Newsgather
Back|Birmingham bin strike settlement within sight after year-long dispute
Birmingham bin strike settlement within sight after year-long dispute
NOTICIAAI
Guardian UK·27.04.2026·🇬🇧United Kingdom·Labor

Birmingham bin strike settlement within sight after year-long dispute

Council leader commits to improved offer for refuse workers as union hails 'vindication' of workers' struggle

2 dk okuma·%70 önem·387 kelime
#birmingham#binstrike#unite#johncotton#sharongraham#wastecollection#industrialdispute#labordispute
G
Guardian UK
Yayıncı
Tamaño de fuente

The end of the year-long Birmingham bin strike is now "within sight", the city council leader has said after committing to an improved offer for refuse workers. On Monday, John Cotton, the Labour leader of Birmingham city council, said a new, improved offer could be made to workers that he hoped would "end the strike once and for all". "After months of frustration and delay, for the first time in over 12 months, a negotiated settlement to end the bin strike is now within sight," he said. Bin workers in Birmingham began striking in January 2025, and stopped working completely in March that year, in a dispute over proposed pay cuts and role changes. It led to the council declaring a major incident when 17,000 tonnes of uncollected rubbish built up across the city. Sharon Graham, Unite's general secretary, said: "The move made today by the leader of the council is a vindication of the bin workers' struggle for a decent deal. "I salute the fortitude of my members who have needlessly been forced to endure months of attacks and hardship to get us to this point." Graham blamed the "vindictive interference" of the government commissioners who were sent to run the council after it in effect went bankrupt in 2023 for blocking the deal to date. "Their lack of both experience and industrial relations competence has been a major factor in this dispute, and their malevolent game-playing has been an absolute disgrace," she said. Unite said the full details of the deal would remain confidential until the council submits a detailed offer, and would need to be voted on by bin workers. The union said the broad outline of the deal would mean workers get a two-month cushion from any salary reduction resulting from a job evaluation process, and agency workers who had worked for more than 12 months would be offered permanent employment. It also said disciplinary issues would be quashed, gross misconduct issues reviewed, and legal action on both sides would end. The strike – one of the biggest industrial disputes in recent years – stemmed from a council decision to scrap the role of waste recycling and collection officer, claiming it did not exist in other areas and that it could make the authority liable to equal pay claims. Striking workers disputed this, and Unite said it would cost some of its members £8,000 a year – a figure the council has disputed. The council's announcement on Monday comes a week before local elections that could see a dramatic political shake up in the Labour-run city. Robert Alden, the leader of Birmingham Conservatives, said council leaders "want residents to believe they have a deal 10 days before an election that is set to see them booted out". "Labour are committing to yet another equal pay bill and running off to leave everyone else to pay for it," he said.

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

Related Stories

Financial Times journalists invoke dispute procedure over four-day office return mandate
NOTICIAAI
labor

Financial Times journalists invoke dispute procedure over four-day office return mandate

FT journalists have unanimously voted to invoke the publication's dispute procedure over management's plans to increase office attendance from three to four days per week by year-end. The NUJ chapel argues management has 'not made a compelling case' for the change, raising concerns about discrimination against parents (particularly mothers), financial impacts on staff, and whether some staff were hired on three-day hybrid working commitments. About 500-600 editorial staff at London HQ are affected, with roughly two-thirds being union members.

Negativo
30.04.2026
Apple Store Union Files Unfair Labor Practice Charge Over Planned Closure
NOTICIAAI
labor

Apple Store Union Files Unfair Labor Practice Charge Over Planned Closure

The first Apple store to unionize in the US is fighting the company's decision to close it by June, filing an unfair labor practice charge alleging discrimination against unionized workers. The IAM Core union representing nearly 90 workers in Towson, Maryland claims Apple is denying transfer rights offered to non-unionized workers and using the closure as a cynical attempt to bust the union. Apple denies the claims and says it will present its case to the NLRB.

Negativo
28.04.2026
Apple Store Workers Allege Union-Busting as Company Plans to Close First US Unionized Location
NOTICIAAI
labor

Apple Store Workers Allege Union-Busting as Company Plans to Close First US Unionized Location

Workers at Apple's first unionized US store in Towson, Maryland have filed an unfair labor practice charge alleging the company's decision to close the store by June is a cynical attempt to bust the union. The IAM Core union claims Apple is denying transfer rights to unionized workers while offering them to non-unionized employees, calling it discrimination and retaliation for exercising labor rights. Nearly 90 workers won their union election in June 2022 and secured their first contract in August 2024.

Negativo
28.04.2026
Indonesia Passes Landmark Law Protecting Domestic Workers After 22-Year Struggle
NOTICIAAI
labor

Indonesia Passes Landmark Law Protecting Domestic Workers After 22-Year Struggle

Indonesia's parliament has passed a landmark law protecting domestic workers after a 22-year struggle, granting nearly 4.2 million workers - almost 90% women - legal recognition for the first time. The Domestic Workers Protection Law entitles them to health insurance, rest days and pensions, while banning wage deductions by placement agencies and prohibiting hiring children under 18. Workers wept upon hearing of the law's passage, calling it a culmination of their fight for protection.

Positivo
22.04.2026