Deal or no Deal?

First there was the Bible.

Then there was War and Peace.

Now there is the “Business Transformation 2010 and Beyond” agreement weighing in at a massive 80 pages. And what a deal it is!

The media are billing it as a victory for the union with posties getting “paid more for working less”. The Mirror says Royal Mail has been forced to offer rises worth up to £5000 per postie as “the price of peace”. The Daily Mail even frothed at the mouth that “militants finally pushed a supine Royal Mail into a disgracefully over-generous pay deal.”

This is the line of our leaders too, as Dave Ward and the negotiating team have finally rematerialised after 4 months calling the deal “a major step forward for the Union and its membership.” Even Royal Mail and Adam “the Axe” Crozier are hailing the deal, calling it “good for the business” – which is exactly what should make posties suspicious and start reading through the small print.

Pay rise…sweated out of us

Lump sums of up to £1000…if your office makes all the cuts required!

A 6.9% pay rise staged over three years, but while the cuts are up front, the carrot is dangled pretty far into the future: 2% this year, 1.4% next and then over half of it (3.5%) three years from now. A gambler wouldn’t put odds on ever seeing that money.

Deliveries will be screwed, with door to door put into ordinary workload and the limit on three per week lifted. Pay will rise by £20 to compensate – but Early shift allowance (£12) is to be cut so that’s £8 net. You can make up to 5 times that delivering on D2D today. Part-timers will be doubly screwed since they deliver the whole lot but get the payment pro-rata. Weight on delivery will skyrocket. This is a massive gift to Royal Mail. No wonder they love this deal!

There will be no rest for the wicked however. After we won the right to a weekend a few years back (or at least one-and-a-half of one by finishing early on Saturdays) Saturdays are slated to become a normal working day. So much for Royal Mail’s family-friendly policy, just say goodbye to your kids, football team, etc.

The consolation prize is one hour off the working week, down to 39 hours. In many offices the managers will just pressure everyone do 40 hours work in 39. The deal also opens the door to extending delivery times.

Not so much a groundbreaking agreement as back-breaking.

Cuts cuts baby

Members in mail centres will have better terms for transport, moving etc if their mail centre closes, but the agreement opens the door to up to half closing – outright surrender by CWU tops.

Royal Mail promises to keep 75% of jobs fulltime but like the 3.5% pay hike in three years, there is nothing really that gaurantees this.

Throw it out

Lots of cuts and workload hikes up front…with lots of jam tomorrow, if your the type that trusts Royal Mail millionaire bosses.

There are a few other benefits – on maternity and paternity pay – but these are minor and the pages of promises about consultation and union ‘involvement” are just thrown in to make CWU bureaucrats happy, they don’t really hold the company to anything.

The CWU states that the PEC ‘overwhelmingly” supported the deal, Royal Mail says the CWU leadership “unanimously” supports it. A poll on Royal Mail Chat shows posties saying they will vote no outstripping yes votes by 403 to 69. Let’s hope that reps and activists mobilise and get the same result in the ballot.

A deal in sight – kiss your weekend goodbye?

Remember back to early November 2009? We took two successful national strike days after a big yes vote, the Postal Exec pulled the strike for talks, the Interim Agreement they assured us had strict oversight rules and tight deadlines aiming for a deal by Xmas….

Here we are in mid-February. Deadline after deadline has been broken while the workers have been told nothing. Letters from Roger Poole the ACAS appointed Chair informed us that the talks were continuing while we got nothing from HQ. The PEC disappeared.

The Letters to Branches (LTBs) began to have an odd deja vu feeling to them as the same words “progress… differences… new deadline” kept repeating:

“The interim agreement commits both parties to making significant progress by early December. At a meeting today to review overall progress the PEC has identified the union’s strategic priorities to meet the significant progress criteria.” (18 Nov Dave Ward)

“Progress is being made and agreements are being reached on some issues, or are close to agreement; some topics still have a way to go.” (14 Dec R Poole)

“We have made good progress and many issues are agreed in principle, although there are some important issues still to be agreed. ..so we have allowed ourselves a short extension of the talks …to conclude an agreement by 22 January.” (R Poole, Dec 23)

“It has been agreed to extend talks into next week on the basis of progress made and the recognition of the crucial importance this set of negotiations will have on the future of Royal Mail.” (R Poole, 22 Jan)

“The current position is that whilst there are a few of major issues to finalise, we have made real progress and we want to conclude an agreement very soon and communicate in more detail.” (5 Feb, Dave Ward)

At last, a word from Dave Ward our Deputy General Secretary Postal (remember him?) pops up like a postcard from a long lost relative that’s just been found stuck under a frame. They didn’t even bother to send it out to all the members or even the reps, just an email to the branches to distribute! What have they run out of paper in Wimbledon?

The latest on the sorry saga:

“Talks with Royal Mail were adjourned on Tuesday 9th February…The union is currently awaiting what Royal Mail have described as their final offer on some elements of the package under negotiation. The next meeting under the independent process will take place on Friday 12th February.” (11 Feb, Dave Ward)

The general theme has been “making progress, differences in major areas remain”. Have they really made any progress at all? The only leak we did get from PEC member Pete Keenlyside’s monthly letter wasn’t good, Royal Mail wouldn’t even accept a net 35 hour week (where hours are cut mostly by breaks going unpaid). Other reports are that they are digging in on Saturdays as a normal work day, finishing as late as 4 pm.

That kind of deal is one we can do without! Activists need to get ready to get their branches to reject any deal that steals our weekend after we won it only a few years back. No to closures and a worse public service, for the shorter working week with no loss of pay!

Dispatches Disses Posties

Tonight’s Dispatches documentary “Post Office Undercover” barely concealed its anti-union, pro-privatisation bias. Two journalists Joe and Karim went undercover as agency postal workers to expose the problems in Royal Mail.

The hidden camera showed again and again postal workers forced to deal with too few staff and unsustainable workloads. But put through the Dispatches camera’s special filter lens, this ended up interpreted as lazy workers and greedy unions. Nowhere was it asked why cuts were needed, if Royal Mail is already making a big profit.

Royal Mail managers were exposed for their laidback attitude to stealing, angry customers, and damaged mail, but the aim wasn’t to show a public service shredded by cutbacks and competition, but a dysfunctional company that can only be saved by privatisation.

The bias became blatant with the string of “experts” who were wheeled out to pronounce on how crap Royal Mail and the CWU are:

- Richard Hooper, handpicked by Peter Mandelson to run an “independent” commission and back Labour’s plans for privatisation (which he did, obliging chap that he is).

- A free market guru from the rightwing Adam Smith Institute who is against the one-price-goes anywhere USO.

- The slimy Post Switch website founder Jonathan DeCarteret who’s aim is to help “companies switch from Royal Mail to rival operators”.

Not a single union representative was formally interviewed (not counting working reps spied on by camera).

Yet what did the programme really show, to those without a privatizing agenda?

- Untrained agency staff out delivering for long hours, even till after dark (the agreed delivery span is 3.5 hours)

- Agency staff sent out without an experienced worker to show them round, leading to long hours or mail being brought back to office (Royal Mail policy is to have new starters who are put on new walks to be shown round without fail for the first six weeks).

- Agency staff were untrained, not seriously vetted or supervised, despite Royal Mail’s claims when they were training up a quality temporary staff (to scab on last year’s strike) and its zero tolerance to stealing. At one point agency staff are left to let in others without any ID being presented, then asked to write down their names fifteen minutes into a shift!

- Keys lost, mail returned by untrained agency staff, putting more work onto the normal staff, who then have to deliver the extra left over (and late) mail the next day without necessary equipment such as keys, working trolleys etc.

And that was just the first half of the programme! The second half was the real hatchet job on the workers and the union.

The managers accuse their workers of not telling the truth about how long it takes to work. “These guys are slowing down –They’re deliberately taking out less. They’re not working normally.”

It shows offices like Brixton where the previous four day week has been forcibly returned to five days, supposedly the manager says for “modernisation and efficiency.” Yet when asked whether staff claims are true, that eight hours is too little to deliver all their mail, he admits “on certain days it probably is.”

The workers are more to the point and angry about it: “These walks have doubled, that’s why we’ve been striking, its out of order”. A senior rep at Tooting office says “a lot of workers think its wrong. It’s the Managers fault, we’re only on an 8 hour day and can’t do it.”

The camera spies on managers and union reps in the canteen “haggling” over the amount of overtime that will be allowed to help shift the mountain of Christmas mail – what Dispatches doesn’t bother to say is that Royal Mail for the last three years has cut back on the amount of extra hours allotted to offices at Xmas, expecting workers to work flat out to cover the extra load while they keep up standards of delivery.

In the undercover footage the Reps say the workers won’t accept what Royal Mail is offering and want double the overtime proposed – too right! Ultimately they get 29 hours extra offered over Christmas but in return have to clear the office. Hardly unreasonable.

The reporter asks managers why they tolerate the union’s demands. One Brixton manager explains how managers have been forced to retreat in the face of postal workers determination and strength: “In some of the offices the management hasn’t got the power. It’s a struggle just to get them out on the street.”

Meanwhile a Tooting Manager tips the real gameplan behind returning to the four day work week: “Keep them happy for Christmas. We’ve got another fight next year.” Yet when they take away the four day work week again in January, managers are forced to backtrack when the workers threaten to strike. Workers were told on Saturday it would go to back to the five day week on Monday!

All of these incidents are painted in such a way as to make the workers look greedy and uncaring. One worker is shown to be unsympathetic to customers queuing (around the block) for parcels, but now Royal Mail is closing offices and hiking the price of redelivering packages to customer’s local post office. Who is really to blame for short fuses on both sides? Modernisation cuts and privatisation clearly lead to a worse service for the public and deeper exploitation of the workforce.

Karim slates postal workers for abandoning their walks in the January ice. A postal worker explains to him that the manager refused to let them out early so they would have the time to take care and deliver, instead piling the work, but this is uncommented on. The workers were right to protect themselves.

Karim patronizingly states that HE doesn’t have trouble delivering in the icy conditions. “There’s nothing wrong with this path at all” – where a thin strip of concrete is surrounded by ice as far as eye can see!

Of course Karim is only playing at being a postie for a few weeks. If he falls he will have a Channel 4 journalists job to go back too, not an injury that will make years of working life painful or a Rottweiler Royal Mail manager that might even see him or her lose their job.

It’s a shame Adam Crozier isn’t transferring to run Dispatches instead of poor old ITV staff, then these two journalists could experience the old Royal Mail management magic first hand! It might change their tune.