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Trade unions and Scottish Water at standstill in dispute

Trade unions and Scottish Water at standstill in dispute

The National27-04-2025
Representatives from GMB and Unite the Union have expressed ­frustration as the company's chief executive has not attended pay ­meetings, and the pay offers proposed to workers 'have effectively meant a wage cut'.
Sam Ritchie, regional officer for Unite the Union, said there was an 'excellent' strike turnout last week.
'There was good weather and good spirits. I think there's also a lot of ­anger towards Scottish Water and the way that they've treated their ­workers,' he said.
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The pay dispute began in July 2024, with surveyed trade union members asking for a flat pay rise of £3000 ­before strike action took place.
Following negotiations, Unite members were balloted in October of last year and rejected a pay increase of £1200 from Scottish Water.
A pay rise of £1400 was rejected by members in December, which ­Scottish Water said was its final offer. Since then, it has 'refused to budge'.
ACAS, a human resources ­consultancy that Scottish Water used to aid negotiations, reportedly asked Scottish Water to return to the negotiation table with a new offer for employees.
Claire Greer, GMB Scotland ­organiser, said: 'The last ACAS ­meeting instructed them [Scottish Water] to give one simple pay offer, and one red line for trade unions was that the offer would be no less than it was before.
'This was agreed in good faith, but Scottish Water, combined with ACAS instructions, gave the exact same ­offer bar £125 in the first year. We're tied in knots, it's a long, drawn-out, complicated offer that they keep ­putting on the table.'
Greer added that Scottish Water is refusing to negotiate on the first year of the pay deal after unions rejected Scottish Water's pay offer for 2024-2025, now only focusing on pay for 2025-2026.
'This went from being a very ­simple dispute, to a dispute that is centred around Scottish Water wanting to explain, re-explain, and re-explain again how to do negotiations, and that's not what we want,' she added.
'Scottish Water is very good at holding meetings and talking at its staff, not letting them ask any ­questions, and saying that it has consulted with staff. That's not how you consult with staff, and that's not how you ­negotiate'.
The frustration is shared by ­Ritchie, who says that management is 'out of touch with reality', and that ­Scottish Water's chief executive has not been present at pay deal meetings with unions.
'Alex Plant received, with his ­salary and his remuneration package combined, just below half a million pounds,' he said.
'For someone who receives such a large package, I would at least expect that he'd get around the table and listen to the voices of his workers, rather than just those voices that are a part of the board.'
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Within his first 10 months in his role as chief executive, Plant ­received £483,000 from his salary, performance bonuses and benefits, and pension combined.
Ritchie added that 'the arrogance of management is also shocking', and that Plant 'should be treating his workers with dignity and respect'.
'Managers at Scottish Water negotiate their own contracts privately, as they're above pay grade eight. ­Managers are offered bonuses to ­retain ­talent, but what about the workers on the front line?'
The change in Scottish Water's pay anniversary has also proved to be an issue, with the change itself being approved by trade unions, but the way it has changed the pay offer was not.
The 3.4% raise that Scottish ­Water claimed would be provided came in the form of £1400 for July 2024 to March 2025, but since the change in anniversary date, this has changed to the raise being spread over 12 months, which unions say makes the raise only 2.8%, or £1050 for Scottish Water employees on pay grades 1-6.
On the change the proposed ­offer would make to workers, trade ­unions agree that this would not be ­substantial, with Greer saying: 'Look at the rising cost of household bills, mortgages, rent, that £1400 is not meeting any of that.'
Ritchie added: 'The numbers don't add up, it feels like they're trying to pull the wool over the unions' eyes.'
Scottish Water's chief operating officer, Peter Farrer, said: 'No one benefits from industrial action and our focus is on continuing to deliver for our millions of customers across Scotland.
'Our above-inflation pay proposal is fair and progressive, prioritising the highest percentage increases in the business for those on the lowest salary grades – money that should be in employees' pockets now.
'We met with ACAS and the trade unions on April 15 to explore options to resolve the current dispute. Following that, we made a different, further improved proposal in an effort to reach an agreement.
'This is a good proposal and we are disappointed that union officials have not shared it with their members and given them the opportunity to vote on the offer in a ballot.
'We urge the unions to get back round the negotiating table as soon as possible.'
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On the 'progressive' offer, Greer said: 'We completely disagree, and that's our members, the joint trade ­unions, GMB, everyone that's ­providing support is in complete ­disagreement with this.
'There are other public bodies across the pay sector that have gone on strike for higher pay offers than this, we've yet to find a pay offer ­lower than this.'
Ritchie backed this claim: 'The NHS were offered 5.5%, the Irish equivalent to Scottish Water were ­offered 5.5% or £1500 to all staff, we're seeing failing water companies down south get offered 4%.'
On returning to the table, Greer said: 'The trade unions haven't left the table, we've been open to any ­offer or suggestion, we've not backed ourselves into a corner here, we're not being precious about what we're willing to do. But we won't come back for the same offer, that's just a waste of everyone's time.
'There's no time for trickery and sleight of hand when it comes to pay talks. Everyone's there for the same reason, everyone wants these people back at work, so let's do it properly.'
Industrial action is set to continue, with the next strikes taking place on May 2 and 6 across Scotland.
Greer confirmed that 'workers right across the whole spectrum of jobs at Scottish Water, from the daily admin and office type roles right out to the more industrial roles' will be on strike.
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He settled into his anything but routine life with his host family, all the while expressing his luck to have such shelter. At moments of despair, he would refer to a piece of poetry, such as Mary Elizabeth Frye's Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep. 'Do not stand by my grave and weep / I am not there. I do not sleep / I am a thousand winds that blow.' There were moments of intense fear, when bombs landed nearby, or further moves were contemplated. And there were moments when the internet was cut, leaving him isolated. Worried messages would then flood in from readers, and I would hear from Tracy, the outwardly hard-bitten editor on the Guardian who became his most concerned and loyal supporter. He never lost his spirit, though. 'There was this awful seed of hope inside of me,' he says now. 'It never died. But deciding to remain hopeful was very difficult and it took a lot of energy.' Ahmad's family was large. At times there were 35 people in the house. There was Ahmad's mother, grandmother to three children who were also there. She kept everyone alive, somehow creating at least one meal a day. 'Gaza's children hadn't been able to go to school because of Covid,' he tells me. 'Then came the war. So there are children who are eight years old who don't know how to write their name. The grandmother used to dedicate an hour of her day to teaching her grandchildren. How come she's not known as one of the most impressive people ever?' Early in the diaries, he revisited a subject, reporting that Gazan men do cry: 'I saw one collapsed building with three men standing opposite, looking at it, and heavy tears were falling from their eyes.' Then came the day the diaries stopped. The diarist, his sister and the cats had crossed Gaza's southern border, to become exiles. I asked him to keep writing, and he has, but he no longer wanted to publish. He said he was too identifiable, that the danger was far from over. 'And what about when I return?' he asked. There was also his overwhelming guilt that he had managed to survive and get out. 'Ahmad's family, who hosted us, are still in Gaza. And you know what? In this very tough moment, when people are starving, every time I talk to them, they say, 'We are fine. We are managing.' And I know that they are not managing – they weren't managing when I was there. Those great people, who helped others, who welcomed me and my sister, oh my God, I will always be for ever in debt to them.' He pauses to collect himself, then adds: 'It seems that those who were killed were the lucky ones, because they did not have to see what came next.' He prefers not to reveal too much about his life now, or where he is, but is happy to talk about exile. 'It feels like your soul has been snatched out of your body,' he says. 'What are we as human beings, if not our stories and memories and moments? If you walk by a street and remember: 'Here, I met my friends,' or: 'Here I held someone's hand who I was in love with,' or: 'Here I cried,' or: 'Here I buried my mother.' If those things are taken, what is left?' Having looked after his family within Gaza, he now finds himself struggling to look after himself. 'A friend gave me a plant and I had a panic attack. I cannot commit to a plant.' At present, he is surrounded by fellow refugees, and has noticed a new decisiveness. 'I know people who decided to get a divorce. When they were in Gaza, they couldn't because of the traditions. Now they say, 'We were about to be wiped off the earth, so at least let me live the life I wanted.'' Others have taken different directions. He has heard of people turning to drugs, alcohol, sex, 'or hurting the people in their lives, being physically aggressive'. He instead has returned to sport. 'So I'm blessed, until this moment.' He has to keep moving, he says. His sister tells him they have to stay ahead of tragedy. 'She says, 'This is history repeating itself. It's not something new.'' And all the while, he swings from hope to despair. 'I met a guy, not Gazan, who is working hard because he wants to get an apartment, and I said, 'Please take time to smell the flowers. Take time to enjoy your life. You can lose it all in a moment.'' His hopes of returning to Gaza have been fading. He tells me to look at Google satellite images of Gaza. I do and it is horrifying, but he says it's more about the people. A friend was talking about how entire peoples can be eclipsed – the Native Americans, say, or Indigenous Australians. 'I replied, 'Are you telling me that in 100 or 200 years, when people think about the culture in this land next to Egypt, they will say, 'Well, there were people here called the Gazans, but then a new culture came. We should apologise to those Gazans'? Are you telling me we will end up being a line in someone's story?' Having received his diaries in real time, I have of course spent much of the last 21 months thinking about my friend, a bit like a helpless idiot calling down to someone at the bottom of a well. But I believe, strongly, that while his instinct has been to write as an anonymous everyman, this is no diary of a nobody. It has felt like the diary of a point of light, moving through a darkening landscape, one among millions of points of light, being eclipsed one by one. The clock has ticked round to 1am as we talk. I ask who he hates. 'Believe it or not, I don't hate anyone,' he says. 'It is not my nature, hating people.' I ask about the cats. 'Oh, they have grown fat!' It's late, but he wants to keep talking. 'I miss sleeping well,' he says. Who Will Tell My Story? by Anonymous (Guardian Faber, £12.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.

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