UK: outsourced cleaners begin three-day strike for living wage and adequate sick pay
"Ministry of Justice cleaners begin three-day strie over pay", 07 August 2018
Cleaners have picketed the Ministry of Justice and the offices of a west London council as they began a three-day strike over poor pay and conditions.
The mostly migrant workers represented by the United Voices of the World (UVW) trade union held protests on Tuesday outside the offices of Kensington and Chelsea council and the MoJ...
One of the main demands of the striking cleaners is to be paid the London living wage of £10.20 an hour, as advocated by the Living Wage Foundation, instead of the government stipulated “national living wage” of £7.83 an hour.
Both the council and the ministry blamed the failure to pay their cleaning staff the recommended London minimum on the contractors who employed them, Amey and OCS respectively.
In a statement on Tuesday, the Royal Borough of Chelsea and Kensington council (RKBC) said it “always seeks to get value for money for our residents and taxpayers, to which we are held accountable.
Petros Elia, a UVW organiser, said: "We are very disappointed with the retraction of RKBC of bringing the cleaners back in house. We find it contemptuous and disrespectful and it shows the bad faith with which they are engaging with the cleaners. Obviously, this strike will continue and build."
The contract with Amey was always scheduled to end this year, regardless of the industrial action.
Amey refused to take the blame for the low pay, saying RKBC could have stipulated that the London living wage be paid as other local authorities have.
... Maria Echeverria, union rep and organiser, said the strike “shows that major public institutions can no longer use outsourcing contracts as a shield to hide from poverty pay and exploitative conditions”.
The other demands of the cleaners are an occupational sick pay scheme and parity of terms and conditions with directly employed staff.
The MoJ cleaners work at three sites and are employed by OCS, who the ministry said was responsible for pay. Jonathan Bartley, co-leader of the Green Party, called the MoJ’s behaviour “shameful” and urged the government to lead by example.
Luis, a striking MoJ worker, said: “Even though we are paid minimum wage, the company still tries to make us work harder and harder, doing more tasks and cleaning more, and the company doesn’t send anyone to replace the workers who are sick or absent.
“It is because they don’t even listen to us or treat us with respect that we have to strike. It is [why] we call this place the Ministry of Injustice.”