St Mungo’s strikers rally in east London (Picture: Socialist Worker)
Around 200 St Mungoâs strikers rallied outside the homelessness charityâs headquarters at Thomas More Square in east London on Thursday. It marked the day, 10 August, that a court ban on bosses using agency workers as scab labour came into force.Â
Music, whistles and horns filled the square outside the multi-million-pound offices. Itâs clear that the ban will hit St Mungoâs bosses, whoâve been relying on agency staff to undermine the Unite union membersâ indefinite strike to win a pay rise.Â
After the court ban, bosses may try to hire some workers on short-term contracts and bring in others to cover unfilled vacancies. But the strikers were resolute that theyâd keep putting pressure on agencies to stop providing scab labour.
Strikers shared their recent tales from the picket line. A picket from Hackney, east London, said, âOur manager came out today and told us they canât find any cleaning staff. So regional managers are coming in to clean the accommodation at Mare Street.
âTheyâll see what our hardest working staff have to go through everyday. Theyâve shown us so little respect for so long, but weâre staying strong with dignity and fighting back. We wonât take it anymore.â
Another striker, Letty said, âSeymour Place in central London was quiet today. But yesterday we had a special guest visitorâCEO Emma Haddad. We formed a welcome party. We questioned her on why executive salaries are so high when St Mungoâs frontline staff are being made homeless, and why the offers have been so poor.
âWe were met with defensiveness and she was extremely condescending in her tone. I was shocked to experience this first hand.
âBut it shows sheâs afraid. Our conversation ended with her crossing her fingers and saying, âLetâs hope this dispute ends soon.â We donât need her to cross her fingersâwe need her to give us a pay rise.â
Workers in London were joined by strikers from Brighton, and some strikers the day before had travelled to Bristol to be part of a rally there.
Another striker shared a story of two peopleâwho had gone back into workâcoming back out on strike on Thursday. And they brought two long term temporary workers coming out with them. Service managers at the Great Guildford Street (GGS) picket in south London joined the pickets for the first time.Â
âPickets are important,â a striker from GGS said. âIâd dropped off a bit because I was tired of having the same conversations and not much movement. But persistence is key.â
The day ended by marching to the office of trustee Joanna Killian, an honorary member at the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accounting.
Source: Socialistworker.co.uk