Council Cheerleaders
Readers in South Lanarkshire regularly send me emails with tales of how their unions locally continue to pour cold water on the fight for equal pay - which doesn't surprise me in the least because, in my view, the trade unions have effectively been acting as 'cheerleaders' for the Council all these years.
Witness this extract from a previous post which highlights advice from a Unison stewards briefing back in August 2005.
"EQUAL PAY CLAIMS - WHY SOUTH LANARKSHIRE IS DIFFERENT"
"Stewards will have seen the press coverage of a firm of English lawyers who are offering to run equal pay claims in Scotland. You may also have seen leaflets from this firm in the name of Action 4 Equality Scotland, promising thousands of pounds in compensation. Mark Irvine, who was formerly a UNISON official, is fronting this firm.
The situation in South Lanarkshire is different from the other 31 local authorities in Scotland. Here the Council has negotiated and agreed a settlement with UNISON, TGWU and GMB that deals with equal pay and the overall issues of Single Status.
Most, though not all, other Councils have adopted the Job Evaluation Scheme recommended by the Scottish Joint Council (SJC - COSLA and the 3 unions at Scottish level). South Lanarkshire Council has instead used the Competence Initiative to assess and grade jobs within the Council. At the same time they negotiated with the 3 unions to introduce common terms and conditions."
As I said in the previous post I think a fair summary of what this briefing document is saying is that everything in South Lanarkshire is just 'tickety boo' - that Single Status is a done deal and union members don't need to be concerned about equal pay or any need to pursue equal pay claims with their Council employer.
But the difference now is that South Lanarkshire's in-house Job Evaluation Scheme (JES) has been declared as 'unfit for purpose' by the Employment Tribunals - more recently the Council lost 'hands down' a landmark FOI case at the UK Supreme Court - and just last month the Council agreed to enter into settlement discussions with Action 4 Equality Scotland.
So I can understand why the unions' noses are out of joint - because they've been on the wrong side of the Equal Pay argument for years and that's unlikely to change in the foreseeable future.