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Saturday, 13 October 2007, 10:31 GMT 11:31 UK

Royal Mail and union reach deal

What has caused the postal strikes?
Robert Peston blog
Wildcat postal strike in Liverpool An agreement has been reached that could lead to an end to strike action by postal workers.

The breakthrough came late on Friday after marathon talks between Royal Mail and the Communication Workers' Union at the TUC in London.

Details are yet to be announced, but it is hoped the deal will end the dispute, which centres on pay, pensions and flexible working.

The terms reached will be considered by the union's executive on Monday.

The deal was ratified by Royal Mail boss Adam Crozier, Communication Workers' Union (CWU) general secretary Billy Hayes and his deputy Dave Ward, and TUC general secretary Brendan Barber.

If it is supported by the executive, it is likely to be put to the vote by the CWU's 130,000 members.

It is hoped the resolution will bring to an end the long-running row over Royal Mail's modernisation plans, which union officials had feared would see 40,000 jobs lost.

Injunction

BBC business editor Robert Peston said the "big pillars" of management demands were in place, including pension fund reform, a pay rise this year of around 2.5% and the reform of working practices.

However, he added: "I don't think that the company has got it all its own way".

Earlier on Friday, the Royal Mail was granted an injunction to stop CWU members at sorting centres and delivery offices striking next week.

The company argued that the union had not given accurate figures for the number of staff affected by the strike - a legal requirement.

PLANNED 24-HOUR STRIKES

Source: CWU

The union insisted the strike was legitimate.

The CWU had announced rolling 24-hour strikes to start on Monday and end on Friday, designed to cause maximum disruption to mail services with minimal financial loss for its members.

The injunction did not apply to all parts of the Royal Mail, and in the wake of Friday's agreement it was not clear whether some groups, such as drivers, would take part in the walkouts.

Thousands of Royal Mail customers across Britain have suffered from disruption since official protests by workers began in June.

Stephen Alambritis of the Federation Of Small Businesses said: "For Britain's four million small businesses it is good news.

"They've been shelling out an extra five million pounds a day to use alternative services."

Wildcat walkouts

Royal Mail has insisted it needs to modernise to survive as a business in the highly competitive mail industry, while union leaders have argued that its plans have no regard for its employees.

Areas under dispute have included pay and pensions, with the CWU saying a pay rise came with unacceptable strings attached, and the Royal Mail wanting to scrap its final salary pension scheme and raise the retirement age.

Some working practices are also under dispute, such as workers being allowed to go home before their shift has ended if they have completed their designated workload

Unofficial strikes over shift times have affected deliveries in London, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Liverpool.

The wildcat protests which began on Wednesday have been called off in Scotland while some workers in London and Liverpool have not gone back to work.

Workers at all 21 delivery depots across Liverpool walked out, with CWU branch representative Mark Walsh saying staff felt they were being "being bullied into having their contract changed".

HAVE YOUR SAY
"The postal workers need to start work again now"
Chris, Durham

Send us your comments

But Royal Mail condemned the mass walkouts, saying they were "wholly unacceptable" and not supported by the CWU nationally.

Postal workers in east, south-west and south-east London also went back to the picket lines over the dispute.

And staff in Edinburgh and Grangemouth walked out over pay deductions following recent official action.

Despite calls from MPs to intervene in the dispute, the government has said it will not take action.



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Related to this story:
Brown urges end of postal strikes (10 Oct 07 |  Business )
War of words amid postal strike (09 Oct 07 |  Business )
Royal Mail to shut pension scheme (05 Oct 07 |  Business )
Behind the picket line (04 Oct 07 |  Business )
Postal woes bring cheer for some (04 Oct 07 |  UK )
Q&A: Postal strike and you (04 Oct 07 |  Business )

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