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Britain: Firefighters speak on threatened strike
By our correspondent
24 September 2002
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Britains firefighters are to vote on whether to stage
the first national strike for a quarter of a century. The Fire
Brigades Union (FBU), which organises 55,000 firefighters, will
announce the result on October 18. The FBU is demanding a pay
rise of almost 40 percent, taking firefighters pay to £30,000,
having rejected an offer of just 4 percent from local government
employers.
The government has attempted to forestall industrial action
by convening a supposedly independent review of firefighters
pay. It is headed by Sir George Bain, who was in charge of the
Low Pay Commission which introduced Britains paltry minimum
wage. Bain will be joined by Sir Tony Young, the former head of
Britains trade union federation, the Trades Union Congress
(TUC), and former Birmingham City Council chief executive, Sir
Michael Lyons-all pro-Labour government stalwarts.
The review will naturally reject the 40 percent demand out
of hand and will link pay to changes in pay and working conditions.
The FBU has rejected participation in the review, in face of the
rising levels of anger amongst firefighters.
Andy Gilchrist, FBU general secretary, said: Our members
are clear that they deserve the going rate for the job they do
today, which is £30,000, and we are therefore not going
to get caught up in a so-called independent governmental review
in the fire service.
A qualified firefighter is presently paid a miserly £21,531,
rising to £22,491 after 15 years. A station officer is paid
between £27,426 and £29,577.
Prime Minister Tony Blair rejected the 40 percent demand, because
it is a direct challenge to his governments strategic aim
of maintaining Britain as a cheap labour platform within the European
single market. In an effort to pit firefighters against other
working families, Blair warned, I dont think theres
anybody really who could believe that we could give a 40 percent
pay claim without terrible damage to the rest of the economy....
The first thing that would happen is the Bank of England would
start putting peoples mortgages up.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to two London firemen
about their thoughts on the threatened strike.
Dave is a senior firefighter based at Park Royal Station in
West London. He spoke of the appalling pay and conditions that
have prompted the strike demand:
You have got a probation period of a year and you get
qualified after a further three years. Your starting pay is judged
by your age. The worst-case scenario being an 18-year-old firefighter
would be on between £18-19,000.
Once youre a qualified firefighter pay doesnt
increase for 15 years.
WSWS: What kind of shifts do you do?
Its a two day two nights, over an eight-day period.
Some people say we have four days off. But the first day off is
following a 15-hour night. If you call sleeping a day off ...
then some people say we do four-on four-off. It breaks down to
a 42-hour week, which includes bank holidays and weekends.
Dave explained that due to the low wages, and spiralling cost
of housing, many firefighters cannot afford to live near to their
workplaces. Some have to sleep over at friends houses during
the week, or even at the fire station.
For this station alone probably half the firemen travel
in to work from outer counties, Dave said. Tonight
we have the green watch on duty. Three of them have to stay at
the station during the night because they cannot get home and
get back here, which is illegal, but the brigade puts up with
it. They are sleeping on the floor on mats in the gym, because
there is not enough resting accommodation. Every station would
have firefighters that cant get back home. We are not insured
to cover them.
WSWS: Are you fully manned?
Dave: Generally the brigade is down, because in 1974
they had a big influx of firefighters. They introduced another
shift. A big influx, and of course years later it all started
to dissipate. They are not recruiting quickly enough. The brigades
are actually down at the moment.
WSWS: What is the reason for people leaving?
For years we have had a magazine come out that would
give the reasons for people leaving, Dave continued. Now
we dont see the figures anymore when people leave. We dont
now see it in black and white. We can see that most of our friends
are on higher pay rates than we are. We dont want to specify,
but tube drivers are on £31,000. I spoke to a policeman
the other day who was just 21 years old and on £26,000.
We know there are much more attractive jobs. The brigade
say its a supply and demand problem, so long as they have
a thousand applicants for 50 jobs, they dont need to give
us a pay risewhich annoys us, because we have been fighting
for years for a decent pay rise. We have decided this year that
now is the time.
I heard [London Mayor] Ken Livingstone on the radio saying
that local councils cant provide the necessary wage increase
without putting council tax up. He believes central government
should come in somewhere along the line. They want to tie [pay]
in with whole review of the fire service; make it more modern.
WSWS: What do you think of Blairs comment about not
paying you the money?
Dave: Well there are various reviews going on with MPs.
They say [Deputy Prime Minister John] Prescotts going to
be in charge. He is to be a go-between for the government and
the fire brigade. There will be a strike. We are pretty sure of
getting 100 percent vote, just from the feedback we get.
WSWS: Will the strike cause personal difficulties?
Once we are on strike we wont get paid, Dave
added. On my last watch, of the 12 men, three firefighters
wives earn more than their husbands and that is increasingly the
case throughout the brigade. If you are junior secretary in London
you can be on £17-18,000. There are a lot of worried families
out there, with childcare costs running at £3-4 an hour.
We do get London Weighting [a top-allowance to offset high living
costs payable to those working in London], but we get half of
what the police get. In some respects we are lucky in London.
We get a few thousand pounds, but if you live in Berkshire, which
in some places is just as expensive as London, you get only hundreds.
Bill is a firefighter from West London Fire Headquarters at
Wembley. He told the World Socialist Web Site:
The level of pay hasnt changed for 25 years. I
am married. The shifts are not really the problem, but you have
to do quite a bit of part-time work to make ends meet. The average
working week is about 90 hours for most fire fighters. We have
firefighters travel in from Bournemouth, Peterborough and even
from Southern Ireland.
WSWS: What do you think of Blair comments?
All firefighters know his comments on [a pay rise] affecting
the economy are complete rubbish, Bill said. They
can afford to bail out people like Railtrack and spend another
£600 million on the Millennium Dome and are prepared to
go bomb Iraq at a cost of countless billions of pounds.
The UK fire service needs £450 million to sort
out this wage increase. Our employers are the local councils,
but the government has seen fit to intervene. Our struggle is
with the government. The government has intervened to stop the
employers making a 15 percent pay deal.
WSWS: Whats the feeling amongst the firefighters?
Bill: The feeling is strong, nobody wants to go on strike.
We would like this whole thing sorted out before any strike date,
but people are fed up. Working their guts out and risking our
lives, which is part of the job, we havent a problem with
that. But we do it for measly wages. Families hardly ever see
us. There are a lot of strained relationships and relationships
that break up. Wages of £21.500 just dont cut it anymore.
WSWS: What do you think of the Blair government?
It would seem that New Labour is not Labour at all. To
be honest, the Conservatives dont stand a chance. New Labour
are more conservative than the Conservatives in terms of running
down workers. They want a struggle, it would seem. It has been
a bone of contention for the government, the fact we have a national
fire union. It would seem this is their effort to break it.
See Also:
Britain: Nationwide firefighters strike
draws closer
[5 September 2002]
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