CPSU to escalate action over cuts

Lower paid civil servants are to escalate industrial action in protest against cuts in pay.

Lower paid civil servants are to escalate industrial action in protest against cuts in pay.

At a special delegate conference this afternoon members of the civil public and services union CPSU decided to take stronger action from tomorrow morning and to escalate the action again from next Monday.

CPSU general secretary Blair Horan said there was a clear mandate for more intensive action and “the Government now has a fight on its hands”

He said that from tomorrow staff were told of further unannounced action which could affect entire regions. He said that the CPSU strike committee would meet on Monday to consider a further escalation.

READ MORE

He said that such escalated action could see staff taken off the pay roll. He said that if staff were removed from the pay roll there would be a strike.

Members of the CPSU have been undertaking low level industrial action for the past week. This has involved some public offices closing at lunchtime and certain staff refusing to answer telephones.

Among the areas hit by the lunchtime protests have been the Passport Office and some Department of Social and Family Affairs facilities.

Tens of thousands of members of the unions Impact and the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation today also continued their work-to-rule in protest at pay cuts introduced in the budget.

The unions have introduced a work-to-rule and a ban on co-operation with reform plans.

The industrial action involves staff in the Civil Service, local authorities, health and education sectors. Unions have warned that the current industrial action could escalate in the days and weeks ahead.

Another Civil Service union, the PSEU, is scheduled to join the industrial action tomorrow, with Unite taking part from Thursday and Siptu from next week.

The Government has so far adopted a “softly-softly” approach to the industrial action.

The Department of Finance has drawn up a draft memo for Cabinet today setting out the state of the industrial action across the public service. The document also details the level of supports provided to unions such as the facility to have subscriptions deducted at source.

However, informed sources said yesterday it was unclear whether Minister for Finance Brian Lenihan would actually bring the document before Cabinet today.

Yesterday, Minister for the Environment John Gormley called on the unions to reconsider the industrial action.

He welcomed any proposed intervention in the dispute by the Labour Relations Commission as suggested by its chief executive Kieran Mulvey over the weekend.

“We saw the effects last week and the effect on our economy when the air traffic controllers decided to take action, and if that goes across all sectors, as Mr Mulvey has said, then our economy is going to suffer and the recovery that we all yearn for so much will only be delayed,” Mr Gormley told RTÉ’s Morning Ireland.

Senior union sources said last night there had been no contact from Mr Mulvey about a possible intervention by the Labour Relations Commission.

However, it is understood Government officials yesterday considered the Mulvey proposals and how they could operate.

Siptu president Jack O’Connor also welcomed Mr Mulvey’s proposals to intervene in the public sector pay row. He said such an initiative could be launched if the Government avoided confrontation in the short term.

Meanwhile, the Health Service Executive (HSE) said last night there had been no significant impact on patient care reported as a result of the industrial action yesterday. Last week the HSE warned of the implications for patient safety arising from any such dispute. It had sought an exemption for the health service from the scope of the industrial action, but this was refused by unions.

A HSE spokeswoman said there had been some issues yesterday regarding the provision of cross-cover of phones for staff on leave. In addition, there had been some non-co-operation reported with information technology and data-reporting systems.

Martin Wall

Martin Wall

Martin Wall is the former Washington Correspondent of The Irish Times. He was previously industry correspondent