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Old May 28th 09, 06:07 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
Recliner[_2_] Recliner[_2_] is offline
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Default Another Tube strike announced

"disgoftunwells" wrote in message

On 28 May, 18:46, "Recliner" wrote:
"disgoftunwells" wrote in message





Strikes are the result of strikers knowing that they can extract
more by threatening to strike or by actually striking.


In general, tube drivers can extract a lot because management is in
a very weak position.


Normally, if you end up with an intransigent work force, you could
build up stock, determine that strikers have resigned, and recruit
new staff. You can't build stock in a service industry so it's not
an option. So management have no choice but to give in to ever more
extreme demands.


Yes, there's a long tradition in Britain and elsewhere of producers
of highly perishable goods (newspapers, trains, airlines, etc) being
held to ransom in this way. But such strikers can be defeated, as
Murdoch and Reagan (with air traffic controllers) showed. However,
it's much harder for a public transport organisation like TfL to
stand up to such demands. And MEP candidate Brother Crow has no love
for either Labour or the Tories, so he'll be delighted if
either/both of them are damaged by the strike.



A strike in the rail sector damages employers, causes huge disruption
for the public, and provides an unpaid holiday for the employees.
Hardly a balanced sharing of pain.

The legislation of the 80s pretty much levelled the playing field in
most industries, but not in essential services.

Where you have an essential service, how about legislation to remove*
the right to strike and replace it with compulsory pendulum
arbitration. This has worked well at many companies, where a strike
would damage employees and employers. It could work in the public
sector as well.

*Or limit, by giving the public the right to sue strikers who deny
them service. (This may have to be via the employer, with whom the
public have a contract).


Somehow, I can't see Brother Crow agreeing to pendulum arbitration, and
it's hard to see the current government agreeing to anything that could
hurt their union paymasters.