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Feature:
Friday July 22 2005
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LOW PAY NO WAY! MPs
support cleaners strike
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OUR battle will go on until we get justice for our
people, said the Transport and General Workers Union
(TGWU) General Secretary Tony Woodley on the picket line outside
parliament on Wednesday.
He was addressing the press as TGWU members who clean parliament
staged their first ever strike against poverty pay.
Low pay no way! the cleaners chanted outside the
entrance to the House of Commons, where they were joined by
more than 60 MPs who came out to show their support for the
strike.
Over 140 TGWU members took part in Wednesdays strike
after a ballot returned a 100 per cent vote for action.
The strikers said: £5 an hour is not acceptable.
No sickness pay, no pensions, is totally unacceptable.
Woodley condemned MPs and peers for not acting to make sure
the cleaners get their demand of a minimum wage of £6.70
an hour.
He said: It is nothing short of a disgrace.
I dont know how MPs can raise their heads when
they walk past these workers today.
One of the strikers, TGWU member Philip Tia, a nightshift
supervisor, told News Line: We have been waiting a long
time for this day to show everybody, especially the MPs, how
the workers, the contractors, have been treated in the House
of Commons and the House of Lords, throughout parliament.
We work in the night for a wage of £5 an hour.
Weve no sick pay, only two weeks holiday
a year, no pension.
Jose Vallejo, a TGWU organiser, said: The importance
of the campaign is the four points: first: to get a minimum
wage of £6.70 an hour; second: 28 days of holidays;
third: sick pay, and fourth: to get a pension.
But the most important part of this campaign is to get
respect from the company for the cleaners. The company is
MITIE.
We hope the MPs will make sure that we get our demands.
Tony Woodley told News Line: MPs should treat working
men and women with dignity and respect and pay a decent living
wage and make poverty history in the House of Commons.
If they treated the cleaners the way they treat themselves,
and paid them accordingly, then we wouldnt have to be
here today.
Its a disgrace we have to go to these lengths,
he said.
Labour MP Dennis Skinner said: The problem is privatisation.
Everybody should be employed by the House authorities,
with everybody being paid the same.
In their Manifesto the striking cleaners pointed out that
Cleaners or Housekeepers directly employed by the House
of Lords start at £7.89 per hour, and move after one
years service to £8.08 an hour.
Those same Housekeepers enjoy 30 days holiday a year,
in addition to the Public Statutory days, up to twelve months
paid sick absence and membership of the House of Lords Staff
Pension Scheme.
TGWU Deputy-General Secretary Jack Dromey said: Parliament
has washed its hands of responsibility and the cleaners have
had enough.
Their message is absolutely clear: they want justice
and if they dont get justice, they will strike again
and again.
If there is no justice, MPs will have to get used to
cleaning their own offices, toilets and building, because
there wont be cleaners there to do the job for them.
Dromey told News Line: MITIE is sub-contracted by the
Houses of Parliament Authorities.
Parliament must now revise these contracts so the contractors
can pay the cleaners a living wage.
Parliaments the problem here. It has got to put
more money into that contract.
Labour MP Harry Cohen told News Line: Immediately there
should be proper wages and a change of the conditions.
I have been to visit where the staff have to hang out
and its outrageous, such a place would have been closed
down under health and safety anywhere else. Parliament has
got Crown immunity.
He continued: Theres got to be proper accommodation
so the cleaners can work to a high standard in decent conditions.
But beyond that, they should get a living wage.
Ken Livingstone has said that a proper wage on which
workers can live in London would start at £6.70 an hour.
These workers who do a fantastic job for parliament
should be receiving that, at least.
I fully support their strike.
Cohen said that MPs can lean on the House Authorities
about the accommodation issue.
Ive spoken to Frank Doran, chair of the administration
committee, and he himself is saying the accommodation has
to change.
The pay issue is between the contractor and the employees,
but it is the House that runs the contract.
It would be better if the contract was brought back
in-house and that would put it back into the hands of the
administration committee and the faceless officials would
have to answer to the MPs, and through them to parliament,
over how they treat their staff.
Cohen said that the Parliamentary Labour Party should be supporting
the cleaners strike.
Another striking TGWU member, Edward Hill, told News Line:
I work on a compactor and a bottle stall inside parliament,
taking away rubbish and empty bottles, and I get paid about
£5.00 an hour.
Its not enough to live on in London.
There is rent, rates, gas, electric and shopping to
pay for.
At the moment our campaign is going quite well.
We are going to get a raise but I still say we need
a pension.
Everybody needs a pension when they retire.
He added: £6.70 an hour is the minimum were
demanding. I think we are worth more, the amount of work we
do here.
I start at six in the morning and finish at two in the
afternoon.
Ive worked here for four and a half years.
Some people are treated differently because they are
employed directly by parliament.
We should all be given a decent wage.
Robert Dumbuya, a TGWU steward, also said: Its
very hard for us on £5 an hour because prices are rising
on most essential items transport, food, Congestion
Charge everything is up.
Parking, electricity is up, gas is up, Council Tax is
up, rent is up while were living on the same
wage.
One of the strikers said: The most annoying thing for
us is that we are working in the House of Commons, the most
rich and privileged place in the world, and our pay doesnt
reflect that.
He added: There are two contractors, MITIE and Emprise.
It would be a good idea if we were all employed by the
parliament authorities.
We think if we were employed by the House, we would
have more rights, like six weeks holiday for example,
whereas we are only allowed 12 days.
Another striker, Yaa Adu Gyamfi, a TGWU member who has worked
at parliament for three years, said: When people ask
us where we work and we tell them the Houses of Parliament,
they assume we get good money, proper holidays and proper
facilities and rights, but as a matter of fact we are no better
off than someone who works in a corner shop.
We thank MPs for coming out to show support. We are
waiting for something to be done, some action.
TGWU member Ainslee Richard said the cleaners were prepared
to strike again if they dont get a minimum wage of £6.70
an hour.
Meanwhile, the TGWU said over 250 MPs and peers had expressed
support for the cleaners campaign.
An Early Day Motion tabled by Dewsbury Labour MP, Shahid Malik,
has been signed by 129 MPs, urging the parliamentary authorities
to reach agreement with the two contractors on making
available the necessary resources to ensure that cleaners
earn the London living wage.
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