International
Royal Mail staff win deal on jobs, pensions
Royal Mail staff win deal on jobs, pensions
Guardian News and Media/London
Royal Mail workers have voted overwhelmingly in favour of a long-term deal on post-privatisation terms and conditions hammered out between their union and the company.
More than nine in 10 workers who voted in the CWU union’s ballot supported the landmark agreement announced early in December.
The union had pledged not to call industrial action before Christmas but otherwise reserved the option to strike until the deal was ratified by its members.
The agreement, seen as a move towards German-style long-term industrial co-operation, secures a 9.06% increase in basic pay over three years. It also features five-year guarantees on job security, pensions and other conditions, and increases union involvement in the running of the business.
In return the CWU has signed up to measures designed to prevent local strikes, which have afflicted Royal Mail for years.
The union has also agreed to measures removing the threat of national action. It undertook to bring in national union and company officers immediately to resolve local disputes and move to independent mediation within a week, as well as use more independent mediation at national level.
The union will also take part in a monthly “growth forum” with company bosses, and make presentations to Royal Mail’s full board. The deal stops short of a no-strike agreement, but Royal Mail can withdraw from the employee protection agreement if the CWU holds national industrial action. Both sides welcomed the vote with 96% in favour of the changes held between January 22 and February 5.
Dave Ward, deputy general secretary of the Communication Workers Union, said: “We are extremely pleased to secure this groundbreaking deal with Royal Mail, which postal workers have overwhelmingly voted to accept.
“The agreement bucks trends in UK employment, and means Royal Mail, as a private company, cannot adopt the type of employment model and practices that are undermining workers everywhere. Although we retain the right to strike, a fresh approach to industrial relations will help create industrial stability.”
The CWU fought a long battle to preserve its members’ terms and conditions under Royal Mail’s new ownership by City investors. The risk of a national strike was cited as one factor in what critics called a cut-price valuation of Royal Mail shares in the company’s flotation in October.