GFTU BGCM Minutes 2017
GFTU BGCM Minutes
GENERAL FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS
102nd GENERAL COUNCIL MEETING REPORT
held at:
Stratford Upon Avon, Warwickshire
on
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday 14 th , 15 th and 16 th May 2017
President: Ben Marshall
General Secretary: Doug Nicholls
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Reported by Jane Norman, Verbatim Reporter JC Norman Transcription Ltd Tel: 01889 271 001 Email: jcnorman4@btinternet.com
Sunday 14 th May 2017
Chair’s Introduction and Apologies for absence
4
Welcome to Guests
4
Adoption of Standing Orders
5
Election of Tellers
5
President’s Address
6
Vote of thanks to the President
10
Affiliate report – CCISUA
15
Affiliate report – SWU
18
Motion 6 – Probation reform and public safety
26
Finances
28
The Educational Trust and the GFTU’s work on education
33
Motion 13 – Selective Education
57
Motion 3 – Representatives, Training
62
Quorn Grange Hotel - Report by General Manager
65
Liberating Arts Festival – Report by Festival Producer
68
Closing remarks and arrangements
71
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Monday 15 th May 2017
EC composition and equalities seats
72
Co-operation and Services Paper
74
Launch of New Legal Services
83
Motion 4 – Promoting efficiencies and greater inter-union co-operation
86
Affiliate report – POA
88
Motion 2 – Sharing the ‘gig’ economy with all
91
Leeds Beckett University
100
The British Economy – Larry Elliott
110
Announcement of new Executive Committee and thanks to outgoing members
133
International work
135
Affiliate report – Nautilus International
137
Kurdistan
145
Motion 10 – Music Co-operatives
157
Motion 7 – Attacks on pay
162
Motion 8 – US Campaign for living wage, $15 per hour
164
Motion 9 – Performers and mental health
170
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Tuesday 16 th May 2017
New affiliate – AUE
176
Motion 1 – 1% for Art
180
GFTU activities
182
Motion 5 – Domestic violence victims in the Family Court system 187
Emergency motion re General Election
190
Motion 12 – London Underground dispute and cuts to
Transport for London’s operating grant
202
Motion 11 – Public ownership of Britain’s railways
203
Wendy Cumming – Gibraltar General Clerical Association
207
Investment and new build proposal
211
Incoming President’s address
223
Vote of thanks
228
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SUNDAY 14 th MAY 2017
The Meeting assembled at 2.00 pm
CHAIR’S INTRODUCTION AND APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE
THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, brothers and sisters. My name is Ben Marshall.
I am President of the GFTU. On my right geographically is John Smith who is
the Vice President and on my left is Doug Nicholls, the General Secretary of
the GFTU. You are very welcome to the GFTU’s Biennial General Council
Meeting, as it is called, in effect our biennial conference. You are very
welcome indeed and we hope that you enjoy what I think should be an
extremely stimulating conference.
The first item on the agenda is apologies. Doug.
THE GENERAL SECRETARY: From some guests that we planned to have, we have
Stefan Dickers, our archivist from Bishopsgate Institute, he cannot make it.
John Hendy QC is doing the last collective redundancy case for the last pit in
Britain, Kellingley, on Monday. Professor Sian Moore from our trust and Cilla
Ross from the Co-operative College. Glyn Travers from the POA will be joining
us later. Members of the Executive who are joining us later are Robert Mooney
and joining us from the Executive tomorrow are Roy Rickhuss, Manuel Cortes
and Theresa Easton. Apologies for the whole BGCM from Nick McCarthy of
PCS. The apologies for the Executive are significant in that the rules say that
they have to be accepted as apologies in order to continue on the next EC, so I
take it that those are accepted. (Accepted)
THE PRESIDENT: I would like before we go on to welcome some people to the
conference. You are going to meet an awful lot of people over the next couple
of days and there will be opportunities for you to meet them in a more informal
sense at the dinner and so on and so forth, but there are just one or two people
I would like particularly to welcome. I would like to welcome Jane Norman who
is taking our verbatim minutes. Once again, welcome Jane. We have two of
our new members of staff here. Perhaps you could wave when I read out your
names. Education officer John Callow. You are very welcome, John.
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Education administrator Shazia Begum sitting next to John. You are very
welcome.
The event is being photographed by John Harris of Report who I am sure that
most of you know very well.
The first formal item of business after the apologies is the adoption of standing
orders. General Secretary?
ADOPTION OF STANDING ORDERS
THE GENERAL SECRETARY: Thanks. The Standing Orders are on page 5. It is a
good set of Standing Orders. They are there to help us have a very relaxed,
friendly and democratic gathering and they always work well. No. 4 always
amuses me. It says: “In the case of a disorder arising, the President shall
have the power to adjourn the meeting to a time he/she shall fix”, so beware!
We have never had to invoke that one and I am sure we never will, so we are
relaxed, we are friendly, the Standing Orders are there to help. In addition to
those on page 5, there are just a couple of things on the order paper. We have
had an emergency motion on the General Election from the TSSA. That has
just been circulated, I think. The Executive supports the motion and agrees
that it constitutes an emergency under rule in that the deadline for motions was
before the election was announced, so this has come in as an emergency and
our intention is to take that on Tuesday as item 34, so we will put that in on
Tuesday.
You have seen the paper on equalities and the composition of the EC seats and
we intend to take that on Monday first thing, because that will affect the
incoming EC. I think they are the only changes that I have been notified of, so
with that I move the Standing Orders and the order of business. (Agreed)
ELECTION OF TELLERS
THE PRESIDENT: We need to elect two tellers. This is one of the least onerous
tasks in the trade union movement, by the way. I cannot remember, having
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been at this conference since 2003, us ever having an actual vote.
Nevertheless, we do need to appoint two tellers.
THE GENERAL SECRETARY: We have had two willing volunteers. We have had
brother Neil Crew from AEGIS and sister Yvonne Pattison from NAPO.
THE PRESIDENT: Is that agreed? (Agreed)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: This is where I take over, my only bit of formal business, I
think. It is a great pleasure now to ask our President to address the BCGM. It
has been an incredible two years. There has been a lot of activity, we are
going to hear all about that and Ben has been at the forefront of all of it and it
has been a pleasure to work with him, so, Ben, please, I invite you to address
conference. (Applause)
PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, John. Brothers and sisters, those of you who know
me know that I have never written a speech in my life. I usually go to the
rostrum thinking, “I wonder what I am going to say now”, but because there is
this tradition of the thing being printed out, I have actually had to write a speech
for the first time in my life, so here you go. I am now going to have to read a
speech.
It has been a genuine honour, and mostly very interesting and sometimes
thoroughly stressful, to have been the GFTU’s President for the past two years.
I have had a very long and, in some ways, very fortunate career in the trade
union movement. I became active in the then Post Office Engineering Union
(now the Communication Workers Union) in the early 1970s and became an
official of my current union in 1984, having not entirely successfully led the
campaign in the early 1980s to prevent BT from being privatised.
I am retiring from my day job at the end of this month, so presiding over this
conference will be one of my last acts before I step down and taking on what
looks like becoming a fulltime job as a trustee of the BT Pension Scheme.
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This is a great swan song for me. I had absolutely no idea that this would be
where my career would end in the trade union movement and I cannot think of
a better way to end it. Having been on the GFTU EC since 2003, I can
genuinely say that my association with this organisation has been one of the
most enjoyable, worthwhile aspects of my time in the movement and in those
14 years I have seen some extraordinary changes in the GFTU, changes
hugely for the better.
The last four or five years in particular have seen some quite extraordinary
changes in the GFTU:
The new education programme is a remarkable testament to this change and I
do urge you both to study the new programme, it is in your pack, and to canvas
it in your unions.
Our move lock, stock and barrel to Quorn near Leicester and the major plans
we have to expand and increase our investment on that side are also
extraordinary. Our new partnerships with an impressively wide range of
impressive academic institutions developed over the last couple of years. We
have largely stabilised the GFTU’s finances and the investment in Quorn will
largely end our dependence on the casino economy, as Doug Nicholls calls it,
quite rightly, and we have seen a range of very significant innovations over the
last couple of years with, just as some of the highlights, the Summits at Stone
in Staffordshire, our work with the arts community, our work with various trade
union specialists (finance officers, education officers and so on), our
development of a range of shared services programmes, our work with the
youth festivals and so on. It is a very long, very impressive list and it is fully set
out in the pack that you have.
I think we have stabilised the GFTU’s pension scheme. I have at times felt as if
the GFTU is an extremely complex pension scheme with a small trade union
body peripherally attached to it. I believe, I certainly hope, that that is no longer
the case, as I think a great deal of concerted work has gone into stabilising that
scheme.
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At the BGCM two years ago, I suggested that we should seek to grow the
GFTU’s affiliation base by ten unions. That was a bit tongue in cheek. I never
genuinely thought we could manage that, but I was determined that we should
seek to recruit new unions as I was painfully aware that we had been pretty
unsuccessful in recruiting new organisations hitherto, so I am really delighted to
be able to say that over the last two years we have recruited not five new
unions, as we say in the report, but in fact six. So a huge specific welcome to
Nautilus, the Artists’ Union England, the Scottish Artists’ Union, the Prison
Officers Association, the Social Workers Union and in the last couple of weeks
the Writers Guild of Great Britain. It is an extraordinary level of growth in two
years.
I think the GFTU can now genuinely claim to be the home for specialist trade
unions and what seems very clear to me is that they are joining us partly out of
solidarity, but also very much for what we can do for these unions. The
movement is a collective and there are very few better examples of that than
the GFTU. We are able to do things for our partners which they may not be
able to do for themselves and that is the point of us and I think we have made
some really significant steps in that direction in the last few years.
I think it is important to recognise that we have made these significant strides
against a very difficult background. I became a fulltime official in 1981, a hell of
a long time ago, and that means that I have been a trade union bureaucrat, and
I hope also very much an activist, at a time of continuous pressure on the
movement. That said, we have achieved some extraordinary things as a
movement in that time: The minimum wage - still too low, but still a massive
achievement; securing new recognition deals all over the UK’s employment
landscape, including some significant deals that my own union has been
responsible for. Some of my colleagues who have been working with me in
that regard are here today; securing real improvements; for example, for the
rights of gay, BME, disabled, women and LBGT+ workers; huge strides in
terms of equal pay as between men and women, something I am inordinately
proud of in relation to my day job, by the way.
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Not to mention the work that unions do day in/day out in terms of bargaining,
dealing with individual cases, recruiting new workers, including increasingly
workers in the so-called ‘gig’ economy. I prefer to refer to outright exploitation.
‘gig’ economy sounds almost cheerful when, frankly, it is anything but; Saving
jobs. Look at what, for example, Community has done in the steel industry, but
that is just one (important) example amongst many.
For those who say the movement is in decline, I say the evidence is only too
clear that it is not. It might get a very bad press from organisations with an axe
to grind, but day in/day out we achieve a great deal for our members. Being a
union activist can be difficult, it can be stressful, it can be very challenging, but
it is incredibly rewarding. I think I have got the best job in the world and I
suspect that most of you think the same. I think we need to be much more
optimistic as a movement and I think that we achieve day in/day out in a way
that gives us every right to be optimistic, but we could do with a much better
economic and political environment.
This is the fifth richest country in the world. It is absurd that we have a
collapsing health service, decimated local government, actually worse than
decimated. “Decimation” implies a 10% reduction, but what is happening to
local government services is far worse than that. Education cuts so savage that some schools are unlikely to survive. Food banks. Food banks in the 5 th
richest country in the world. A more than doubling of rough sleepers in four
years. House prices and rents now so high that in many parts of the country
we are now embarking on, arguably, the most severe housing crisis since
Cathy Come Home in the 1960s. Cuts to benefits so drastic that they are
killing people. A criminal justice system so beleaguered that justice itself is
clearly impossible for many. In every sense, by the way. It is our people,
working people, who are often the victims of crime. A world where war is
horrifyingly endemic. My earliest political activism included protesting against
the Vietnam War. The world situation now is far worse than it was then. How is
that even possible?
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But I think it is really important to recognise that all of this is happening at a time
when in the UK, for some, people have never had it so good. This is an
extremely wealthy country. What we have seen, for sadly most of my adult life,
is an appalling reversal of the strides towards equality this country made
between 1945 and 1979. That clearly means that what is happening now is
absolutely not in some way pre-ordained by the invisible hand of market forces.
It is the result of the deliberate policy choices that can genuinely be described
as pulling up the ladder behind them by powerful interests in our society, aided
and abetted by a media that has a massive stake in this selfish process.
Those choices have to be changed and they can be by the simple act of electing a Labour government on 8 th June. I believe we must do whatever we
can to bring that about. Now is absolutely not the time for us to fall out
amongst ourselves. I have always believed in the basic tenet of the trade
union movement – have your rows in private, establish the way forward and
then support it. It is this collective will and collective action that makes us
strong. That is what we need to do over the next few weeks.
There are many people I should thank for their contribution to the GFTU over
the past few years and, in particular, over the four years I have been Vice
President and then President. The current GFTU staff are magnificent. Fellow
members of the GFTU EC have been massively supportive and sometimes
downright brave. The decision to invest in Quorn, to embark on some of the
changes we have made over the last few years have basically involved betting
the farm. I think we have pulled it off, but it has sometimes been touch and go.
I would like in particular to thank John Fray for handing over a going concern
when he stepped down as President two years ago, John Smith for his huge
support for the GFTU over the last two years as Vice President and he will be a
great President and Doug particularly. He has been a real rock through
sometimes some very difficult times. Thank you. (Applause)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: I now call on the General Secretary to give the vote of
thanks.
VOTE OF THANKS TO THE PRESIDENT
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THE GENERAL SECRETARY: Thank you very much indeed, Ben, a lifetime’s
experience and commitment to others in the trade union movement, what move
could you want and what a privilege to have Ben give us that address at the
GFTU. Thanks ever so much, Ben. We discovered recently that Ben did a
degree in archaeology as an MA later in life or someone told us that he did, so
Oshor and I were trying to work out some jokes about skeletons in the
cupboard and old fossils and mummies’ boys and all the rest of it (laughter) ,
but I thought I had better steer clear of a bit of that.
A big part of Ben’s life has been to understand the complex world of pensions
and to represent his members on a whole variety of pension schemes,
including the biggest in Europe and one of the smallest in Europe, our own,
and we like to think that we have contributed to his education in pensions over
the last four years, because it has been really quite complicated in the GFTU
scheme as one of our sections going into section 75 and we had to have all
sorts of meetings with the Pension Protection Fund and so on to pass the
scheme on in good health. So that is a major contribution and Ben continues
that, because he will be a trustee of the BT scheme going forward and, of
course, we are not letting him off that lightly as well, because that lifetime’s
experience in pensions will be evident at the Advanced Pensions Training Day
that the GFTU is organising in June, which Ben, alongside our pensions
lawyer, Ivan, will be delivering, so make sure you get your applications in there.
That was demanded by affiliates. We put it on, so make sure you are there to
get some of perhaps Ben’s last very work, but we do invite Presidents back to
the subsequent conferences, so we look forward to seeing you in two years’
time, Ben, but Ben also goes every year to the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival. I
think he has been there for 35 years, so we might be able to see him there.
Ronnie assures me that Ben’s tent is as big as a small council housing estate,
so we can perhaps share some of the space with him.
So a massive thank you from us, Ben. No employer would have an easy time
with you against them, but every trade unionist would have a good time with
you on their side. We are grateful for all of your work on behalf of the GFTU.
Thanks, mate. (Applause)
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THE VICE PRESIDENT: To second the vote of thanks please welcome Oshor
Williams from the PFA.
BRO OSHOR WILLIAMS (PFA): Brothers and sisters, it was a great privilege for me
to be asked to second the vote of thanks to Ben. I knew that Ben was moving
into that kind of formal arena of writing speeches and delivering them in that
dignified manner, because I saw him produce his new suit for today’s event,
which suggested that this was a special occasion and it is.
It was really only when I agreed to second the vote of thanks to Ben that it
dawned on me how long I have known him. I have known him for, more or less
to the day, eight years when I joined the Executive Committee in 2009 and that
is hard for me to believe. Whilst I am able to endorse ringingly the words of our
General Secretary in respect of the tremendous work undertaken by Ben on
behalf of the Federation, I felt I wanted to offer a deeper insight into Ben
Marshall the man, which was quite difficult really! (Laughter) It is very easy for
me to say he is an absolutely top guy in terms of the work that we undertake on
the committee and any downtime that we have, he is a man that can converse
on a wide range of subjects. Everybody within the Executive Committee would
agree on that.
But, as Doug said, we were looking for that little gem, that story, that quirky
kind of fact or factoid that was going to define Ben in a way that we had never
seen him before. Ben has spent a lifetime working in telecommunications and
advancing digital technology. I decided that the obvious place to look would be
the internet, just Google a name in and people’s life stories pop up before you.
Ben, I think, two years ago emphasised that new digital media advances were
transforming the way that we live and the way that we are going to live, so I
though the irony would be fantastic, it would not be wasted on Ben. So I
Googled in the name, looking for the hidden gem. The first two pages of
articles brought up a range of people, sports people, a footballer who plays for
Wolverhampton Wanderers. That was no good to me. Ben Marshall,
Wolverhampton Wanderers, all these stats and I thought, although I have
admired your energy and verve and the speed with which you can dash from
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one meeting to another, the velocity is absolutely impressive, I did not think that
your skills ran to combining your duties within Prospect and within the GFTU
with fulltime professional football, so I put that to one side.
So I decided to refine my search and came up with a really interesting Ben
Marshall and I thought this might be the secret life of Ben Marshall. He is
actually the author of the Official History of the Who. (Laughter) Now, come
on, that would be one to bring to the table. I thought that was absolutely
amazing, I can just imagine Ben chronicling their rise from the heady days of
My Generation with his kind of drive towards new blood and youth within the
movement through to the classic single Won’t Get Fooled Again which, with
Ben’s sense of irony, would have been a coded reference to the legacy of New
Labour. (Laughter) But, alas, a photo of this particular Ben Marshall confirmed
that it was just another dead end.
I thought with my faith in technology I am going to have one last go and I
opened up a link and I thought that this is the Ben Marshall that I have been
looking for, this is the side that is little known within the Executive and this is
what it said: “Ben Marshall has taken heroin, lost his job, encouraged his
girlfriend to audition for work in an LA strip club and sold his reputation to the
Sunday Mirror for £5,000”, an appallingly low sum, I thought. (Laughter) “He
will not stop, he says, until he does something which will put him in jail. This he
sees as inevitable. Marshall, if not a man on the edge, is a man verging on a
serious loss of control”. I thought that is him, that is the man I know!
(Laughter) But unfortunately, again, further investigation revealed that it was
actually the then Editor of Loaded Magazine which, for those who do not know,
is a lads’ mag for airheads. So that was the end of that.
In truth, I did not need technology, despite its uses, despite its advantages. I
did not need technology to know about Ben, Ben the man. I can tell you about
him in my dealings with him as a member of the EC. It is all out there for us to
witness in the day to day work he undertakes for Prospect and within the
Executive Committee over the last two years as President, whether chairing EC
meetings or facilitating group workshops, as he did at the Progressive Summit
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at Yarnfield. Ben always ensures that everyone has a voice. That is important.
He ensures that all opinions are valued. That is vital. He encourages
everyone to contribute, providing a safe space for debate and discussion, even
through the most contentious of issues, and there have been many. Ben can
condense lengthy dialogue into key points without losing either context or
content and this itself is a great skill. Forensic in his scrutiny of figures and
accounts, he has been a valued member and Chair of the Finance and General
Purposes Committee as well as a trustee on the pension scheme and, of
course, he has already alluded to the difficulties in navigating and stabilising
the GFTU pension scheme.
Socially Ben, as I have said, is one of those people who can converse on
virtually any subject. A few years ago at the GFTU annual dinner my wife and I
had a few beers with Ben and then found ourselves sat next to him. I think it
was probably about four years ago at the meal. Conversation flowed, we had a
fantastic night, it was great. The following morning my wife said, “Ben, he is
really interesting and knowledgeable” and that would have been a compliment
if I had not realised that she wanted to add the words “compared to you”.
(Laughter)
But coming back to my original internet search theme and that was a little bit of
construct you might not have realised. There were a number of articles
featuring Ben, but they did not feature Ben, they featured Ben talking about
issues, describing issues, raising important issues concerning the trade union
movement, concerning his own trade union, the merger with BECTU.
Obviously, we know about his history in terms of the privatisation of what was
the Post Office, Royal Mail, movement of BT. So there were all these things out
there. He is not the sort that sits on Twitter putting out tweets “Chilling at home
watching Game of Thrones”. It is always about the issues. It is always about
the things that mean so much to him.
Ben, probably the last compliment I could pay you is that you have an
incredible ability to adhere to schedules and you are renowned for brining
meetings in on time, so on Tuesday just bear that in mind. Within the trade
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union movement that is a highly valued skill. I would like to second the votes of
thanks to the President and thank him personally for his work, his humour, his
fraternal friendship throughout our time at the EC. Thank you. (Applause)
THE GENERAL SECRETARY: We have just got a little gift we would like to give Ben
for all his hard work. That is with the appreciation of the Executive and all the
unions. Thank you. (Applause)
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very much indeed. The reason you will not find
anything about me on the web is because I understand the web quite well!
(Laughter) Just bear in mind, especially if you have got children, everything
you do on the web is indelible, it is like getting a tattoo, only even harder to
remove. Anyway, thank you, that was very generous and there is more than
enough of that, so let us move on with the agenda.
The next item on the agenda are affiliates reports. This is an opportunity that
we give to some of our affiliates, but also to all of you to know about some of
the often inordinately interesting work that many of the quite often quite
specialist little known but really very significantly important organisations that
affiliate to the GFTU actually do in their day jobs and I think we have a number
of people who are going to speak in this section, starting with CCISUA who will
explain who they are, but when I tell you that the United Nations is quite a well-
known organisation and that they represent the people who work for it, that
gives you an interesting insight into just how wide the GFTU can reach. So a
warm welcome to the BGCM to Asha Roop Kaur Dhillon of CCISUA.
AFFILIATE REPORT – CCISUA
SIS ASHA DHILLON (CCISUA): Thank you. I have to say it is a great privilege to be
here, to be representing CCISUA. I am really honoured that I have been
selected by CCISUA to be representing them at this gathering.
As I was listening to the speeches I was just thinking maybe I should say how it
came about becoming a representative of CCISUA. I was working in a small
little country called Malaysia in the UNHCR office and I worked as a protection
officer working on issues and the reason why I got interested in labour unions,
15
staff representation was because of certain events that unfolded that exposed
certain flaws and weaknesses in the oversight and accountability mechanisms
of the UN system and I thought, “I want to do something and make change, I
suppose I should get into this area”. So I ran a campaign and this whole
process took me to Geneva and I was elected the first Vice Chair of the staff
council of Geneva and then I learned about various UN trade unions and
organisations such as CCISUA, FICSA and all that, so here I am. I am here to
introduce to you what CCISUA means. It is a committee of international staff
unions and associations of the United Nations system, so it is an international
federation comprised of UN staff, staff unions and associations committed to
provide equitable and effective representation of staff at all levels. Therefore,
CCISUA primarily represents members’ interests in interagency bodies that
make decisions and recommendations on conditions of service. We are one of
three staff federations serving unions and staff associations. The others are
FICSA and UNICEF.
What we do, we promote the common interest of international civil servants of
all categories whose staff unions and associations are members of CCISUA.
We are about 40,000 members. About 17 UN agencies are members of
CICCISUA because we are located all over the world. We were founded in
1982. What we also do is to promote staff unions and associations and other
staff representative bodies of the system to advise advisory and decision
making bodies with a united voice and particularly participate in various
activities and with our interlocutors, namely the ICSC which is the International
Civil Service Commission.
So generally we look into staff welfare, staff conditions in the deep field in
various locations, because we have a common ground among all the UN
agencies. We are rather unique because UN staff do not have a single
employer, they are employed by the 193 member states. Because they work
for an international agency, they are not protected by any national labour
legislation or international conventions. Although freedom of association is
written into the UN staff regulations, national unions are not recognised and
terms and conditions are negotiated directly with representatives of the
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member states. The first collective agreement that was recognised by the UN
system was signed with a CCISUA affiliate who is the ILO Staff Union. That
allows for staff representative bodies to be established at each UN organisation
or mission and for those bodies to represent the interests of the staff which is in
our UN staff rules. Therefore, each UN mission or organisation then
establishes its own union or staff association and these are affiliated with either
CCISUA, FICSA or UNICEF.
The UN staff face many of the same issues as workers in national economies
and CCISUA affiliates represent both blue collar staff, such as security guards,
as well as white collar UN civil servants. CCISUA affiliates do not represent
the UN peacekeepers who are made up of military and police personnel
contributed by member states, they are answerable to their own member
states. There are a number of industrial relation issues that are peculiar to
working within the UN system. The most important of that is perhaps the fact
that UN staff are not protected by labour legislation, which means all
conditions, as I said, need to be negotiated directly and also of great concern
are the dangers to staff working in conflict and other non-secure locations.
Many UN staff, as you probably have heard, are killed in the line of duty.
Another area of concern is the prevalence of short term contracts in the UN
system. There is a lack of job security and long term career development and
the right of redress that the UN staff have is to a body called the United Nations
Dispute Tribunal and the Appeals Tribunal.
Therefore, at CCISUA we service a platform of a collective bargaining
mechanism in the International Civil Service Commission, the ICSC, our main
interlocutor. What currently we continue to grapple with right now is the
continuous erosion of staff entitlements, be it the general service category or
the international professional staff. On the basis of pressure of various
member states right now, the biggest challenge that we have is that the ICSC,
due to pressure from member states, have actually deduced a 7.5% pay cut of
all UN professional staff salaries in Geneva and there has been a lot of
pressure and a lot of discussions among all the UN staff federations and unions
in Geneva and we are losing an entitlement. Slowly by slowly we seem to see
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an erosion of our staff entitlements, either in a duty station in Geneva or in field
duty stations and things like that. So we see that and we find that some of
these member states have deviated from what they had initially agreed to in
terms of conditions, in terms of service of the international civil servant, so staff
unions are, therefore, concerned that all these cuts in income on this scale and
the reduction in rights to various entitlements such as family leave, right to
education, in terms of education grants, allowances to staff who have families
when staff are posted to a deep field location and staff sometimes need to have
their families close by in safe duty location so that they can be able to visit
them over four weeks of working in a tough duty location.
So these are some of the areas that CCISUA work for and I think that is about
it. I think I will stop here. If there are any other questions please throw it up for
a discussion. (Applause)
THE PRESIDENT: Can I also ask John McGowan from the Social Workers Union to
say a bit about another incredibly interesting organisation.
AFFILIATE REPORT – SWU
BRO JOHN McGOWAN (SWU): Brothers and sisters, I am delighted to be up here.
As you can see, our name is on the board, so it is great to be part of the GFTU.
What I am planning to do is I am planning to tell you a bit about what we do as
social workers, why we set up the union in 2011 and also why we feel that the
membership of the GFTU is really important for our organisation. Before I start,
you see my name there, John McGowan, General Secretary. It is a part time
post. I am also part time for the Open University. I am the programme tutor in
Scotland for the social work degree. That is why I have got a Powerpoint. It is
what I do every day! (Laughter) I have been in the post now for eight months.
I can think eight months ago I used to have hair and I was not grey and I was
about a stone lighter, so the eight months has taken its toll on me, but it is a job
I really enjoy and I have to say that because our President is here as well.
(Laughter)
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Last night I was watching Dr Who on TV and I have got an 11 year old boy and
I said to my boy, “Look, I’m coming to Stratford, have you got any good jokes
about Shakespeare?” He said, “Dad, I’ve got a good one for you”, so if you all
promise to laugh at his joke, it is coming up next. Shakespeare walks into a
bar and the bartender says, “You can’t drink here, you’re barred!” (Groaning)
If that is okay I will share that with him when I phone him tonight and say you
all laughed at the joke. (Laughter) Hopefully that is okay.
I will just take you through the journey of social work. Social work is an
academic and a practice based discipline, so our roots are really if you think of
the dimension of psychology, sociology, social science and political science, so
we have a clear academic framework, but also we work with the most
vulnerable group of individuals that you can imagine, so we have got a lot of
skills in relation to interviewing and report writing and court working and we are
working from children to adults, so the whole scope of, I suppose, the most
damaged individuals in society is part of our work basis.
Our principle then, we engage with people and structures to address life
challenges and we try to enhance wellbeing. That is rooted in our profession.
What we do. Social work promotes social change and empowerment of
people, family and communities. The main line I tell my students is that social
work is about promoting change, making that small difference in somebody’s
life or a family’s life, that is what we strive for.
A practising professional with a degree in social work is called a social worker,
but ironically that title was not protected until 2005. Prior to then anyone could
call themselves a social worker and, indeed, I have been in the back of many
taxis prior to 2005 where the taxi driver seemed to be a social worker, but since
2005 if anybody calls themselves a social worker they are in deep trouble
unless you have got that qualification.
Who are we then? The Social Workers Union is a trade union. It is dedicated
to social work professionals. Unlike other trade unions who represent social
workers and this is not about competition, because we welcome anyone who
joins a trade union, but I would argue that I suppose part of our remit is that we
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are always able to represent social workers, because everyone involved with
our organisation needs to be a qualified social worker and registered as a
social worker and that goes for myself, members of the exec, all our trade
union officers, we are all qualified social workers and we all understand the
code of conduct and also what it means to be a social worker. Our unique
selling point since 2011, I would argue, I suppose we all know how difficult it
can be for a social worker, we all work under tremendous pressure. We
understand that pressure from the Social Workers Union perspective, because
we have all been there and actually I still practise in child protection for my
licence, so I understand how difficult it is working with vulnerable people.
Therefore, we are able to use the specialist knowledge and we advocate on
behalf of social workers, both individually on a one-to-one basis through
representation, but collectively as we are growing in strength in the union, we
are trying to do that as a collective group of our organisation, so that is a bit
about who we are.
The next thing is why did we set up the Social Workers Union? Prior to 2011
we all belonged to what is called the British Association of Social Workers, that
is our professional body, but there was a growing concern that our professional
body, we had advice and representation prior to 2011, but we were not always
recognised by local authorities and other organisations, so we put it to the AGM
about setting up a union in 2011, so since then it has been a great learning
curve, but, I suppose crucially, all our members in the British Association, the
professional body, that is something they wanted, so the establishment of the
Social Workers Union now means that our members, our professional
organisation, can also belong to the union and that is a choice. They have got
to pay up and join the union or if they want they can just remain with the
professional organisation.
Our membership at the moment in the UK, there are over 100,000 social
workers in the UK, we set up in 2011 and in 2017 our last stats were 12,000
paid members, so that has been a great learning curve for us as a union. In
the last eight months our membership has increased by 3,000. I suppose it is
hard being a brand new union, but the message is getting out to new social
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workers that they have the choice to join the Social Workers Union. I think that
is great. I think you would all agree from a brand new union in 2011 to having
that membership base, it has been a massive learning curve.
I will maybe share with you some of the demands on our members. I suppose
it is the legal necessity. Social workers work within a legal framework and I
suppose we have all read the headlines in the Daily Mail and other newspapers
about the constant barrage of criticism towards our profession. It is always
blaming a social worker, so that is really difficult when you work in that bubble,
because it is not our way to tell you all the good news. I could stand here all
day and tell you about the amount of children I have saved from hardcore
abuse, but at the end of the day the media focus on the negative. I think that is
hard for our profession. It is hard for our profession, because if anything goes
wrong it is scrutinised in a heavier way by the media, so our members need
protecting from that. They also need protecting from the sort of bureaucracy
and I think we are all part of that, that at the end of the day it is a difficult
framework to work in.
I suppose for me as the General Secretary the question of who protects the
protectors, that is often side-lined, because our development in the profession
means that often that is overlooked to say, “Who is looking after you as a social
worker?” so I am pleased that that message is getting through to our
membership base.
The need for a trade union. Research was done in 2005 and I have put that
up, because there has probably been more modern research, but, bizarrely,
that still stands the case for social work, that Asquith Clark and Waterhouse
argued that it is internationally recognised that social workers are often low
paid, indeed in respect of our qualification, bearing in mind that some of our
social workers have been through five years of university, they are relatively
low paid. We can work very long hours, we work with heavy, complex
caseloads and we have to juggle with the demands of our managers, the
clients and also the professional body and maintain that professional
registration. That is quite interesting. Our members are still finding that, that
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they are juggling low pay and the demands, so again it is a good selling point
for us as a union to make sure people join us.
To be or not to be in a union, I suppose I could stand here and could argue all
day that social workers need to stand up for themselves, so we think about our
own training. We have trained as social workers so we need to stand up and
be counted and speak up for ourselves. I suppose we all realise that that is
fine, but we all work within a bubble, being accountable and also the whims of
employers, so it is quite difficult to stand up for yourself when you are faced
with heavy caseloads and responsibilities and legal responsibilities, so that is
my argument as to why social workers should join our union, because we are
there to protect them if things go wrong and also offer advice and guidance.
Unionisation has real benefits for members, as we all know. I suppose it is not
my intent to portray our union membership as a silver bullet for the social work
community and I certainly would not argue that by joining the Social Workers
Union we will resolve all the issues for our workers, but nevertheless I would
argue that both the immediate and long term support offered by the GFTU
represents for us a real investment in the future of social work and it is a great
tool in the resources which support our profession and union members. So
again it goes back to what I said at the start, I am really pleased that we belong
to the GFTU.
Why social workers join our union. Every year our advice and representation
service, looking at the stats last week, we have helped over 1,000 social
workers in a range of different situations from the small, easily resolved issues,
usually over a phone call, to more significant and prolonged conduct issues
and I say conduct issues, because every time there is a child death or an adult
death, unfortunately, that leads to a fatal death inquiry, so obviously we need to
be involved with that, so there are more significant issues for our members and
obviously the day to day demands of working with very difficult service users.
Here are some of the issues that we have helped members over recently –
grievance procedures, representation at internal hearings, investigations into
professional social work practice and allegations of misconduct. We have also
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helped social workers with issues around discrimination in employment and
their access to training. We have also helped social workers and the trainee
social workers and we have represented them in conduct hearings.
So that is a flavour of what we do in the Social Workers Union. Why social
workers need to join us. We have put that there. Recently I have been active
and I have organised a march along with my BASW colleagues, so we
marched from Birmingham to Liverpool. I think it was about 106 miles we
walked over seven days, but we organised it with a number of social workers
and service users, so it was a great opportunity to pay attention to Boot Out
Austerity. There is a website called Boot Out Austerity. We are trying to get
this movement on social injustice and for me that was a great opportunity to
meet our service users and visit food banks and speak to politicians, so it was
something I was very pleased to be involved with.
I just want to conclude now by really highlighting why I feel as General
Secretary the need for our union to be a member of the GFTU and I think we all
recognise those facts. I was just typing this morning thinking, “What is it about
the GFTU?” Of course, that list could go on, but I have got the
Education For Action. Our members benefit from the extensive training
courses offered by the GFTU. A sense of belonging. I think it was Doug who
highlighted that earlier, that I suppose in this room I am amongst likeminded
unions and that sense of sharing and together we can be stronger. The GFTU
is suited to our union size. We are still small enough that I think our voice is
heard within the GFTU, so that is very important to us. We have certainly
benefitted from the GFTU knowledge base and I have received ongoing advice
from the GFTU General Secretary and also the staff, so I have been thankful
for that. We have got access to the full training courses, day schools, even the
hotel if we want that. We have got study seminars, we have got ongoing
general secretary workshops which will be useful for myself, because, as I say,
I have only been in the job for eight months. Again, the GFTU campaigns for
and supports everyone in this organisation and overall the GFTU services the
needs of our union, because we are a specialist union and we have always
found the GFTU approachable, so thank you for that. (Applause)
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