Support the strike at Optare
Optare make Electric Buses at their factory in Leeds.
The company is owned by Ashok Leyland which is owned by millionaire
business brothers Srichand and Gopichand Hinduja who are reported to
have a net worth of £19 billion between them according to Asian Media and
Marketing group.
The workers at the factory who have been working a normal 40 hour week
throughout the pandemic asked for a pay rise in line with the Bank of
England’s inflation rate of 2%. Optare offered 1% so they went on strike.
The strike is however not just about pay
Many of the jobs in the factory have been outsourced away from the
permanent workforce and given to part time contractors on worse pay and
conditions. This outsourcing can cause chaos with production. A worker at
the plant explained that 167 pieces of glass had to be removed from a
vehicle because it didn’t have the correct laminate and the outsourced
workers hadn’t been trained to lift the glass properly which resulted in a lot
of smashed bus windows and waste of money.
The workforce wants to be able to produce excellent electric buses and are
fed up with the chaos.
In the last few months Marcus Rashford’s campaign for kids to get school
meals has highlighted the struggle that working families are facing at the
moment, even families in work are having to use food banks as wages in
the UK are low and many companies have used the pandemic to reduce
hours or sack people and rehire them on lower wages or longer hours.
The
workers at Optare just want a decent living wage.
Does this have anything to do with the struggle against climate
disaster?
Rebels have already stared debating the way forward for XR after the
pandemic and reviewing tactics. In Australia in Sept 2019 380 dockworkers
from the Maritime Union walked out of work for 4 hours as part of a climate
strike.
They attended rallies with their official union placards saying” Stop
Blocking Offshore Wind Climate jobs now” The Maritime union also
represents oil and gas workers and says it’s trying to get ahead of the
curve on climate action and has official union policy to limit warming to
1.5degrees.
The Optare workers and the strikers at Rolls Royce who make jet engines
are fighting for jobs and decent pay but in both factories, there is the
beginnings of a serious debate on repurposing and a just transition.
Factories can be tooled up to produce wind turbines or other necessary
parts of green energy solutions and it is a mistake to think that workers
even in fossil fuel industries can’t be won to action on climate.
Some British unions have already supported climate action. The rail,
lecturers’ and teaching unions have supported the climate strikes. Workers
at the Government Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy (BEIS ) who were on strike against being outsourced and for a
London living wage when the last rebellion was on marched to one of the
rallies with a banner that said “ Fighting for a green fair and just society”
and chanting a “living wage on a living planet “.
The strikers at Optare need support because they have a right to a decent
wage to feed their families. No one in the movement for climate justice
wants to see workers who are involved in new green technologies working
hard with poor wages and conditions.
We want decent permanent Green
Jobs. We want Green Industry. We want a just and fair system for people
to live in peace and safety.
Supporting the Optare strikers is not separate to our struggle against
climate disaster.
XR rebels should send messages of solidarity to the Optare workers - we
need them and they need us.
Donations to the strike fund can be made.
The account name is Unite NE/200/1 Optare branch account number
20327132 sort code 60-83-01 and the bank is Unity Trust Bank
Messages of support can be sent to: Richard.bedford@unitetheunion.org
Rebels can add their name to the list of signatories below.
Signatories
Mary Littlefield, Unite Community Norfolk Vice Chair and XR Rebel
Wendy Smith, Unite member and XR rebel
Tim Knight-Hughes, Unite member and XR rebel
Tony Staunton, President, Plymouth Trades Union Council
Hugh Stanners, NEU member and XR rebel
Steve Wilkins Secretary Medway Trades Union Council
Jamie Osborn, Unite member and XR rebel
Raymond Morell, Unite Branch Chair, Aerospace, Edinburgh
Ian Allinson, former Unite EC member, President of Manchester TUC
Dave Sherry Vice Chair Glassgow Unite Retired Members Branch
Jonathan Warner Unite member
Nicola Redwood
Chair Unite SE London Medical branch, Health RISC and NISC delegate
and Co Chair Unite Rank and File
James Eaden President Chesterfield and District Trades Council
Arthur Nicoll Co-Chair, Dundee City UNISON
Angela Brown, Unite Manchester Construction branch member