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: Britain
UK firefighters begin first nationwide strike in 25 years
By our correspondent
15 November 2002
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Britains firefighters began a national 48-hour strike
on November 13 following the breakdown of talks with local authority
employers and the government. The strike is the first national
action in the industry in 25 years.
In a ballot earlier this year, firefighters voted by nine to
one to take strike action in pursuit of a pay increase of 40 percent.
The average firefighters wage is currently £21,000, lagging
significantly behind similar professions. A pay deal following
the last national strike in 1978 had pegged firefighters wages
in line with the average manual wage, which has declined over
the last two decades. Three further strikes, each lasting eight
days, are planned before the end of the year holiday period.
The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) sanctioned the action after it
condemned the insulting and derisory pay deal being
offered by the governments supposedly independent review
of the fire service headed by Sir George Bain.
Provocatively, the Bain review proposed a four percent increase
this year, with significant strings attached. A seven percent
rise the following year could take place if the firefighters agreed
to sweeping modernisation changes that the review
recommended. The proposed pay offer11 percent over two yearswas
considerably less than the 16 percent mooted by the local authorities
last month, leading to allegations that Prime Minister Tony Blair
had intervened to stop the offer and provoke a strike.
Once it became clear the firefighters would proceed with their
action, Blair and other government ministers have adopted an ever
more belligerent tone, in an attempt to turn public opinion against
the action. The Labour government has insisted it will not cede
to the firefighters selfish and unreasonable
demands, as it would result in other workers calling for similar
increases and collapse the UK economy. Only hours before the strike
began, Blair told Parliament that no government on earth
could concede to a wage claim of 40 percent.
Sir George Bain also fuelled the dispute by stating that firefighters
are generally well paid. Taking into account
the very generous pension entitlement, the holiday arrangements,
the good job security, firemen are actually not badly rewarded.
The recruitment and retention figures back this up. Theres
about 40 applications for every vacancy in the fire service,
he stated arrogantly.
In reality, the fully qualified firefighters salary of
£21,500 is below the national average wage, despite the
hazardous nature of the job and the compulsory shift patterns.
Such dangers were highlighted on November 12 at the funeral of
firefighter Rob Miller in Leicester with thousands of members
of the public and fellow workers in attendance. Miller had been
a firefighter for 25 years and died two weeks ago after falling
through a floor at a factory fire in the city.
FBU leader Andy Gilchrist said of the Bain review, I
dont consider 11 percent over two years to be either substantial
or significant, adding that firefighters had already voted
to strike to reject a previous pay offer of 4 percent.
The Retained Firefighters Union (RFU) which has a no-strike
policyand is working alongside the army as an emergency
force said the review could form the basis for negotiation
and settlement.
Fire service minister Nick Raynsford described Bains
proposals as an exciting, far-reaching package. Raynsford
added that any pay deal would be linked to changes such as increased
flexibility and improved partnerships with other agencies and
that We made it clear that if they [the employers] went
beyond 4 percent they would have to fund that.
In the days leading up to the industrial action, the media
has churned out government propaganda denouncing firefighters
as unpatriotic for striking just as British army troops are being
mobilised for a impending war with Iraq. Some 18,500 British army
troops, navy, and air force servicemen have been drafted to replace
the striking firefighters. Of these 12,000 are drawn from the
army and 3,000 to 4,000 each from the Royal Navy and the RAF.
They are attending fire emergencies in 50-year-old Green Goddess
vehicles.
The tabloid daily newspaper, the Sun ran an article
on the day the strike began with the headline, Union boss
is a flaming idiot. The right-wing tabloid made a hysterical
comparison between the firefighters and the Al Qaeda terrorist
group, accusing the workers of playing into the terrorists
hands and leaving Britain at the mercy of Al Qaeda.
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