Model email to send to Vice-Chancellor re treatment of pregnant cleaner — January 28, 2015

Model email to send to Vice-Chancellor re treatment of pregnant cleaner

at 6 months picTo show your support for Nuvia Erazo Farias, the University of London cleaner taking her employer to court on grounds of maternity discrimination, please send the email below to Professor Sir Adrian Smith, Vice-Chancellor of the University of London at adrian.smith@london.ac.uk:

Dear Professor Sir Adrian Smith, Vice-Chancellor of the University of London,

I am writing to profess my profound concern over the treatment of Nuvia Erazo Farias, a University of London cleaner.

It has come to my attention that last summer, when Nuvia was six months pregnant, her job was at risk of redundancy.  She applied for vacancies, and was then told that she would not be given a job interview because of her “condition” and was made redundant.  Luckily, after a series of legal threats from her union, Nuvia was given a permanent job.  However, this only happened after weeks of stress and anxiety which culminated in Nuvia’s hospitalization. This, I hope you would agree, is appalling behavior for a university campus.

It has also come to my attention that the University of London has been aware of Nuvia’s situation for some time but has chosen not to intervene to encourage its contractor to settle the claim.  This means that Nuvia has to pay the exorbitant employment tribunal fee, arrange for childcare for a five day tribunal, and endure the grueling cross-examination of your contractor’s high-paid barristers.

For the sake of the integrity of the University of London, and the dignity of Nuvia, I would request that you please intervene in this matter as a matter of urgency.  Nuvia deserves compensation for what she has endured at the hands of your contractor.

Yours sincerely

Press Release: PREGNANT UNIVERSITY OF LONDON CLEANER DISMISSED BECAUSE OF HER ‘CONDITION’ TAKES EMPLOYER TO TRIBUNAL — January 27, 2015

Press Release: PREGNANT UNIVERSITY OF LONDON CLEANER DISMISSED BECAUSE OF HER ‘CONDITION’ TAKES EMPLOYER TO TRIBUNAL

at 6 months pic
‘At six months pregnant I was told I wasn’t being given a job because of my “condition”‘.

28 January, 2015, London.  An outsourced cleaner at the University of London is taking her employer to an employment tribunal on allegations of maternity discrimination.  The tribunal hearing is scheduled to take place on 3, 4, 5, 6, and 9 February, 2015 at the London Central Employment Tribunal.

Nuvia Erazo Farias is an Ecuadorian cleaner employed by Cofely Workplace Limited to clean the University of London’s student residence halls.  Until June of last year Nuvia worked at the Garden Halls, three student residence halls that the University of London shut down in the summer for refurbishments.  As a result of the closure, Nuvia’s job was put at risk of redundancy.  Like many of her colleagues, Nuvia applied for various vacancies in order to avoid redundancy.

However, unlike most of her colleagues, Nuvia- who was six months pregnant at the time- was not given an invitation letter or any advance notice for her job interview.  Nor was her “interview” conducted by two managers as protocol required.  The one manager present was Sharon Bracey, the Cleaning Services Manager who doubles as the UNISON rep.

“Sharon told me that she didn’t want to talk about work because of my ‘condition’ and only wanted to speak about redundancy and maternity pay,” said Nuvia  Nuvia was then made redundant.  Sharon Bracey has a patchy history with maternity discrimination as allegations that she was trying to drive a pregnant woman out of her job resulted in another (unrelated) employment tribunal claim just over a year ago.

Sonia Chura, Vice-Chair of the University of London Branch of the Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB), Nuvia’s union, said: “They say that this country is where human rights are most respected, yet here we can see that this is clearly not the case.  The case of our co-worker Nuvia is one more example of the abuse that women cleaners are subjected to daily.  There are many more cases like this one which are hidden in silence.  We give our full moral support to Nuvia for her to continue with this case.”

Henry Chango Lopez, Chair of the University of London Branch of the IWGB said: “The current allegations of discrimination against the Cofely UNISON rep are one more reason why the Cofely-UNISON Recognition Agreement is not fit for purpose.  Workers want a union that will defend them in the workplace, not one that causes problems for them.  That is why over 70% of the workforce has joined the IWGB.”

After a series of legal threats Cofely backtracked and gave Nuvia a permanent position.  However, in the interim, Nuvia went through an extremely stressful period, culminating in her hospitalization, believing that she would no longer have a source of income after her maternity leave.

The University of London was contacted a number of times about this case and chose not to intervene.

A public hearing is to begin on 3 February, 2015 at the London Central Employment Tribunal (Erazo Farias v Cofely Workplace Limited).

For more information, contact Dr. Jason Moyer-Lee at Jasonmoyer-lee@iwgb.org.uk or at 07771783094.

To follow the latest developments see:

Facebook: IWGB University of London;

Twitter: #YoSoyNuvia

IWGB issued with Certificate of Independence — January 26, 2015

IWGB issued with Certificate of Independence

certificateAfter what seemed like an age of bureaucratic procrastination, the IWGB has finally been issued with its Certificate of Independence by the Certification Officer. For any doubters – it’s in black and white on the gov.uk website.

The certificate is intended to show that a union

  • is not under the domination or control of an employer or group of employers or of one or more employers’ associations; and
  • is not liable to interference by an employer or any such group or association (arising out of the provision of financial or material support or by any other means whatsoever) tending towards such control.

Obviously, the way the IWGB has been conducting itself was bound to raise suspicions that it was just a stooge of the University of London and Cofely, so hopefully this bit of paper will finally put those vicious rumours to bed…

The major significance of this for the union is that now we can start forcing employers to legally recognise us!

It costs around four grand to get one of these, which was funded by a grant from the LUSH fund -for which may thanks…

Workplace Reps — January 20, 2015

Workplace Reps

Demonstrating the rapid growth of the IWGB, we now have representatives for all of the different workplaces within the University. Your representative will be your first point of contact should you have any workplace issues so it is fantastic to have so many representatives, showing the continuing strength of the IWGB within the University.

Contact details for all of the workplace reps can be found here.

soniaandolga

6 Ways to Build a Labour Movement Fit for the 21st Century — January 19, 2015

6 Ways to Build a Labour Movement Fit for the 21st Century

Class_battle_fronts_diagramCowed by anti-strike legislation introduced in the 1980s, British trade unions mostly retreated to the comfort zone ofsocial partnership following their large-scale industrial defeats in the 1980s. Since the financial crisis of 2008, sustained attacks on workers terms and conditions have seen the longest period of wage decline since the 1870s, whilst trade union membership languishes at its lowest level for 70 years.

What will it take to create an effective labour movement that takes the fight to employers, wins concessions and reverses the tide of defeat?

Read full article here.

Branch meeting – next Friday 23 January, 1pm, Institute of Education – PLEASE NOTE THE NEW TIME! — January 16, 2015

Branch meeting – next Friday 23 January, 1pm, Institute of Education – PLEASE NOTE THE NEW TIME!

We’ll be holding our next branch meeting on Friday, 23 Januaryin room S16 in the Institute of Education.

Apologies – the time has changed from 12.30 to 1pm!

For those who can’t make this, the second meeting will be held at 3pm in the IWGB office, and the third meeting will take place on Saturday after the campaign meeting at 1.30pm.

Lots to discuss – London Weighting, expansion of the branch to the whole University of London etc – so please do come along.

All members get a voice and a vote!

All-Staff meeting this Thursday at 11am – please go if you can — January 13, 2015

All-Staff meeting this Thursday at 11am – please go if you can

oliver-twist_330
University of London employees dare to ask for more…

The long-awaited All-Staff Meeting is finally being held this Thursday 15 January at 11am. Though senior management are likely to try and keep it off the agenda, it is a great opportunity to try and get some answers on London Weighting to questions such as:

  • Can the University justify imposing this settlement when many staff are clearly unhappy with it?
  • Why, with an issue that has been unresolved for 22 years, is there such urgency to end discussions after just 2 quick meetings?
  • Given the rosy state of the University’s finances, why can they not afford a more generous settlement?

If you can’t make it – do send us any suggested questions, or submit them here: https://intranet.london.ac.uk/3781.html (there’s a strong possibility that they may try to avoid any direct questions on Thursday, so getting them in beforehand is definitely a good idea).

Any questions, do get in touch via uol@iwgb.org.uk.

Books wanted for IWGB library — January 5, 2015

Books wanted for IWGB library

Melk_-_Abbey_-_LibraryWe’re trying to put together a little library in the union office, and were wondering if members had any books they might want to donate.

Anything on labour history or employment law would be fantastic BUT we’d consider anything, as many of our members are also learning English and would benefit from reading novels or other non-fiction as well.

Please get in touch with us, or just drop in at the office…

80 Lambs Conduit Street, Bloomsbury, London, WC1N 3LZ
uol@iwgb.org.uk
Tel: 02072428044

IWGB calls for equal sick pay, holidays, and pensions for outsourced workers at LSHTM — December 24, 2014

IWGB calls for equal sick pay, holidays, and pensions for outsourced workers at LSHTM

lshtmIn the latest of a wave carefully planned of pre-Christmas campaign salvos, the IWGB has served notice to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) that it faces a fierce ‘3 Cosas’-style campaign should it fail to address the glaring inequalities which exist between the terms and conditions of in-house and outsourced workers at the college.

The full text of IWGB President Jason Moyer-Lee’s email can be found below:

23 December, 2014

Re: Sick pay, holidays, and pensions

Dear Professor Peter Piot, Director of London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,

I am writing to you, in my capacity as President of the Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB), on behalf of the cleaners and other outsourced workers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM).

As you are aware, many of these outsourced workers currently have far inferior terms and conditions to directly employed members of staff at LSHTM.  Of particular concern is these workers’ entitlement to sick pay, holidays, and pensions.

Many of these workers are only entitled to the statutory minimum for holidays.  This means that they have 20 paid holidays (plus 8 bank holidays).  Given the fact that many of these workers are from foreign countries and use holidays to return home, restricting their holiday entitlement makes visiting friends and family particularly difficult.  Additionally, Ocean (the company you subcontract to do the cleaning) restricts how many of these holidays can be taken at once, meaning that workers often have to take periods of unpaid leave in order to return home.  Direct employees on the other hand are entitled to 30 days holiday, plus 8 bank holidays, plus 6 school closure days.

The pension schemes available to outsourced workers are also inferior to those of direct employees.  Whilst outsourced workers for the most part are entitled to only minimal employer contributions, their directly employed colleagues (on grades 1-4) are entitled to the SAUL pension scheme which enjoys 13% employer contributions.

Finally, and of most concern for a university whose mission is “to improve health and health equity in the UK and worldwide” and whose vision is “to be a world-leading school of public and global health, working closely with partners in the UK and worldwide to address contemporary and future critical health challenges”, is the issue of sick pay.  Currently many of the outsourced workers only have statutory sick pay.  This means that for the first three days of illness-related absence they will not be paid anything at all.  Starting on the fourth consecutive day they will only be entitled to £87.55 per week, hardly enough to pay rent or buy groceries.  Whilst the LSHTM may genuinely want to promote health equity and access to healthcare in the UK, when you refuse to pay sick pay to your cleaners, the result is that the people who mop the floors of your laboratories and take out the recycling for your researchers are either constrained to work sick, or are financially penalized for falling ill.  This treatment contrasts sharply with the sick pay entitlement of direct employees (3 months full pay and 3 months half pay from day one; 6 months full pay and 6 months half pay after three years of service).

I am therefore writing to request that the LSHTM take action to implement direct employees’ levels of sick pay, holiday, and pension entitlements to all of its outsourced workers by no later than 31 January, 2015.  If the enhanced terms and conditions are not implemented by this date, the workers at LSHTM are prepared to wage a high profile “LSHTM 3 Cosas Campaign”.  These workers will have the full support of the IWGB for this campaign.

Whilst by far the easiest solution would be for LSHTM to engage with the IWGB and agree an immediate implementation of the enhanced terms and conditions, I would like to take this opportunity to be very clear about what will happen if the terms and conditions are not implemented.  Among others, the following list of campaign tactics have proved successful in the past and will likely be used in the LSHTM 3 Cosas Campaign:

  1. Leafleting outside the university to raise awareness among students, employees, and visitors;
  2. Loud and disruptive protests;
  3. Promoting awareness on social media, in particular Facebook and twitter;
  4. Launching a website where campaign followers and participants can follow the latest news on the LSHTM 3 Cosas Campaign;
  5. Campaign videos with interviews from workers as well as prominent supporters;
  6. Write to LSHTM donors and famous alumni to inform them of the exploitative working conditions of outsourced workers at the university and highlight the fact that the people who clean LSHTM are not benefiting from improved health equity;
  7. Circulate press releases and obtain mainstream press coverage.

You and your colleagues may or may not be familiar with the IWGB and the campaigns this union has waged.  However lest you have any doubts about the union’s track record on waging and winning campaigns, it might be worth your while to peruse the union website (http://iwgb.org.uk/) and the history and press coverage of the 3 Cosas Campaign at the University of London (http://3cosascampaign.wordpress.com/press-reports/).

In closing, I would advise that LSHTM not question the determination of the IWGB to achieve justice in this matter.  There is nothing that the union treats with more seriousness and urgency than achieving improved wages, terms, and conditions for its members.

The workers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and the IWGB more generally, look forward to receiving your response.

Kind regards,

Dr. Jason Moyer-Lee
President
IWGB
http://iwgb.org.uk/