Organising to break the pay freeze, organising to protect
our NHS and our public services and organising to turn
back the vicious impact of ConDem policies on our members,
on the poorest in society, on the disabled, elderly and
our children. A daunting list of tasks but one UNISON’s
National Conference was up for.
This year's conference was all about equality and social
justice. It was about communicating, organising, campaigning
to get our message to our members, prospective members
and to the public at large. There is an alternative!
We will build now for massive demonstrations in London
and Scotland on 20 October to campaign for a “Future
that Works” instead of the failed coalition policies.
“We will smash the public sector pay freeze”,
said Dave Prentis, General Secretary in his keynote speech.
He slammed three years without a pay rise, most public
service workers having to tighten their belts with escalating
food and fuel bills, but one in four now struggling to
survive. "This year pay will be our battleground”,
said Dave.
Later Scotland's Stephanie Herd told delegates: “We
know we are going into a fight. But rather than say, “We
are all in this together”,
I say, “We’ll win this together!”
It wasn’t the most contentious conference which
is just as well because we will need maximum unity to
resist the multiple attacks on public services, the people
who deliver them and the people who rely on them.
The speech of the week came from Northern Region’s
Clare Williams as she demolished the government policies
that are cutting wages and throwing people on the dole. "I'm
no economist, but even I can see that if people haven't
got much money, they can't spend it in the local economy.
So how is that going to stimulate growth?"
Scotland NEC member Jane Carolan outlined UNISON’s
alternative to these failed policies. “A strategy
that will create demand in the economy, will create employment
through investment in skills and infrastructure, and
that sees investment in public services as a boost to
the economy. We have already agreed it wasn't the nurses,
janitors, social workers or any other public sector worker
who broke the bank".
And Scottish Convener Lilian
Macer promised: “We
will continue to expose the coalition for what they
are - ideologues pursing an agenda to benefit themselves
and their super wealthy funders.”
Depute Convener Stephen Smellie's call on members to
'raise our sights' in opposing cuts to public services,
which vice-president Chris Tansley described as "devastating" and
a return to "Victorian values".
Victorian 'values' like child poverty, on the rise and
hitting families in work as well as the unemployed. Aberdeenshire’s
Kate Ramsden told Conference: “Child poverty could
be ended tomorrow if the political will was there to
do it”.
Inequality
Every speech highlighted the growing inequality in this
country. From the increases in boardroom pay of 41% whilst
low paid public service workers suffer a pay freeze -
a real terms pay cut of almost 14%; to the millions paid
out in bonuses whilst more and more of our children live
in poverty, delegates railed at the social injustices
perpetrated by this government on our poorest and our
most vulnerable, whilst giving tax cuts to their wealthy
chums.
They railed at the thrust towards more and more privatisation,
when keeping money in public services instead of paying
it as profits to private companies would save over £100
billion a year.
They railed at the impact of welfare reforms on the
poor, the disabled and the elderly and the demonisation
of these people by this uncaring government.
Pensions
And they called for fair pensions for all, including
a state pension not lower than the official poverty line
figure - currently £178.
A two hour debate about the England and Wales pensions
proposals at Local Government Conference ended in a plan
to consult and inform widely before a ballot. The debate
challenged the confusion many have between the two thrusts
needed in the pensions campaign. The bargaining strategy
in individual pension schemes to ensure fairness and
sustainability, alongside the broad political campaign
for fair state pensions for all and against the rise
in retirement age.
Health and safety
Making health and safety the first debate was a key
sign of the union’s concern about laws that protect
workers’ basic right to come home safe from work
being watered down to satisfy the greed of big business.
On the health aspects, Bill Dunn from
Highland Healthcare called on branches to negotiate
disability leave policies
and
to
challenge bad practice with the Equality Act 2010.
Devolution
Conference backed measures to support devolved
bargaining with additional
resources. On the constitutional front, Stephen Smellie
told delegates: "It is not about where the political
power is held -Edinburgh or London – but what the
politicians will do with that power, and how it will
make a difference to our security of employment or our
children’s
future."
Falkirk's Gray Allen reminded delegates, “Putting
football and rugby aside, between public service workers
across the UK there can be no barriers, no boundaries
and no divides."
Reaching out
As befits a campaigning union, UNISON also agreed to
reach out and campaign on issues like elder abuse, youth
unemployment and equal chances for young black people.
The mover of the Elder Abuse motion was ‘proud
to be in a union that cares’ and rightly so. Strathclyde
Police and Fire’s Brian Molloy added: “All
the citizens of the UK have a duty to protect the most
vulnerable people living in our society.”
Emotional and moving contributions came from Neville
Lawrence, ever dignified after 18 years of seeking justice
for his son Stephen. He called police privatisation plans
a ‘disaster’.
Tears also met the words of Carmen
Mayusa from Colombia
where on average one trade unionist is killed every three
days. Standing ovations greeted four
wives of the Miami 5, imprisoned in the US for trying to stop terrorism
against ordinary Cubans.
Something to celebrate
Bad as things are, Conference had things to celebrate.
The victories against privatisation in Edinburgh
and Aberdeen took centre stage. “We won in Edinburgh.
We won in Aberdeen. We’ve turned the tide in Southampton.
We’re fighting on in Barnet and councils across
the country. We’ve got a taste of victory and it
tastes good. Let’s go out and do it again!” Edinburgh’s
John Stevenson urged delegates.
The next step is to take
that message back to our members and our communities
to show them there is an alternative
to austerity - an alternative based on compassion,
equality and social justice.
And to rally our members to "March for the Future" on
20th October 2012 at the TUC March in London or the STUC
March in Scotland.