| Unison claim £4,000 London 
                weighting
 Unison members in local government are taking selective industrial 
                action for up to four weeks, across London, commencing on 14 July.
 
 Unison lodged a claim for £4,000 London weighting for all 
                council staff in July 2001 to alleviate the excessive cost of 
                living and working in the capital.
 
 The strike action will take place in 21 of London's 32 Boroughs.
 
 The strike action will hit a variety of services with the aim 
                of persuading council leaders to make a serious offer to the workforce. 
                The action is timed to coincide with the meeting between the employers 
                and Unison at the Greater London Provincial Council on 16 July.
 
 Julia Coleman, Unison regional head of local government and trade 
                union side secretary, said:"Council leaders have brought 
                this action upon themselves. The serious escalation of this dispute 
                has been caused by the contempt shown to local council workers 
                across London. With other public sector workers receiving increased 
                London weighting in the fire service, in teaching and in the NHS, 
                it is about time council leaders made a serious offer to UNISON's 
                members.
 
 "The only offer we have had had to be squeezed out of the 
                councils following strike action earlier this year, however the 
                £3.86 a week tabled, for a small part of the workforce, 
                hardly constituted a serious offer.
 
 "By stepping up the campaign, UNISON is showing how serious 
                it is about this dispute. Council leaders will have a lot of explaining 
                to do to their residents, if they do not resolve it in the very 
                near future."
 
 David Eggmore, chair of UNISON's London local government committee, 
                added:
 "UNISON has held back from lengthy industrial action until 
                now. UNISON knows how much the public relies on the services provided 
                by our members. However, it gets to a point, when the employers 
                are being intransigent, that we have to make a stand.
 "If the employers were relying on the claim for £4,000 
                London weighting to fade away it shows how out of touch they are 
                with their workforce. UNISON's members are very determined to 
                win their campaign for decent London weighting. All they ask is 
                for something similar to that paid in other parts of the public 
                sector."
 
 Strike action will take place in the following boroughs:
 Barnet, Camden, Croydon, Ealing, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith, 
                Haringey, Havering, Islington, Kensington & Chelsea, Kingston, 
                Lewisham, Merton, Newham, Redbridge, Southwark, Sutton, Tower 
                Hamlets, Waltham Forest and Wandsworth.
 
 Unison Web site
 |  | Council will provide emergency 
                service Unison has voted for a month-long, 
                all-out strike in Hammersmith & Fulham's housing benefits, 
                homelessness and main switchboard services. The strike is part 
                of Unison's London-wide action over pay.  The housing office in Glenthorne 
                Road will be severely affected by the proposed action as Unison 
                has refused the usual exemptions for staff providing 'life and 
                limb' services. In these circumstances, the council will be able 
                to provide a skeleton, emergency service only.  Emergency arrangements 14 July 
                2003 - 8 August 2003 are as follows:  SwitchboardAn automated answering system 
                will run on the main switchboard to minimise the number of calls 
                needing to be dealt with by remaining staff not on strike. A comprehensive 
                list of all the council's main direct dial numbers is being sent 
                to every home next week via the borough magazine HFM.
 Housing benefitsA limited service will be 
                available at the housing centre in Glenthorne Road, dealing with 
                emergency enquiries only. A reduced telephone service will also 
                operate on 020 8753 1396.
 HomelessnessAn emergency-only service 
                will also run from the housing centre. We are asking all agencies 
                referring homeless families to us to restrict their enquiries 
                to emergencies only. This will enable us to provide help to those 
                who really do have no alternative.
 The numbers for the housing needs 
                service are 020 8753 4143 and 4144. 
 Managing Director, Geoff Alltimes, 
                says: "Unison has got it wrong in targeting Hammersmith & 
                Fulham. We already have some of the best terms and conditions 
                in London and a deserved reputation as one of the best employers 
                in the country. Staff already benefit from a very competitive 
                salary, higher than many other boroughs in London. If we were 
                to meet the full costs of the Unison claim, it would add £100 
                a year to band D council tax bills. It is just not possible.  "We also believe that targeting 
                services used by some of our least well-off and vulnerable people 
                is unacceptable. A month-long strike in these services is likely 
                to have a profoundly damaging effect on individual people, including 
                vulnerable children."  The dispute is about a claim for 
                more money for council staff working in London but inner London 
                weighting allowance was incorporated into basic salary, with the 
                consent of the unions in April 2000. Staff in Hammersmith & 
                Fulham already enjoy:  · a minimum earnings guarantee 
                (no full-time member of staff earns below £7.76 an hour) 
                 · generous leave and flexible 
                working arrangements  · one of the best pension 
                schemes in the country.  
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