It is surely wrong for over 90% of a workforce of 14000 to vote in favour of strike action only for it to stopped by a high court judge. Reason behind it is an administrative technicality which would not have effect the outcome. The union can not even appeal in less there is legal error.
Why are Unite still funding the Labour party? The Labour party have had 12 years to overturn the anti trade union laws. It has to be a human right for individuals to withdraw their labour if their employer is behaving in an unreasonable manner.
Again workers suffer, again the High court backs employers, again the UK is made to look a joke country with no respect or rights for its citizens.
Very sad day indeed.
Results 1 to 30 of 123
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17-12-2009 03:31 PM #1
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BA wins injunction to stop the strike
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17-12-2009 03:42 PM #2
Maybe we should let them strike and give jobs to the flyglobespan staff who are unemployed now
#persevered
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17-12-2009 03:54 PM #3
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Maybe we should support them in their fight to safe guard their pay and conditions and jobs. Also why has the Scottish Government or Westminster not stepped in to help safeguard these Globespan jobs? if its good enough for the banks why not Scotland's biggest airline?
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17-12-2009 04:08 PM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
BA moved to prevent a strike that would have been a brutal blow to the company as a whole and resulted in severe losses...the mere threat of strike has probably cost BA millions already, a strike by Unite would and could only be self defeating...the greatest of all phyrric victories.
Fact is Unite goofed by balloting people that it shouldn't have...personally I would blame ermmm Unite for that!!
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17-12-2009 04:20 PM #6
The BA staff who voted for strike action need a reality check. Are they totally oblivious to what is going on in their industry at the moment?
Given the speed that their company is losing money and the struggle that the airline industry finds itself in they are lucky that they are still in employment!
I really do wonder sometimes.
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17-12-2009 04:35 PM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-12-2009 04:37 PM #8
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quotejust because a company is going through a bad patch the workers suffer. When BA were making millions in profits did the workers get extra pay? NO. The shareholders got a big fat dividend. Now that they are not making as much the workers have to suffer. Its attitudes like this that allowed Thatcher to introduce the most draconian labour laws in Europe.
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17-12-2009 05:08 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
BA £29,900
Easyjet £20,200
Jet2.Com £16,300
Virgin £14,400
Striking at a time of year that would only going anger customers by ruining the festive season for thousands, and do BA's already poor fortunes at the minute more damage.
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17-12-2009 05:31 PM #10This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The likely outcome now is a re-ballot, which could be pretty interesting. Chances are, it will be nowhere near the landslide it was this time.
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One other thing I would mention is that Unite have got a ****ing cheek anyway. A few years ago, BA chose to farm out all their ground operations in Scotland and the North of England which resulted in hundreds of job losses - far more than would be lost if this industrial action is unsuccessful. What did the unions do to support their members up here - not a jot. Shame they didn't take such a moral stand then, eh?
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17-12-2009 05:47 PM #11
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Everyone lives to their income and if its under threat you're not going to sit there and think 'well if I worked for Virgin I would be on 10 grand less, so aye ok, cut my salary'.
On another note, anyone else think the High Court judge may have had flights booked over the Christmas period with British Airways?
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17-12-2009 06:00 PM #12This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's ok for the public sector to take a pay freeze, so it should be ok for these guys too.
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17-12-2009 06:06 PM #13
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17-12-2009 06:06 PM #14
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It is not right that public sector workers get a pay freeze to fund bailing out the banks.
Workers of the world unite
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17-12-2009 06:57 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Hardly a massive change.
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17-12-2009 06:59 PM #16
Those salaries don't include all the allowances.
Long hual BA cabin staff can earn up to £60k a year.
Yes, really.
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17-12-2009 07:08 PM #17This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's not a bad package!
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17-12-2009 07:29 PM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
They get to go to some great places, but pretty much the longest they're there is two nights (and even then it would be arriving late one night, staying there the next day and then an early start the next). They've also got places that they're escorted to and from the hotels and need to stay there for their stay because they're so dangerous to be in.
BA also got rid of Glasgow as a crew base round about the same as they punted the groundstaff, which means they're all now based out of London. So anyone that works for BA but lives up here has to pay for their own travel down to London in the first place.
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17-12-2009 07:45 PM #19This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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17-12-2009 07:56 PM #20
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17-12-2009 10:48 PM #21
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18-12-2009 07:11 AM #22This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
BTW, the reaction to the result of the strike ballot was a joke, celebrating going on strike like you've won the lottery?
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18-12-2009 07:49 AM #23This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The fact that BA have now successfully put through an injunction just underlines how hard it is to try and get any form of effective protest up and running in the UK.
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18-12-2009 08:22 AM #24This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Would you rather go back to the days of unballoted wildcat action stirred up by militants? Militants like Len McCluskey of Unite - a former henchman of the Trotskyist looney council in Liverpoool, and - god help us - a candidate for General Secretary of the union.
I confidently predict that there won't be a landslide vote for industrial action next time - when the workers actually know what they're supposed to be voting for.
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18-12-2009 08:45 AM #25
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I decided a few months to give BA a try for my rotation this trip so due to fly home via Heathrow on December 29th/30th. Main reason being is the way a lot of my workmates have raved about BAs business travel compared to the likes of KLM and Air France. Not a clue how much a ticket costs but would imagine in the 3-4,000 range. Now canceled and back to Air Frog. I am not going to miss my first New Year at home for bloody years and the yam match
As to the rights and wrongs of the strike, I agree with their principals on striking if it is just about them losing money. If it is about more cost effective working practices that result in a little more work, no sympathy. Their union reps should be ripped to pieces for their handling of the ballot.
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18-12-2009 09:53 AM #26
Nothing but good things to say about BA, and that has nothing to do with them over selling economy class on my £204 flight home from Shanghai and upgrading me free of charge to business class
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18-12-2009 02:18 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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18-12-2009 02:24 PM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThis is how it feels
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18-12-2009 03:11 PM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The High Court was right to stop the strike and make Unite carry out a competent and fair ballot.
Every BA worker that I've heard on TV or radio is desperately unhappy with Unite's handling of the entire matter so I wouldn't expect the same landslide in the next ballot.
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18-12-2009 04:42 PM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Are Unite not the same union that organised the strike at Grangemouth for workers rights that related to workers that didn't even exist yet??
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