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Old 21-06-2022, 12:21   #27
mrmistoffelees
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Middlesbrough
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Re: RMT announce Rail strikes are on for this week

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mick View Post
From Sky News: https://news.sky.com/story/train-str...ption-12637169

This strike is about safety more than pay, Network Rail worker tells Sky News

A Network Rail employee who "works on the infrastructure daily" has been in touch to counter what he suggests are widespread misconceptions about the cause of this week's strikes.

The worker, who provided his name to Sky News but asked to remain anonymous, said the action was not primarily being driven by pay.

"The issue that I have is nothing to do with money," he said.
"Every reporter and news station across the country is just focusing on pay - this strike is mainly about safety. Network Rail want to cut 2,000 operative jobs just on my route alone.

"They want all operatives across the country to be gone and replaced with a job role called assistant technician.

"The duties of this role would include travelling to various locations throughout the country in your own vehicle, therefore using more fuel and having to change your insurance policy to allow for business use, therefore costing the worker more money.

"They also want to bring in cross-discipline working so they want staff to be able to work with various departments using skills that people have mastered over years of experience.

"However, they expect us to do their highly skilled work even though we are not trained to do the task.

"Network Rail wants to attack our pension scheme and make us work more weekends with reduced rest periods between shifts, therefore making staff more fatigued and increasing the risk of serious injury."

The worker went on to criticise Andrew Haines, Network Rail's chief executive.

"This is the man that claims we need to save money as the company has no money to give us a pay rise, while he sits there on his £635,000-a-year job," he said.

The latest available figures indicated Mr Haines's salary was between £585,000 and £589,999 annually.


You can actually start to understand why these strikes are on when a CEO comfortably sits on more than half a million pound salary.
To add to this, there was something i saw on twitter from a lady who works as a platform attendant, I can't remember the exact words were that were user, but it was along the lines of

what people see is me standing on the platform blowing a whilstle, and they think it looks easy.

What they don't see

supporting a domestic abuse sufferer
waiting with an ill patient because an ambulance has been delayed
chasing after and sitting on suicidal kids trying to throw themselves on the lines.

The above had happened all in the past six weeks....
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