There's still plenty of time to enter our calendar competition (see previous post for details). And, to make it easier for you, we can now accept entries by email. If you'd like to see your photos on next year's local branch calendar, please email them to unisonslg@btconnect.com or post them to UNISON Local Services Branch, 18-20 Alexandra Buildings, The Esplanade, LERWICK, ZE1 0LL.
If your photos are chosen for the calendar, we'll let you know in September. Good luck!
Monday, 29 July 2013
Thursday, 4 July 2013
National Delegate Conference
Here is Brian Smith's report from UNISON's recent National Delegate conference. The photo isn't of Brian but of Ricky Tomlinson (readers are left to decide if there is more than a passing resemblance), who was at the conference to highlight the Shrewsbury24 campaign he is involved in. Further details below.
Dear friends
It is impossible to do justice to an event as rich as UNISON’s four-day National Delegate Conference in a short report. This is an account of the week as it struck one delegate.
It began with a bang. Ricky Tomlinson spoke passionately about his plight and his colleagues’ plight in the 1970s when they were blacklisted as building workers. The evidence of what happened has been concealed by successive governments: join the campaign to reveal it at http://www.shrewsbury24campaign.org.uk/
As at the Local Government conference, delegates – especially those in England and Wales – were unimpressed by the union leadership’s performance on pay. Many speakers savaged Dave Prentis, who last year promised a major campaign on the subject and then forgot to have one. When Prentis spoke on Tuesday he didn’t get the usual standing ovation.
There is a great deal of stage-management at conference these days. In most cases there were no speakers against this or that motion, and during the week there were only two card votes. (I remember days when there might be a dozen.) Thursday afternoon, when changes to rule are discuss, was livelier. I voted for a motion to introduce UNISON’s new financial systems on 1 January 2014, having been assured by Cherelynn that they will be very useful.
There was much concern about the National Health Service, and what is regarded as the privatisation of it, the toll PFI is taking on it, and debilitating cuts in funding. Conference agreed that there would be a mass demonstration at the Tory Party conference in Manchester at the end of September about the issue.
As usual, there were many debates on equalities issue: one of UNISON’s most impressive areas of campaigning. There was a good discussion about racism in football and the impressive Kick it Out campaign, and a particularly impressive one about disability hate crime, something I had hardly been aware about.
On Thursday morning conference was invaded by an impressive flash mob campaigning about page three images in the Sun. See them here: http://www.uniondiary.com/video/unison/?videoId=33SmkobZp38 (You might catch a glimpse of the present writer in this film.)
A less satisfactory equalities debate was one about an amendment about male violence towards women. It was defeated because some speakers argued that some men receive violence from women, which was really beside the point.
As usual, the debates about international issues – notably Colombia, Palestine and Nicaragua – were very good.
Throughout conference there was a constant theme that the government’s attacks on public services, and their economic policies, have very little to do with economics, and much more to do with ideology. Friday’s debate on welfare cuts was a good example, where ATOS’s habit of certifying dying people as fit for work was dealt with in detail.
Conference isn’t just about describing how awful things are. Also on Friday support was forthcoming for 115 UNISON members who work for the Future Directions Company in Rochdale, who are cutting their members’ pay and attacking their terms and conditions. Conference made an immediate donation of £5000 to the strike fund.
Best wishes
Brian
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Several local UNISON members have been attending the National Local Government conference and UNISON's National Delegate conference. The events were held in Liverpool, and our branch chair Brian Smith has sent reports of each. Here is Brian's report from the Local Government conference. His National Delegate conference report will appear in a later blog post.
Dear friends
Here is a short report about the National Local
Government Conference, held in Liverpool on 16-17 June, attended by branch development officer, Averil Simpson, and
me as delegates.
The conference kicked off with a powerful speech of
welcome by Joe Anderson, the mayor of Liverpool. Joe is a UNISON member, and he
and his administration have tried to mitigate the cuts prescribed by
government.
The first debate was about the onslaught by many councils
on facility time for trade unionists. This is not a situation that our branch
has faced; my hair stood on end when I heard what some employers have been
doing.
There was much about the bedroom tax, and about how much
it is costing councils to implement. There was some annoyance about a circular
that UNISON had sent branches warning that everyone should co-operate with it.
There was an excellent debate on Sunday afternoon about
pay. You will have noticed that in England and Wales a very poor turnout of 12
percent of members voted two to one in favour of the employers' offer of 1 per
cent. The service group executive was heavily criticised for not running a
campaign, and had the grace to look embarrassed.
On Monday there was an excellent debate about fighting
cuts and privatisation, and about UNISON's relations with councillors here and
there who try to withstand cuts. An amendment by the executive warning about
the legal consequences of dealing with such councillors was heavily defeated.
Jane Carter, a young labour economist at the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees gave us an excellent talk
about the horrific extent of privatisation in the U.S., and the tactics she and
her colleagues use to try to thwart it.
There was a superb presentation about the union's new
Ethical Care Campaign. We heard about how private care companies are restricting
care at home to 15-minute packages and 'employing' workers on zero hour
contracts, with no payment for travel.
The debate on deregulation and attacks on health and
safety was very good. One speaker likened the government's performance on this
subject to two UKIP supporters sitting in a pub moaning about the good old
days!
All the best
Brian
Wednesday, 19 June 2013
Photo Competition
Would you like workers all over Shetland to see your photos? If so, enter our new competition and your
pictures could appear on the local branch calendar next year. You can send us photographs taken in
Shetland, or in any part of the world you have visited, but all submissions
must be from UNISON members. Please send images in hard copy (we will ask for a digital version if your photo
is selected), and you should write your name, contact details, membership number
and category entered on the back. The
categories for entries are:
1. Place
of Work
Images of any places of work. This category can include imaginative images
of any element of a workplace, here in Shetland or overseas.
2. Wildlife
Could include any wildlife-related image.
3. Landscape
This category might include any landscape, outdoor
scene, natural image or sunset.
4. Urban
landscape
Pictures of urban places.
5. Rural
Landscape
Images of rural landscapes.
6. Our
community
Pictures which use the theme of community and what
that means to people.
7. Weather
This category includes any image of weather.
8. Architectural
Design and Building
Images which
capture stunning architecture or building design.
9. Food
Could include any images associated with the growing,
distribution, cooking and eating of food.
10. Portrait
Pictures of people from all walks of life.
11. Black
and White
Images in black and white, with any subject,
composition or style considered.
12. Trees
In our final category, we’re looking for images of
trees. American Giant Redwoods or
Willows in Waas can be submitted.
Images should be sent to:
Photographic
Competition
UNISON Local Services Branch
18-20 Alexandra Buildings
The Esplanade
LERWICK
ZE1 0LL
The closing date is Friday 30
August 2013. We can’t return
photos, unfortunately, so remember to keep a copy for yourself. We’ll let you know in early September if your
picture has been chosen for the 2014 calendar.
Thursday, 21 February 2013
AGM
AGM
The local branch AGM will be held on
Friday 8 March at 12.00
in Isleburgh Community Centre.
A soup and sandwich lunch will be served,
and there will be a talk by
Dave Watson, Scottish Organiser for UNISON
(Bargaining and Campaigns)
Dave will be speaking about changes in pension
legislation, and we hope a large number
of members will be able to come.
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