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Monday, August 15, 2005

Its good to talk!

Interesting Independent story about 'Carphone Warehouse' staff looking for union representation in this Sunday's paper.

Apparently staff who fail to sell 8 TalkTalk subscriptions per every 100 mobile phone deals are being threatened with 'misconduct' - and possible dismissal. Well I suppose someone has to pay for the £10m that Carphone Warehouse Chief Executive Charles Dunstone recently picked up when he sold a slice of his shares!

Friday, August 12, 2005



While we were away this week, we spent a great day at Lake Vyrnwy. Had a great time bike-riding round the lake with Joe (our eldest, who is all of 7) - its the first time he's cycled on the road and it was one of those really nice 'dad and lad' moments.

The lake was created (controversially) in the 1880's to supply water for the city of Liverpool - you can read more here.

Latest on Heathrow dispute

FT update is here.

I've been away for the last few days, and so haven't been able to follow the dispute that closely, but you can find my colleague Carl Roper's take on events over the last couple of days here.

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

You turn your back for 5 minutes!

Away with the kids in Wales for a few days and hence no regular blog service.

However that doesn't mean this site has been totally devoid of interest - yesterday my comments section got 'spammed' for the first time, and so people wanting to leave a comment about TUC fringe meetings (ok admittedly not a huge number!) where instead invited to 'meet companions with wide ranging, but specialist, interests' (I'm paraphrasing).

May explain the spike in hits the site got yesterday!!!

Saturday, August 06, 2005

On the fringe

If you are down at TUC Congress this year, why not join us for the 'Organising, campaigning, growing' fringe meeting being held on Monday? Speakers will include Mary Bousted and Billy Hayes.

Thursday, August 04, 2005


Looks like Frankenstein, but he's OUR Frankenstein and that's what counts! More here.

We're all worried but...

Check out this picture on Roger Darlington's blog. Boy is she packing!

What can you buy with 82p?

When MG Rover collapsed John Tower and the other members of his Phoenix Consortium promised that £50m of the car-makers assets would go toward compensating the 6,000 or so men and women who lost their jobs.

Today, as the Times reports, the 'Phoenix Four' have instead offered the grand total of £5,000 of their own money toward a compensation trust fund - that's a grand total of 82p each per worker. Remember this is the same group of people who have between them have taken some £40m in pay and pensions since they took over...

This news comes on the same day that the Guardian reports that 'Directors' pay at Britain's top companies climbed an average of 16.1% last year - four times faster than average earnings and eight times the rate of inflation.' What's more at a time when many workers are facing the threat of having their pension schemes closed, or having to work through into their old-age, more than £880m has been set aside by the UK's top 100 companies to finance the pensions of their directors. Nice work if you can get it I suppose! Even (Sir) Digby Jones has been forced to admit this is probably a bad thing.

What's happened over the last 12 months... Have British bosses suddenly become 16% more productive in the space of 12 months? Hmmm yes, please don't bother to answer that. No in fact - please do. (Unspecified) prize to the person who can come up with the most imaginative reason why British bosses feel they deserve such a hyper-inflationary pat on the back. Submissions in comments please!

Early start

On my way down to Cardiff by train this morning. Bit of an early start - as I have to be there by 11, and it'll take me the best part of 4 hours.

A few years ago this sort of trip would have meant a few hours gazing out at the (beautiful) mid-Wales scenery and ploughing through a book. Now, thanks to the wonders of modern technology (well my blackberry and a lap-top), the trip down and back will give me a few hours to clear off all those boring bits of work I know have to be done, but which I've managed to avoid for a while.

I'll also get a chance to update my 'to-do' list which has morphed into a bit of an opus over the last few months. As one item gets crossed out, 2 more seem to appear - I am sure there is a scientific metaphor for this but at 6.15am my recall of GCSE Biology (B no less), Chemistry (C) and Physics (D) is limited!

Next stop Caerddydd Canolog!

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

On a brighter note...

The Onion's view of the AFL-CIO situation...

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Liverpool's shame

Update on the police hunt for the killers of Anthony Walker is here.

For those of you outside the UK who haven't followed this story, Anthony Walker, a black teenager, was killed by an axe blow to the head last Friday evening in Huyton, Liverpool. What provoked this assault? The fact that he was a young black man, who had the temerity to walk down the street with his cousin and white girlfriend.

Anthony's death is not only devastating for his family and friends, who are no doubt struggling to understand how and why this could have happened to their boy, but to the whole of Liverpool and beyond. What the hell was going through the minds of the gang of white men who ambushed him before killing him in cold blood? This wasn't the action of a sole lunatic, but a group of men acting together, who between them must have somehow rationalised their attack on a defenceless teenager.

Comparisons have, rightly, been drawn between Anthony's killing and that of Stephen Lawrence 12 years ago. Like Anthony, Stephen was killed simply because he was black - there was no argument, no provocation, no history of bad-blood between him and his killers - he just happened to run into a bunch of people who decided that the colour of his skin made him fair game.

Hopefully one difference between the case of Anthony Walker and Stephen Lawrence is that the Police act quickly and professionally to bring those responsible to justice - Merseyside Police have already pledged to avoid the dreadful mistakes made by the the Met during that investigation.

Anthony's death says a lot not just about the men who carried out this murder, but the whole issue of race in cities like Liverpool. Like most people from the city and its surrounding area, I'm immensely proud of where I come from, and the fact that the city is one of the most racially diverse and multi-cultural in the UK. But its clear that beneath the surface there are lots and lots of unresolved issues and racial tensions.

Outside of Liverpool 8, the city is overwhelmingly white. In the north of the city, and across the water on the Wirral where I live, there are very few black faces and for years (things have got better recently), few black and Asian workers were employed in the city centre's shops. While things have again got better on the football front, its a fact that there is still a vocal minority in the support of both Liverpool and Everton who think the odd-bit of racist chanting and abuse is all part and parcel of going to the match (especially travelling away).

Does all this make Liverpool any worse than anywhere else? No - but it doesn't make it any better either, and its a point of shame for us all that a young black man can't walk his girlfriend home without being set upon by a gang of cowards. We can do all do our little bit - even if its just challenging those who say 'I'm not racist, but...' You can bet your house on the fact that none of the group who ambushed Anthony Walker were members of the BNP or NF - they were just low level racists, the sort that we all normally ignore, but who on this occasion, no doubt emboldened by their numbers and a few pints, took their 'banter' a few steps further.

Along with so many other people in Liverpool and beyond, my heart goes out to the family and friends of Anthony - lets hope they get justice.

Monday, August 01, 2005

Public Enemy No 1 Posted by Picasa

Believe the hype!

As if my credit cards weren't already hammered to the limit, last week I made the fatal mistake of discovering iTunes...currently indulging myself by downloading the soundtrack of my (partly mis-spent) youth.

Hard to believe that Public Enemy's 'Fight the Power' is more than 15 years olds - kids today don't know what they're missing, time was when music meant something (continue in similar vein ad infinitum...beginning to sound more and more like my dad every day!)

To Wapping and back...

Great story here about the return of the NUJ to 'The Sun' (no, definitely no link!) after 20 years out in the cold.

Despite being prevented from gaining union recognition because News International recognises its own 'independent' (sic) staff association, some 50 Sun journos have decided enough is enough, and have voted to re-establish an NUJ 'chapel' at the paper.

Just as the move to Wapping 20 years ago summed up how bleak things were for unions, I think that this little bit of good news shows that there really are no 'no-go' areas for unions these days.

Just the other week I blogged about USDAW's efforts to organise 'Marks and Spencers', one of the traditional non-union bastions of the High Street, and Community's efforts to organise 'bookies'. With the GMB moving into casino's, and the T&G stepping up their efforts to organise cleaners and security guards, I think its fair to say that unions are really beginning to get to grips with those parts of the private service sector in which we used to fear to tread.

Let's hope we're successful enough to make Messrs Murdoch, O'Leary (Ryanair) and Rose (M&S) et al sit up and take notice!