Trains on strike
Photograph: Toby Shepheard/Reuters
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Trains on strike
Photograph: Toby Shepheard/Reuters
Exclusive: walkout over pay due to take place before Christmas
Solidarity with nurses- they have been treated so poorly during the pandemic and more recently, they deserve everything.
Some top tier signs from the Art Gallery of Ontario strike:
Anyway help these lovely people get a fair deal by emailing the CEO Stephan Jost ([email protected]) and telling him that the gallery needs to negotiate with OPSEU and get the gallery to reopen!
Im currently waiting on 3 different parcels that were all ordered over a month ago.
The news just announced that Australians should brace for even bigger delivery delays, because a new batch of delivery workers have just gone on strike.
As someone who's waiting for three different parcels, one of which was ordered in September and due in early October........
Good.
They should strike. They should strike the shit out of their industry.
Delivery workers get treated like shit, they get paid like shit, and they're being worked harder than ever whilst their various employers see massively increased demand but choose to hoard the increased income rather than spending it on hiring more staff and giving their staff appropriate benefits and wages. Companies deliberately keep staff as casuals whilst employing them at full time hours, meaning workers have no job security and don't get any of the benefits they are entitled to.
The news highlighted the delays this is going to cause and spoke about how we've already had delays start kicking in because of increased volume and previous strikes, so its not hard to work out that the Murdoch-owned media is on the side of the companies who exploit their workers, but it pisses me off because I know their tactic will work.
People will hear the news about increased delays because of strikes and their response won't be "ugh, friggin money-grubbing companies holding everyone's Christmas shopping to ransom because they want to hoard money instead of paying their workers."
No, people will hear the news, spun in a decidedly anti-strike, anti-union tone, and they'll say, "ugh, friggin delivery workers delaying my Christmas. Suck it up and go back to work."
And thats the WRONG RESPONSE, FOLKS.
The right response is to support those striking. The right response is to get mad at the companies who refuse to treat their employees well, not get pissed at the employees who are standing up for themselves.
The right response is to chill the fuck out about your delayed packages. I'm nearly out of my preferred deodorant and I am out of my shampoo and conditioner (and my skin and hair is very picky, so I cant just buy some random off the shelf replacement), AND, one of the items is a gift that I need to have by a certain date. And I wholly support the strikers.
Over 4200 CSP members - employed by 30 NHS trusts across England - will be called to strike on 26 January
Physios do so much valuable work, and deserve fair pay. Solidarity to them.
Is 6.5% enough- Part II
This is a bit of a follow up to the post I wrote yesterday about the 6.5% rumoured pay offer for teachers. In that post, I alluded to the fact that pay isn’t the only issue, and whilst I do think pay has a significant impact on recruitment, I don’t think low pay is the main driver of people leaving teaching.
Most teachers don’t leave because of pay, although pay you can’t afford to live on doesn’t help, and many schools in expensive towns struggle to recruit more than those in cheaper parts of the same local authority. Most teachers leave because of “workload”.
But what is “workload”? Many schools have taken real strides to address the problem of workload in the last 5-10 years. They’ve got rid of bizarre, excessive marking policies. They’ve centralized planning, so you hopefully aren’t planning from scratch, at least up to KS4. There haven’t been major changes to the exam spec recently, so we aren’t having to rewrite all our schemes of work yet again. I know there are schools which are the exception to this, but they aren’t the norm any more.
That said, teachers are screwed by a part of our contract which states that we have to work enough hours to discharge the duties of our job. Legally, there’s no such thing as an unreasonable planning or marking load, even if there is a (theoretical) limit on the amount of time schools can have us in meetings or parents evenings.
In many schools, a part of “workload” is covering for absent colleagues. These could be unfilled roles within the school, or people who are off sick, or on a planned absence, such as maternity. It is very difficult to find a teacher to take on a maternity cover these days, let alone a temporary position that only lasts for, say, a term. There’s a shortage of supply teachers, as well.
This affects teachers in a few ways. One, physically “covering” the class, i.e. supervising them during a “non-contact”. But, the bigger, more insidious way, is that the remaining teachers in a department often have to take on the planning and marking for these classes. In a large department, split between several of you, it’s a killer. In smaller departments, it’s almost impossible. And often, it pushes other people over the edge into leaving, putting the school into a downwards spiral.
The worst, though, is when the school can’t make cover work that day, and so the remaining three or four teachers are sent to the hall or the library, to teach 5 or 6 classes at once. This is incredibly draining, and worse, you know the students are getting nothing out of it, so it’s putting your classes “behind” as well.
In many schools, this has been happening for at least the past few years, and, combined with covid, means you have classes entering Y11 and Y13 with major gaps. Because teachers care about their students (and because poor grades can sometimes prevent you progressing up the pay scale) teachers often run revision sessions for students after school. This is extra work, extra planning, often involves buying extra resources, and then all too soon becomes expected. Whereas in the past it might be revision or a club, it can become “revision and a club and targeted intervention”- taking up three hours a week. Technically, you can say no, so it’s not included in “directed time”, but saying no to these things is very hard.
There’s also issues around lack of “support staff”. Support staff aren’t just the teaching assistants, who do an amazing job. It’s also people like the absence officer, who chases up students who haven’t turned up to school and their parents haven’t given an explanation. Or perhaps pastoral support workers, who help students with challenging home lives. And many of the duties these people might have done get pushed on to teachers, who now, after their teaching day is over, may be ringing parents to find out why their child wasn’t in school. Senior leadership always told me this was a five minute job, but they weren’t the ones ringing home and finding out that this family had been evicted, or this parent had been a victim of domestic violence, or that a grandparent had unexpectedly died. And all these phone calls would then generate an hour or more’s work trying to find appropriate support for the student.
The truth is education isn’t the only service in this country that is crumbling. But it is the only one where we see young people day in and day out. Councils can cut youth workers. The NHS can extend waiting lists for everything from mental health support to autism diagnosis. Social services can raise the threshold at which they intervene or offer support. Or, even in a crisis, just say no-one is available, because they aren’t the ones with a crying child who’s got nowhere to go in their office.
But schools and therefore teachers have been forced to take all of this on. Schools run food banks, wash the clothes of children who don’t have enough electricity at home, try to sort out social problems like homelessness. Schools have brought counselling services in house (with all the problems that involves) and try to manage students with undiagnosed special educational needs as best as possible. All of this creates extra work for people, and it also creates extra stress- especially when it goes wrong.
If we want schools to do all of this, and in some ways, it might make sense to make a school or college a one stop shop for all the needs young people might have- then it needs to be funded. It needs to be appropriately staffed. Because trying to be teacher and social worker and counsellor to young people is breaking a lot of teachers, and soon there will be no-one left, no matter how high the pay is.
Teacher members have voted YES to formal ballot strike action on pay in preliminary ballot.
BREAKING: Indicative ballot- 62% turnout, 86% in favour of strike action.
Unless there is a firm commitment to a FULLY FUNDED pay rise soon, the next step is a formal ballot, which based on these numbers, the union would win.