Articles A
Keep Water Public: #NameTheDate
by Róisín McKane
 

Fórsa has once again expressed its disappointment at Government’s failure to act on its promise to stage a referendum on water ownership despite it being in the Programme for Government agreed in July 2020.

 

 


Fórsa has once again expressed its disappointment at Government’s failure to act on its promise to stage a referendum on water ownership despite it being in the Programme for Government agreed in July 2020.

 

Whilst the Minister has confirmed the intention to run both the water and right to housing referendum at the same time, a date has not yet been secured.

 

Fórsa national secretary Richy Carrothers said that a referendum would help protect Irish water services from any future attempt at privatisation by providing a constitutional guarantee of public ownership, and urged Government to name the date.

 

“Privatised water services result in higher costs and poorer services for the public. Public ownership of water services ensures safe and sustainable access to water for everyone. It is critical that we continue to press Government to the name the date to keep water public,” he said.

 

Last October Fórsa alongside Siptu, Fórsa, Unite, Connect and the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) formed the coalition behind the ‘Keep Water Public’ campaign, calling on the Government to confirm a date for a constitutional referendum on the public ownership of water services.

 

Speaking at the campaign launch, ICTU president and Fórsa general secretary, Kevin Callinan, said the campaign to name the date for a referendum represented a shared commitment by trade unions to ensure the future of public ownership of water services.

 

“It’s time now to end any lingering uncertainty about the future of water services in Ireland. A referendum would give people the opportunity to have their say, in addition to providing us all with a unique opportunity to safeguard public ownership of water for future generations,” he said.

 

Fórsa members are encouraged support the campaign by signing this petition and to circulating it among work colleagues, friends, and family.

 

“This is the kind of grassroots campaign that unions excel at, and I’m confident that Fórsa members will seize the opportunity to get this message across to the Government parties,” said Richy.

 

 

 

 

Job evaluation sees return to WRC
by Roisin McKane
 

Fórsa is set to return to the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) later this month, to seek an acceptable solution to the dispute over the introduction of a job evaluation system for clerical and administrative staff in local authorities.

 

 


Fórsa is set to return to the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) later this month, to seek an acceptable solution to the dispute over the introduction of a job evaluation system for clerical and administrative staff in local authorities.

 

The union has long sought a local authority job evaluation scheme similar to the one that operates in the HSE and the education sector. Job evaluation is an established tool that allows the knowledge, skills and responsibilities associated with individual jobs – rather than grades or staff categories – to be assessed and appropriately rewarded.

 

Fórsa has maintained that almost 10,000 council jobs were lost following the financial crisis, and services had only been maintained because staff had taken on additional responsibilities above their pay grades.

 

Late last year the Local Government Management Agency (LGMA), which represents council employers, responded to the union business case for job evaluation, essentially dismissing the union claim. The employer has also tabled new job descriptions as part of the process. 

 

Fórsa’s head of local government Richy Carrothers said that in the event the WRC process fails to produce a satisfactory resolution, the division will plan for industrial escalation.

 

“Local authorities suffered the greatest reduction of numbers of employees during the austerity era, which has resulted in significant grade drift in the sector. Why should these workers suffer less favourable treatment than colleagues in other sectors,” he said.

 

There are severe disparities in pay rates across the local government sector, where staff doing the same work could be paid more or less depending on which of the 31 councils they work for.

 

“It is completely unacceptable that clerical and administration, library staff, museum curators, archivists, technicians and so many more, are being paid different pay rates in different counties. That is undermining the similar level of work and effort that’s put in by people in these grades, just based on what council they work for,” Richy said.

 

The WRC hearing is set to take place on 26th January.

Irish Water transfers to start in February
by Niall Shanahan
 

Irish Water management has informed unions on the Irish Water Consultative Group (IWCG) that the transfer of water services from local authorities to Irish Water will commence, on a phased basis, from next month.

 

 


Irish Water management has informed unions on the Irish Water Consultative Group (IWCG) that the transfer of water services from local authorities to Irish Water will commence, on a phased basis, from next month.

 

The Irish Water Consultative Group (IWCG)  is chaired by the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) and composed of trade union representatives, senior representatives from the Department of Housing, Local Government & Heritage, the Local Authority Management Agency (LGMA) and Irish Water.

 

Fórsa national secretary Richy Carrothers explained: “The IWCG met last December, where management outlined details of a draft ‘Master Co-operation Agreement,’ currently being prepared between Irish Water and the Local Authority sector.

 

The new agreement is designed to replace the service level agreement (SLA) between Irish Water and local authorities, which has been in place since the national water body was created.

 

“We received a copy of the draft master agreement this week, and unions have been invited to provide feedback on its content, and we’ve asked the WRC to schedule a further meeting of the IWCG as soon as possible,” he said.

 

Richy said Fórsa continues to brief members at local meetings across the country and that this will continue throughout the transfer period.

 

He added: “While the master agreement is broadly a legal document, giving effect to the transfer from local authorities to Irish Water, our focus now is on  number of items, dealing with terms and conditions, which must be removed from the new draft agreement before the formal transfer commences,” he said.

Lunch and learn with Fórsa’s Skills Academy
by Roisin McKane
 

The Fórsa Skills Academy is kicking off series of online training sessions later this month, providing information and guidance across a range of topics of interest and benefit to members, activists, and representatives.

 

 


The Fórsa Skills Academy is kicking off series of online training sessions later this month, providing information and guidance across a range of topics of interest and benefit to members, activists, and representatives.

 

‘Lunch and Learn’ aims to give members the knowledge to support them as a union member or representative whilst supplementing the broad range of training programmes currently being offered by Skills Academy. The virtual sessions will take place on the last Friday of very month from 1pm – 2pm, exploring different topics. Whilst these sessions are predominantly for information, there will be opportunities for participants to ask questions via the chat function.

 

The inaugural Lunch and Learn will kick off on Friday 27th January from 1-2pm, covering the why and how of union motions.This session will explain what a motion is, its function and importance to workplace democracy.  It will also explain how to construct a motion and the journey it takes from an idea to its implementation, clarifying some associated jargon along the way.

 

Members interested in attending should register their interest here.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Fórsa stands with refugees and communities
by Niall Shanahan
 

Fórsa has said the union stands in solidarity with refugees and asylum seekers, and has criticised protests designed to intimidate those in direct provision and emergency accommodation.

 

 


Fórsa has said the union stands in solidarity with refugees and asylum seekers, and has criticised protests designed to intimidate those in direct provision and emergency accommodation.

 

The union made the statement last week in response to recent anti-immigrant protests in a number of communities, including Ballymun, Finglas, Drimnagh and East Wall in Dublin.

 

Fórsa national secretary Richy Carrothers said the union stands in solidarity with asylum seekers, refugees, and the majority of people in those communities where protests and intimidation have taken place: “These protests have been staged by a small number of people who have attempted to stoke fear and hatred in the community. Intimidating people in direct provision will do nothing except scare vulnerable people and rip our communities apart.

 

“The vast majority of people understand this, and don’t subscribe the racist ideology behind those organising the protests.

 

“Racism has no place in Irish society, and the trade union movement stands behind those who have escaped conflict, oppression, climate and economic catastrophe to come to Ireland in search of safety and a better life.

 

“Fórsa supports policies to end direct provision and make it easier for refugees to access employment. We support their right to be able to live with dignity, in peace, and free of the type of harassment and intimidation we’ve seen in recent weeks,” he said.

 

ICTU

The Irish Congress of Trade Unions has also condemned the protests. Congress president and Fórsa general secretary Kevin Callinan said: “The best way to defeat the far right is by delivering decent work, wages, rights, public services, and homes for all.

 

“In order to do that we must build solidarity and workers’ power. The trade union movement stands with refugees and international protection applicants and their representative organisations. We will continue to build solidarity between working people of all backgrounds and to work towards ensuring that the messages of the far right never gain mainstream traction in our unions, communities, and workplaces.”

 

Congress general secretary Owen Reidy criticised extremists who are “whipping up fears and anxieties by turning their hate on those seeking international protection in Ireland.” He said the cynical use of socioeconomic challenges such as a lack of public services, housing, and the refugee crisis to divide working people and local communities is unacceptable.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

New AA Roadside Rescue plan for members
 

Fórsa members can now save 50% on their AA Roadside Rescue plan, through a new and exclusive union negotiated scheme.

 

 


Fórsa members can now save 50% on their AA Roadside Rescue plan, through a new and exclusive union negotiated scheme.

 

This new AA Roadside Rescue offer provides for 24/7 roadside breakdown assistance in Ireland and the UK for just €6 a month, and will provide cover whether driving or as a passenger.

 

This new offer can be accessed exclusively through this portal.

 

Contact the AA here for more information.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Feature Article
Fórsa challenges in 2023
by Kevin Callinan
 

Now that the new year is well and truly underway, Fórsa general secretary and president of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) Kevin Callinan outlines some of the challenges Fórsa members will encounter this year, how the union is approaching those challenges, and why union membership has never mattered more.


Colleagues, as 2023 began I was conscious of the enormous pressure faced by our colleagues working in our health services. Covid, flu and record numbers seeking treatment have made this mid-winter an especially difficult one for workers and service users alike. The pressure continues and the Government, Department of Health and the HSE have each come in for strong criticism.

 

As new health service structures begin to take shape, Fórsa remains determined to ensure services are properly resourced and that our members have the support they need in changing times.

 

Despite a recent reduction in the inflation rate, the most significant challenges for trade unions in 2023 will be continuing high inflation. Should it continue to exceed last year’s projections by the Department of Finance, as seems likely,  it will put considerable pressure on pay bargaining during the year ahead, including in the public service as the extended (Building Momentum) agreement expires in December.

 

Fórsa remains determined to solve the significant pay deficit for workers in the community and voluntary sector. The widening gap in pay, compared to other sectors, has led to recruitment and retention problems for organisations, notably those delivering health services. Limited strike action last September illustrated the determination of health workers in the sector to fight for change. While those efforts did not lead to an immediate solution, solving the issue has become a major objective for the union in 2023. 

 

Bargaining power

 

The expectation of higher inflation is also reflected in ICTU’s wage bargaining advice for the private sector, where the Congress Private Sector Committee has advised unions to seek pay increases in the range of 4 to 7.5% this year.

 

There has been a recent flurry of pay activity in the private and commercial sector as, driven by the cost-of-living crisis, and the current tight labour market. Post-Covid pay restoration and new collective agreements are happening in the aviation sector, most recently for Ryanair cabin crew and pilots, and pay increases are being won in more profitable enterprises. These are welcome developments and demonstrate the real premium of union membership and organised labour.

 

Collective trade union organisation is essential. No one should be under any illusion that these things would happen without the intervention of trade union bargaining power. The challenge for every union, every official, and every activist, is to ensure we grow our membership to ensure that premium is maintained.

 

Across the globe workers are organising in places where it was once unthinkable, most notably in the giant tech companies like Amazon, where efforts to prevent workers organising have been considerable. We should all draw inspiration from their efforts.

 

Research in 2021 shows that young Irish people are very well-disposed to the idea of union representation, but they are not yet joining in significant numbers. Together, we should ensure that this changes in 2023, and that we encourage younger workers to join, and strengthen our hand in the collective bargaining process.

 

Ag obair le chéile, let’s keep the Fórsa voice strong in 2023.

 

Kevin Callinan, general secretary, Fórsa

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Also in this issue
Sign up to reduce your childcare fees
by Mehak Dugal
 

Parents are being urged to sign up to the universal childcare subsidy, worth up to €22.50 a week or €1,170 a year per child, which is now available for all children up to age 15.

 

The revised subsidy took effect from 2nd January 2023 and will be capped at €2,100 per year.

 

The subsidy can also be used to reduce the cost of afterschool and out-of-term childcare fees for school-age children using a registered provider.

 

The childcare provider, including childminders and school-age childcare services, must be registered with Tusla and have a national childcare scheme (NCS) contract with the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth.

 

The updated subsidy allows families accessing Tusla registered early learning and childcare to receive a minimum hourly NCS subsidy of €1.40. This is an increase of €0.90 from the current minimum hourly rate. And it will be a universal measure, meaning children up to the age of 15 are eligible for the improved NCS measures.

 

You can sign up HERE to avail of the expanded subsidy, which previously only applied to babies and toddlers.

 

The new rate will automatically be updated for families with existing awards, where applicable, and they will be notified when this happens. These families do not need to take any steps to avail of the new rate.

 

Families who do not have an existing award from the NCS are encouraged to submit an application to begin receiving financial support with their early learning and childcare costs.

 

It’s also possible to make a paper application by contacting the parent support centre on 01-906-8530.

 

The subsidy is paid directly to childcare providers, who must then subtract its value from your childcare bill.

 

You can also use a subsidy calculator which can help you estimate how much you may be eligible for before you apply. 

 

Every family using a registered childcare service provider is entitled to this subsidy to reduce their childcare fees, regardless of the families’ income or earning.

 

The scheme is currently worth 50 cent for each hour the child is in childcare up to a maximum 45 hours a week. However, if one or both parents are not working, studying or training, the maximum number of subsidised hours is 20 hours a week.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

1% of Irish society now owns more than a quarter of the country's wealth
by Mark Corcoran
 

The wealthiest 1% of Irish society now owns more than a quarter of the country's wealth according to a new report from Oxfam.

 

In total the study, based on data collated from Forbes, Credit Suisse and Wealth-X, found eight Irish people are worth over €1 billion. The research also shows that with €15 billion between them, the two richest people here have 50% more wealth than the poorest half of the population.

 

Fórsa has long campaigned for income equality both in Ireland and internationally. We do this not only in our day-to-day work, but also with our sister unions in the Irish Congress of Trade Unions.The recent research from Oxfam Ireland is shocking but unfortunately not unexpected.

 

The trade union movement has a unique perspective to bring to the issue as we represent workers in all sectors of society. Patricia King in her speech to the ICTU conference in 2021 put it well when she said:

 

“Decent and fair wages, collectively bargained, are the most effective instruments of wealth distribution. But some of the players in these sectors regard workers as expendable commodities, instruments only to expanding their own profits and gain.

 

“They despise the notion that trade unions could enable workers to achieve such fairness. They vehemently oppose any attempt to alter the status quo, and effectively they disenfranchise workers who may wish to become organised but the fear and risk is too great.”

 

The Oxfam study entitled “Survival of the Richest” states that over the last two years the richest 1% of the world’s population have acquired nearly twice as much wealth as the rest of humanity put together.

 

Trade unions have and will continue to work with other groups to seek to rebalance these glaring difficulties.

 

We will continue organising, representing, and negotiating on behalf of workers and play our role in ensuring a fairer share of the pie.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

No case to retain low VAT rate in hospitality - ICTU
by Niall Shanahan
 

ICTU has said that there is no logical case for the retention of the 9% ‘temporary’ reduction in VAT for the hospitality industry, as suggested in a report by the Irish Tourism Industry Confederation last week.

 

Congress general secretary Owen Reidy said the hospitality sector had received generous support from the taxpayer to get through the pandemic: “However, we have seen various reports of price gouging from some hotels.

 

“It is excessive to argue that the industry will lose jobs if the rate is restored. On the contrary, in the current tight labour market, the industry has difficulty attracting and retaining workers precisely because the industry is rife with low pay and precarious work.

 

“The government should not be taken in by this report. The industry would be better engaging with unions at the Joint Labour Committee - which they’ve boycotted for years - to build a sustainable industry in the interests of the consumer, the worker, and the employer. There will be no sustainable future built on the back of low pay”.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Irish Labour History society
by Niall Shanahan
 

Irish Labour History Society

At fifty years old, the Irish Labour History Society (ILHS) celebrates the contribution, and promotes knowledge of, Irish labour and Irish people in labour history, and provides a rich resource of material for history students, writers and makers.

 

Website. Publications. Archive

Run by volunteers, most trade unions are affiliated to the ILHS and there are also several hundred individual members. The website is updated regularly and contains material of interest to researchers. The annual journal Saothar (now in its 48th year) is published by the ILHS, as are several other studies of labour history personalities and events.The society also:

  • Maintains archives and a library at Beggars Bush in Dublin
  • Displays museum pieces and union banners at its premises
  • Has a collection of individual papers and material, and
  • Makes its study facilities available without charge by appointment.

Much of what is stored at Beggars Bush would have been lost had not the ILHS collected and preserved it.

 

Join Us!

As we celebrate our half century, the ILHS invites you to join us, whether your interest is based on personal, educational, or general interest in labour history. Individual membership costs €35 per year and includes posting of a copy of Saothar to each member on publication.

 

At the close of 2022, the ILHS published the latest (and the 18th) in our Studies in Irish Labour History series, Luke Dineen’s “A City of Strikes - The Cork General Lockout of 1909”.  There is a full list of such publications on our website. Among the Society’s activities in 2023 will be a series of essays to mark our half century, publication of Saothar 48 and an international conference in Dublin in September.  

 

Join with us in the work of promoting and preserving labour history.

 

Join on our website at www.irishlabourhistorysociety.com.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Safe access zones will not prohibit industrial action
by Mehak Dugal
 

The Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) has secured confirmation from Minister for health Stephen Donnelly that the proposed Safe Access Zones Legislation will not prohibit industrial action within those zones.

 

ICTU had previously sought an amendment to the proposed legislation to avoid an unintended consequence which could impede lawful activities by an authorised trade union.

 

The union said anyone needing a termination of pregnancy should be able to access services in safety and with privacy and dignity, but requested confirmation that the proposed legislation would not prohibit industrial action within safe access zones.

 

As a result, ICTU has now received confirmation from the minister that the legislation will not prohibit industrial action within safe access zones, and engagement is currently ongoing on the most effective way to address this matter.

 

Minister Donnelly acknowledged unions’ concerns and agreed to develop proposals that balance a range of rights, including the right to protest, while ensuring the legitimate aim to protect the right of a woman to access termination of pregnancy services with privacy and dignity.

 

The Fórsa-backed Safe Access Zones Legislation was also being debated at the Oireachtas health committee earlier in the week. At the hearing, Department of Health officials communicated that the proposed legislation would apply to all eligible health facilities and not just those currently providing termination of pregnancy.

 

Meanwhile, it emerged that gardaí have also raised a number of operational issues with the proposed legislation and asked for more clarity around matters such as curtilage in the demarcation of the zones.

 

Other revisions to the proposed legislation also saw the definition of ‘public place’ clarified to mean any place to which the public have access, whether as of right or by permission and whether subject to or free of charge. It is expected that private property will also be included in certain circumstances in the legislation, the details of which are currently being ironed out.

 

Early last year, Fórsa members passed a motion at its national policy-setting conference, calling on the union to support the creation of protest exclusion zones outside of medical facilities for people accessing essential healthcare.

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.

Membership subscription ceiling increased from 1st January
by Roisin McKane
 

The membership subscription rate ceiling increased on 1st January this year, in line with the pay award increase under the extension to the Building Momentum pay agreement. This ensures that higher paid workers contribute their fair share of an increased contribution that lower paid workers automatically get deducted as their salary increases.

 

Under Rule 1(ii) of Appendix A the NEC has approved the increase of 6.5%. increasing Fórsa’s membership subscription ceiling to €425.30. The ceiling ensures a limit to the amount that members are asked to pay in annual subscription to the union.

 

Subscription rates remain unchanged. The union’s general subscription rate for 2023 is 0.8% of basic salary up to a maximum of €425.30 (€35.44 per month) reflecting a maximum salary of €53,162.50. This downloadable excel spreadsheet illustrates how the subscription rate applies in a range of different salary bands. 


The union’s two other subscription rates are unaffected by the change. These are the legacy rate paid by those who were members of the former PSEU on 31st December 2017 and the 1% rate for new and existing CO related grades in the Civil Service who have access to the former CPSU Benefit Scheme which was carried over into Fórsa. Branch levies are unchanged but the ceiling if applicable has increased in line with the 6.5% increase in the general Forsa membership subscription ceiling.

 

Benefits


On top of negotiated pay increases and protection when things go wrong at work, union members can benefit from an improved range of membership entitlements introduced when Fórsa was formed in 2018.


These include €5,000 in personal accident cover or €5,000 critical illness cover or death benefit, which also is also available to spouses of Fórsa members.


Alternatively, €5,000 in illness benefit is available to members who are out of work for more than 12 months. And Fórsa also covers evacuation or repatriation expenses up to the value of €250,000 for members who become seriously ill or injured, or who die, while abroad.


That’s on top of a range of financial benefits, negotiated with external providers, which can mean big savings on financial products like car, home and travel insurance, pension benefits, salary protection and life cover.


Fórsa members can also avail of free counselling, legal advice and support helplines, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. And they can opt into our group scheme, which gives them access to huge savings on a wide range of everyday items and services including restaurants, retailers, hairdressers and coffee shops.


Get full details about membership benefits here

 

There’s never been a better time to join a union, and it’s never been easier. Join Fórsa today.