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Stephen Smellie |
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Katrina Murray |
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Willie Docherty |
With more and more fragmentation of public services,
through outsourcing, personalisation or the break up
of established bargaining arrangements, conference backed
a range of measures to recruit, organise and support
members in these dispersed workplaces.
Scotland’s Stephen Smellie told delegates that
although we all know that recruitment is essential to
everything we do, we regularly fail to make this a priority.
He called for a more proactive and innovative approach,
but highlighted that this will also take resources.
He supported North West’s call for the union to
mount a one week recruiting and organising drive each
quarter.
Katrina Murray, moving Lanarkshire Health’s
amendment, reminded delegates, however, that it is not
just about recruiting new members but also retaining
the members we have by proving to them the continued
benefits of being in a union.
“We need to be very clear that we don’t
take our membership for granted. We need to keep justifying
why it is important to stay as UNISON members as well
as recruiting new members,” she said, adding that
members appreciate a strong local infrastructure, local
reps who know their members and managers and who can
often sort things out with just a phone call; and who
know when to keep things low key and when to escalate
to a full scale campaign.
Willie Docherty, of the Scottish Electricity Branch
welcomed the amendment from the National LGBT Committee
highlighting the key role for self organised groups
in organising and recruiting around the equalities agenda.
“We all recognise that organising and recruitment
is our biggest priority and we need to use every means
to do this. However we need the resources to back this
up.”