by New Worker correspondent
In London, sick pay from day one
for the capital’s 20,000 bus men and women has been secured by their union,
Unite.
This
victory only came after intense pressure on bus operators, Transport for London
(TfL), the London Mayor Sadiq Khan and the national government for better
protection from COVID-19 for bus workers.
Over 21
London transport workers have died as a result of the virus, 15 of them bus
workers. Some bus workers may have felt that they had to come to work when
exhibiting signs of having caught the disease because of the lack of company
sick pay.
Unite
says that securing company sick pay from day one, regardless of length of
service, means that bus workers fearful of having contracted the illness can
now stay home safe in the knowledge that they will not be plunged into
immediate hardship.
A regional officer for the union, John Murphy, said:
“If they fall victim to this virus,
bus workers need to be able to go sick from day one, to isolate themselves and
to recuperate. They should not face a terrible choice between health and
hardship. Keeping people at home when they are unwell has to be part of the
effort to combat this virus. With this victory we can now concentrate our
efforts to make people safer at work.”
He
also said that the union is pressing “the
best in PPE [personal protective equipment], masks and gloves to be available
for bus workers and for the ending of rear door entry trials and for sealed
front doors rolled out immediately across the capital’s buses”.
Across the country First South West Bus, which
serves Bristol, Bath and Somerset, has come under attack from transport union
RMT for what it calls the “most inept steps they have ever seen from an
employer to protect their workers from COVID-19”.
After making strenuous representation to First
South West Buses to fit suitable Perspex screens to their fleet of buses in
order to provide a physical barrier between the driver and their passengers,
all the company did was to screw what looked like a shower curtain to the
ceiling of the drivers cab that hung well short of the bus wind-screen. It was
so flimsy passengers could been pull it to one side in order to speak to the
driver.
General Secretary Mick Cash said that: “Sainsbury’s
are clearly far more concerned with the safety of their staff than you appear
to be. Sainsbury's have within 24 hours sourced and fitted to multiple check
outs high quality Perspex screens that give a good level of protection and they
were fitted to check outs at a maximum time of 20 minutes per unit.”
The matter has been taken up with Public Health
England (PHE), who are conducting a review of transport safety in relation to
COVID-19.
He also noted that: “RMT also has other concerns
about the bus industry including issues for engineering staff in depots and the
facilities provided for employees in mess rooms. Many bus drivers on rural
routes have no access to facilities to wash their hands – a key risk control
measure as advised by Public Health England.”
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