Saturday, October 24, 2009

Postal strike: union wary of Royal Mail tactics

Leader accuses company and government of 'cynical' plan to sideline union

The head of the postal workers' union today accused Royal Mail of having a "cynical" plan to sideline the industrial body in its protracted dispute over jobs and pay which has resulted in a planned national strike.

Billy Hayes, the general secretary of the Communication Workers Union (CWU), also said he hoped Lord Mandelson was not seeking "revenge" for his failure as business secretary to part-privatise the company.

The emergence of an internal document suggested Royal Mail bosses had full government support for implementing modernisation plans with or without the agreement of the CWU. The document came to light after the CWU announced two 24-hour nationwide strikes next week.

The Royal Mail strongly denied that senior managers had seen the document and said it had no plans to "derecognise" the union.

But Hayes repeated today that he believed the document was genuine, adding it was "more worrying" that Lord Mandelson seemed to know what was in it.

"I hope Peter Mandelson is not sitting there, thinking: 'This is my revenge because I could not persuade my parliamentary colleagues to part-privatise the Royal Mail'," Hayes said on BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

He said Lord Mandelson had ruled out the involvement of the industrial arbitration body Acas in trying to break the deadlock.

The union leader said it was "incredible" that the Royal Mail, and now the government, were not prepared to agree to the use of an independent conciliator.

"It seems like a cynical attempt to sideline the union."

A Royal Mail spokesman said of the document: "No member of the board or the senior management team at Royal Mail has seen, or is aware of any such presentation.

"Royal Mail's policy and strategy in relation to the current dispute with the CWU is to reach agreement so that the CWU calls off its damaging and irresponsible strikes.

"For the avoidance of any doubt, Royal Mail has never had any strategy to derecognise the CWU and nor would we seek to do so."

The first 24-hour strike will begin next Thursday, with mail centre staff and drivers walking out. Delivery and collection staff will strike the next day. Coming in the wake of a series of regional Royal Mail stoppages, the strikes will cause major delays to home and business deliveries.

Royal Mail's managing director, Mark Higson, said the CWU strike was an "appalling and unjustified attack" on customers and showed a "reckless disregard" for everyone who depended on the company.

Lord Mandelson branded the move "suicidal", adding: "I very much regret this decision by the CWU. Taking industrial action will not resolve this dispute. It will only serve to drive more customers away from Royal Mail. One thing this company cannot afford is strikes and industrial action.

"We are, of course, in frequent contact with both management and the union. Our message to them has been clear: put your customers first."


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