
Posts: 15,742
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Post by bluetornados on Jan 24, 2024 15:04:11 GMT
Of course none of us could have read that, without you copying and pasting it to this forum without comment or opinion. And before you revert to your Dick Emery Act "Oh Les.....: giphy.com/explore/you-are-awfulOh Les, Oh Les, you really are awful, but i like you, your predictability in vetting our posts has now become amusing, well, to me at least... Les, i am sure you do have many good and pleasant qualities, it really is a waste not to use said qualities more often, give it a go Les, go on... BTW Les, i really enjoyed the film Zulu the other day, it's one of my big go to favourites, along with my milk and cookies...G'day sport...
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