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Re: British Airways cabin crew vote for Christmas strike
it makes we wonder if workers have any rights left at all .It seems to me that reguardless of what workers think about new employment practices they will be ignored ,given the size of the vote for strike action then there is obviously something wrong at BA and if the work force feel that strong they should just walk out anyway and there wont be that much BA could do about it
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Re: British Airways cabin crew vote for Christmas strike
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Re: British Airways cabin crew vote for Christmas strike
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Re: British Airways cabin crew vote for Christmas strike
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He provoked the Gate gourmet dispute which cost BA millions, he oversaw the T5 fiasco and is now hellbent on being the CEO of a merged BA/Iberia airline. There was much made by the supportive press of him forgoing his bonus during the T5 fiasco, I didn't notice any reporting of the £1 million pound "additional payments" he received. The only way for BA to survive is to get rid of this numpty and install mangagement who are willing to bring a strategy that is for the benefit of BA, not the CEO. |
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i am sure that the details of how long a strike is going to last and when it takes place has to be ironed out before the ballot .If people say they didn't know how long the strike was on for or when it would take place then they are talking out their backside |
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Quite right. Who would blindly put an X in a box without knowing the possible consequences. The press will find some idiots who claim this but it isn't representative. |
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well i've just checked my big book of strike rules and it states that any action voted on must commence within 4 weeks of the ballot or the ballot is invalid it also states that the employer must be notified of how many people and who they are and when they will be implementing any action before the ballot takes place |
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In that time there will always be some people who receives a ballot paper who are not entitled to vote. The decision yesterday was about a few hundred people who no matter how the voted wouldn't have affected the overall outcome. In the future, if there is a much closer ballot, does the employer only have to find one or two people who shouldn't have voted to run to the High Court to force the union to start the process again. Bad precedent :( |
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As is often the way in these sorts of cases, there's the critical word reasonable. What you're suggesting as the future nightmare scenario simply is not reasonable. No judge is going to halt a strike just because an employer can find a small handful of people who shouldn't have been balloted. For BA to have won this, there must have been a substantial number of people who were not entitled to vote, and there must have been some good evidence that Unite didn't bother to take reasonable steps to avoid balloting them. ---------- Post added at 13:29 ---------- Previous post was at 13:27 ---------- Quote:
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thats the problem the word REASONABLE is used far to much in employment law and can be very vague also it does depend on a judge to rule on what is resonable and what's not .I understood that some of the people ruled invalid to vote were people on voluntary unpaid leave or voluntary redundancy (serving notive)surely these people technically still work for BA and so should have been allowed to vote |
Re: British Airways cabin crew vote for Christmas strike
BA complained about ballot papers that were sent to people who had already left and those who were in the process of leaving... These were all people who had gone or were going under the VR scheme. All within the last 6 months, most more recent .
I've seen various figure quoted for those not entitled to vote but there seems to be a consensus that it was in the region of 800 - 1000. The membership figures of most trade unions is usually out of date because the vast majority of members pay through their wages. The Union therefore depends on the Employers to inform them of leavers, sickness etc, through their payroll process. Some employers do this monthly, others quarterly, a few even less frequently. I don't know how regular BA send returns to Unite but a balloting process that started at the end of October would have been using figures from further back than even that. I totally agree with the expert you quoted on what is reasonable. The high court judge didn't. The undemocratic aspect is that even if every single ballot paper that was incorrectly issued was counted as no vote, there would still be an overwhelming majority voting for industrial action. |
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surely anybody in the process of leaving through a VR scheme still works for the company and therefore should vote |
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This was a secret ballot so nobody actually knows if any of these people actually voted. |
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