8,000 members of Unite to participate in one day public sector strike on 18 January

Workers in health and social care, education, public transport, roads, forestry, rivers, ferries and PSNI to strike for improved pay

Union demands secretary of state for Northern Ireland Chris Heaton-Harris stops using underfunding of public services as negotiating leverage

Unite the union has confirmed that public sector workers have voted to join a wider, coordinated strike action by public sector workers on 18 January. Over the next 24 hours the union will provide full details of the industrial action to a range of public sector employers. 

8,000 public sector workers in Unite will join the action. The union’s membership includes more than 4,000 health and social care workers, 2,300 bus and rail workers, 800 education authority workers as well as members in the roads service, forestry service, rivers agency, Ferry services and PSNI. The coordinated strike action by public sector workers on 18 January is set to be the biggest in the history of Northern Ireland and is focused on achieving pay improvements as well as ensuring pay parity where relevant with public sector workers in Great Britain. 

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “This will be an unprecedented demonstration of the power of workers in Northern Ireland. For almost two years, the absence of a functioning Stormont Executive has led to growing paralysis and crisis across public sector services. 

“This situation has been made worse by a secretary of state for Northern Ireland who has sought to leverage the crisis in the current negotiations through imposing a punishing budgetary settlement.

“Unite will not allow the livelihoods of workers and the funding of public services to be used as a bargaining chip by this government.” 

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Tara Mines: Government must step in as company adopts unacceptable approach to workers’ jobs and conditions

Alternative ownership must be on agenda

January 9th: Speaking following a conciliation hearing held today (Tuesday) at the Workplace Relations Commission, trade union Unite – which represents craft and staff grades at Tara Mines – expressed outrage at proposals advanced by the company which would cut the workforce by over one-third while reducing the terms and conditions of remaining workers.  The company has also issued a redundancy scheme which is significantly worse than that previously agreed with unions.

Unite said that, unless the company withdraws what the union termed an unacceptable approach to workers’ jobs, terms and conditions when the WRC reconvenes on 22 January, and commits to a firm re-opening date, the Government must intervene to secure good jobs and skills at Tara.

The union said that alternative ownership must be on the agenda for Europe’s largest zinc mine in order to safeguard a vital national asset which can play a role in a low-carbon economy going forward.

Commenting, Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said:

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Public transport workers in Unite, GMB and SIPTU to strike over pay on Friday

Strike will bring all bus and rail services in Northern Ireland to a standstill

Members of Unite, GMB and SIPTU employed by Translink will hold a further 24-hour strike action commencing on a staggered basis from 00.01am Friday [December 21]. The strike follows a two-day stoppage last week and will bring all bus and rail services to a standstill.

The strike follows ballots by union members which returned percentages in the high nineties for strike action in pursuit of a cost-of-living pay increase. Unions were informed that Translink could only offer a pay freeze because of the harsh budget imposed on the department for infrastructure by the secretary of state for Northern Ireland, Chris Heaton-Harris. Accounting for inflation (RPI) this amounts to a real terms pay cut of 11.4 per cent.

While the secretary of state has offered a funding package, which he claims is adequate to address workers’ public sector pay demands, he has made it contingent on progress in wider political talks to re-establish the Stormont executive. As a result, the pay freeze remains in place.

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “It is completely unacceptable that public transport workers are being denied a pay increase during the worst cost of living crisis in generations.

“There is excuse for the secretary of state failing to provide adequate funding for a pay increase for public transport workers. Transport workers have been left with no option but to go ahead with their planned strike action. They have the full support of Unite in doing so.”

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Unite Education courses in 2024 (Republic of Ireland)

The following are details of some upcoming Unite courses. Contact Noelle Whelan to book your place by email to noelle.whelan@unitetheunion.org

Public Speaking (Via Zoom) – 12th & 19th of January

Workplace Reps Stage 1 (Dublin office) – 23rd, 24th, 25th of July

Workplace Reps Stage 2 (Dublin office) – 3rd, 4th, 5th of April

Environmental (via Zoom) – 3rd, 10th and 17th of May

Health & Safety (Dublin office) – 3rd, 4th of September

Communication & Negotiation (Dublin office) – 8th, 9th, 10th of July

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Public transport workers at Translink to commence 48-hour strike action in absence of pay offer

Joint Trade Union statement

Strike action by members of UNITE, GMB and SIPTU will mean no bus or rail services on Friday or Saturday

Blame for disruption rests wholly with secretary of state Chris Heaton-Harris who is punishing workers in political stalemate

Public transport workers employed by Translink will commence fresh strike action in pursuit of a pay increase tomorrow. The strike will commence at staggered times in the morning of Friday 15 December and last for 48 hours ending on Sunday 17 December. The industrial action follows a previous one-day strike by bus and rail workers held on Friday 1 December.

Members of all three trade unions on Ulsterbus, Metro bus and Glider will strike and those of GMB and SIPTU on Northern Ireland Rail. The industrial action follows ballots across all three unions with yes votes in the high 90s for strike action in the face of a pay freeze instigated by the secretary of state Chris Heaton-Harris, which amounts to a real-terms pay cut of 11.4 per cent when RPI inflation is factored in. 

Due to the involvement of all three frontline unions, all bus and rail services across Northern Ireland will be halted. 

Unite union general secretary Sharon Graham said: “The failure of the secretary of state Chris Heaton-Harris to intervene and provide any pay increase has left Translink workers no alternative but to escalate industrial action. 

“All too often Translink workers are on the frontline of social disorder or unrest now in the midst of the worst cost of living crisis in a generation, they are being told to accept an 11 per cent real-terms pay cut. That is completely unacceptable. They continue to have the full support of Unite in their fight.”

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