Judith Grant Royal Mail Group Head of Occupational Health and Wellbeing Resignation

Judith Grant Royal Mail Group Head of Occupational Health and Wellbeing Resignation:
To: All Branches
Dear Colleagues,
This is to inform all CWU Health and Safety Representatives in Royal Mail Group that Judith Grant Royal Mail Group Head of Occupational Health and Wellbeing has resigned from the business and will leave Royal Mail at the end of April after three years with the organisation.
Judith Grant was keen to work closely with the Trade Union whilst leading Royal Mail Group’s wellbeing programme and over the last three years has progressed a number of initiatives such as the revamped ‘Feeling First Class’ Health and Wellbeing Programme, the newly introduced Stress Risk Assessment Policy, supporting a stronger policy on Mental Health by raising awareness, seeking parity for mental and physical health and signing the Mental Health ‘Time To Change’ pledge with the CWU to end stigma as well as supporting the TUC ‘Dying To Work’ charter which pledges to support terminally ill workers in order to continue employment if they so wished.
Judith has asked me to thank all the CWU local and Area Health and Safety Representatives for their important contribution to the Health, Safety and Wellbeing of the workforce in Royal Mail Group, as part of the Safety, Health and Wellbeing Community and has acknowledged the important role our Reps play.
On behalf of the Union I thanked Judith for her service and wished her well in her new job with Mace Construction International.
Attached for interest is a recent article entitled “Judith Grant: Why investing in mental wellbeing is important to Royal Mail Group (HR Review 1 November 2016).
Yours sincerely
Dave Joyce

National Health, Safety & Environment Officer
Email Attachments – Click to download
Attachment 1 – LTB031/17 Judith Grant Royal Mail Group Head of Occupational Health and Wellbeing Resignation:

Attachment 2 – Doc4

Election of: CWU Delegates to the TUC Equality Conferences – 2017

Election of: 
CWU Delegates to the TUC Equality Conferences – 2017

Further to LTB 750/16 Dated 22nd December 2016, at the close of nominations on the 19th January 2017 the following have been received: 
 
TUC WOMENS CONFERENCE
Postal
NEC Member No Nominations Received 
4 Lay Members BALLOT REQUIRED  
Dale-Marie Bliben
South Central Postal
 
Clare Drummond
Greater Manchester
 
Kath Kelly
Newcastle Amal
 
Morag Rose  
Scotland No 5
 
Vicki Turner
Leeds No 1 Amal
 
Telecoms & Financial Services  
NEC Member  
Julia Upton
East Midlands
*Elected
3 Lay Members 
Mel Cambridge
Scotland No 1, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, North East, Portsmouth,West Sussex & IOW
*Elected
Jacky Morrey
Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, North East, Portsmouth,West Sussex & IOW 
*Elected
Jean Sharrocks
North East, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales, The Marches & North Staffs, Portsmouth, West Sussex & IOW
*Elected
 
TUC BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE
Postal  
NEC Member No Nominations Received
4 Lay Members (1 Woman) BALLOT REQUIRED  
Adam Alarakhia
Leicestershire
 
Linford Gibbons
Nottingham District Amal
 
Bola Omoyeni
South Midlands Postal
 
Mohammed Sakib
South Central Postal
 
Amarjite Singh
South East Wales Amal
 

Ian Taylor
Greater Manchester
 
Telecoms & Financial Services  
NEC Member  
Tom Cooper
Leicester & Midshires
*Elected
3 Lay Members (1 Woman) 
Sylvia Beckett
Capital, East Midlands, Leicester & Mid Shires, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, North East, Portsmouth West Sussex & IOW
*Elected
 
TUC DISABLED WORKERS CONFERENCE
Postal  
NEC Member No Nominations Received 
4 Lay Members (1 Woman) BALLOT REQUIRED
Adam Alarakhia
Leicestershire
 
Mark Anthony Bastiani
London South West Postal
 
William Johnston
Scotland No 2
 
Tony Sneddon
Scotland No 5
 
Lee Starr-Elliott
Bristol & District Amal
 
Telecoms & Financial Services
NEC Member  
Chic McGlynn
Central Counties & Thames Valley
*Elected
3 Lay Members (1 Woman) 
Jonathan Bellshaw
Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Capital, East Midlands, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, North East, Portsmouth West Sussex & IOW
* Elected
Jacky Morrey
Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, North East, Portsmouth West Sussex & IOW
* Elected
Peter Sharrocks
North East, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, Portsmouth West Sussex & IOW
* Elected
 
TUC LGBT CONFERENCE
Postal  
NEC Member No Nominations Received
4 Lay Members (1 Woman)
Helen Cooper
Western Counties
* Elected
Suzanne Dorritt
Newcastle Amal
* Elected
Tara Morgan
Greater Manchester
* Elected
Merlin Reader
Mount Pleasant
* Elected
Telecoms & Financial Services  
NEC Member  
Nick Darbyshire
Capital
*Elected
3 Lay Members (1 Woman) BALLOT REQUIRED
John Monk
London & West Branch
 
Jacky Morrey
Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, North East, Portsmouth, West Sussex & IOW
 

Jason Reynolds
Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, North East, Portsmouth West Sussex & IOW
 
Jean Sharrocks
North East, Capital, East Midlands, Lincolnshire & South Yorks, Mid Wales The Marches & North Staffs, Portsmouth, West Sussex & IOW
 
Duncan Strivens
South London Surrey & North Hampshire
 
The timetable for the ballot is as follows:
Despatch ballot papers: 24 January 2017

Ballot closes: 7 February 2017 (14:00)
Any enquiries regarding this Letter to Branches should be addressed to the Senior Deputy General Secretary’s Department on telephone number 020 8971 7237, or email address sdgs@cwu.org.
Yours sincerely,
 
TONY KEARNS
SENIOR DEPUTY GENERAL SECRETARY
Email Attachments – Click to download
LTB 030/17 – Election of CWU Delegates to the TUC Equality Conferences 2017

Pillars of Security

Pillars of Security
You will be aware that Royal Mail has started a formal consultation on the future of the Defined Benefit Pension Scheme (RMPP) from March 2018. As part of that process, the business has now provided every individual scheme member with an illustration of what the proposed changes will mean for their future pension provision.
In response, the CWU has sent a leaflet to every individual member’s home address (copy attached) setting out the Union’s case and the policies we are pursuing to secure a new agreement with Royal Mail based on four key ‘Pillars of Security’.
Since privatisation in 2012, the CWU has become increasingly concerned about the direction Royal Mail is taking and the degree of commitment to our mutual interest agreements. Instead of a long term focus on investment and growth we have witnessed a short term focus on cutting costs to boost shareholder return. The company’s recent ‘dash for cash’ has led to serious problems in the workplace around resourcing, growing intensification and pressure at work, as well as mounting concerns about the impact of automation, Royal Mail’s growth agenda and the long term future of members’ jobs, standard of living and retirement security.
CWU’s “Pillars of Security”
In the face of these challenges, the CWU believe the time has come to seek a new deal with Royal Mail. At the Policy Forum in March 2016, the Union agreed a clear set of policy priorities to secure members’ long term interests. The four Pillars of Security are:
Ø A lasting pension solution that delivers a decent wage in retirement for all members in both the DB and DC schemes;

Ø An extension of all our current agreements and legal protections enshrined in the Agenda for Growth Agreement;

Ø A 35 hour shorter working week to address growing pressures and intensification of work and improve members’ health, well-being and work-life balance; and

Ø A redesigned Royal Mail pipeline to secure the company’s commercial future and deliver long term growth.

A Decent Wage in Retirement
Since Royal Mail first signalled a problem with the RMPP scheme in September 2015, the CWU have been in talks with the company, its actuaries and the trustees to fully understand why the scheme has fallen into problems so soon after the last agreement in 2013 and to fundamentally question their financial rationale for closing the scheme for future accrual from 2018.
As reported in LTB 001/17, the company say the latest three-yearly valuation of the RMPP is indicating that the costs of keeping the scheme open have almost doubled since 2013 as gilt yields have slumped and financial market conditions have worsened. Royal Mail now say that the additional contributions they would have to make to keep the scheme open in its current form beyond March 2018 are “unaffordable” and will require an employer contribution of 50% of pensionable pay, which would equate to an annual company contribution of £1.2 billion. As a result, Royal Mail argue that they cannot afford to run the DB scheme in its current form beyond March 2018.
At this stage, members should note that:
Ø The CWU do not accept Royal Mail’s proposals. The company’s own figures reveal that DB members will suffer a serious worsening of their pension provision from April 2018. For those retiring at 60, the average ‘before and after’ loss will be 19% rising to 28% (for those retiring age 65).

Ø No proposals have been agreed with the CWU and no final decision has been taken. The 60 day consultation process has only just started and talks with the company will continue until we have reached a negotiated settlement. Any moves by the company to executive action will be met with a ballot for industrial action.

Ø Any proposals will not affect members’ pensionable service accrued in the RMPP up to March 2018. These are all fully protected and the 91,700 current scheme members can therefore expect all their current pension entitlements and benefits to continue up to that date. Royal Mail’s proposals only relate to the way members would build up benefits after March 2018.

Both Current Schemes are Failing
While we clearly need to address the situation for our DB members post 2018, as the Union for all RMG employees we must also deal with the mounting evidence about the inadequacy of Royal Mail’s current DC scheme (RMDCP).
Latest figures show that the 42,000 current DC members are facing an increasing prospect of pensioner poverty with inadequate contribution rates, meaning members will simply not build up the pot of money needed to secure a decent income in retirement. Pension experts now say that, to secure a decent retirement income, employees need total employee/employer contributions of over 20% of pensionable pay but, in Royal Mail’s DC scheme, the vast majority (88%) are not even paying the current maximum contribution rate of just 15%.
Royal Mail’s proposal to close the DB scheme also reflects wider problems around the long term future for DB schemes and the flawed thinking of many so-called pension experts who argue that, in the face of financial market uncertainty, companies should ‘de-risk’, close their DB schemes and move to a ‘risk-free’ DC alternative. However, there is now a growing realisation across the entire pensions industry that DC schemes simply do not cut it and we need to establish a new normal on pensions that ends what some commentators have called our “mad approach” to DB pensions.
The CWU rejects the conventional wisdom that DB arrangements are unsustainable and that DC schemes are the only alternative. We need to end the constant crisis management we’ve seen with the DB scheme over recent years and the endless financial ‘cliff edges’ that continue to threaten its future. At the same time, we urgently need to address the mounting evidence from our own DC scheme and the wider economy that current contribution levels into existing DC schemes will force millions of workers into poverty in retirement.
The reality is that both of Royal Mail’s pension schemes are failing. Rather than trying to keep propping up the DB scheme (that was closed to new entrants nearly a decade ago) and continue with clearly inadequate DC arrangements, the CWU will be seeking a lasting pension solution that ends two-tier provision and delivers a decent DB ‘Wage in Retirement Scheme’ for all our members in both DB and DC schemes.
It’s also important to recognise that any pension solution cannot be secured in isolation from the wider issues the Union faces around the future of Royal Mail post-privatisation and the commercial, political and regulatory issues we face. A lasting solution on pensions must form one of the Union’s four ‘Pillars of Security’ that together will provide us with the confidence to continue our cooperation in addressing Royal Mail’s challenges and protecting our members’ long term future.
Drive to 35
The CWU’s call for a significant reduction in working hours from 39 to 35 hours a week (with no loss of pay and inclusive of paid meal breaks) is another key element of our strategy to improve members’ working lives and address the numerous challenges we face around resourcing, workload and automation.
Cutting working hours not only helps protect full-time jobs, it also helps to improve members’ work-life balance (allowing individuals to better manage their job, family and domestic responsibilities) it recognises the physically demanding nature of the work postal workers perform by reducing overall working time and so helps address the reality of more people having to work longer because of increases in the state pension retirement age.
A shorter working week (SWW) can also form part of a wider solution to the nature of the jobs our members will perform in the future, particularly in deliveries, in the face of issues around automation, manageable workloads, delivery spans and ‘doing the job properly’.
All the research shows that a SWW is a genuine response to the 4th Industrial Revolution and can also provide solutions. At a time when workers are feeling greater pressure and intensification of work, a significant reduction in the working week can improve employees’ health and well-being and deliver increased productivity for the business and more productive and harmonious workplace relations.
Extension of our Current Agreements
The groundbreaking ‘Agenda for Growth Agreement’ provided a series of important protections for members – around the future of the company, job security, resourcing and Union recognition – all backed by legal protections and collective agreements built on “consensual change” and a “mutual interest” culture.
It guarantees no break-up of the company, with no outsourcing or franchising; it ensures Royal Mail will remain an end-to-end service provider; it enshrines the CWU’s recognition and collective bargaining rights and use of the IR Framework and ensures no existing terms and conditions will be changed or worsened without Union agreement. It also provides important guarantees around job security, no compulsory redundancies, no use of zero hour contracts, limits on the use of agency staff and a commitment to a predominantly full time workforce employed on permanent contracts. Although the Agreement is not up for review until 2019 we cannot afford to wait – we need an extension now.
Redesign of Royal Mail’s Pipeline
Over recent years, as letter volumes have continued to fall and competition has intensified in the increasingly lucrative parcels market, the CWU believe Royal Mail has been too focused on managing decline and has not delivered the investment and innovation needed to promote real long term growth in the business.
To enable Royal Mail to deal with the latest competitive pressures and commercial realities, it needs to maximise the potential of its current core USO delivery to provide new commercial products and services alongside its USO offerings. That means developing a core operational structure that is designed to enable deliveries right across the working day and from as early as possible (e.g. 7am)
Operational redesign also recognises the fundamental changes in the post and delivery market, the increasing use of technology and the shift in emphasis from poster to receiver. A new pipeline will not only open up greater commercial opportunities alongside our core delivery service but offer the potential for a range of other services and enable the company to tap into other markets (such as fleet haulage and fleet maintenance services) and diversify for growth.
 

Support the four ‘Pillars of Security’
The CWU’s four Pillars of Security set out the key policies needed to protect members’ future jobs, standards of living and retirement security against a backdrop of heightening competitive pressures and a hostile regulatory and political environment.
The aim is to provide a sustainable bedrock of future security for our members and a lasting settlement with Royal Mail that delivers our members a decent wage in retirement, cuts working time, extends our current agreements and lays a proper foundation for long term growth in the business.
We recognise that our proposals will be difficult to achieve. As in any negotiations, Royal Mail will want to push their own agenda but meaningful talks can only proceed (and a comprehensive new deal can only be struck with the CWU) if the business is seriously prepared to negotiate around our four key priorities.
How You Can Help
To support the CWU’s campaign, Branches are asked to keep members informed and return pictures of the four ‘Pillars’ poster to help build our social media campaign.
Branches are also asked to encourage members to show their support for the Union’s position on future negotiations in the following ways:
Ø Display the poster in workplaces.

Ø Tweet pictures of them and their colleagues with the poster to @CWUNews or message us via Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/thecommunicationsunion

Ø Respond to Royal Mail’s consultation expressing their views. This can be done either by post: Freepost MY PENSION, Pond Street, Sheffield, S98 6HR, or by email: my.pension@royalmail.com writing FEEDBACK in the email subject header.

Ø Attend workplace meetings Branches will be organising in the coming weeks.

Ø Follow CWU’s social media channels for regular news.

Ø Share our launch video for the ‘Four Pillars’ here: https://youtu.be/oFNUkGuKLJU

With the active support and engagement of all our members and Branches – in every workplace, function, division and region – you can help us build the four Pillars of Security our members need and deserve.
Yours sincerely

Terry Pullinger

Deputy General Secretary (Postal)  
Email Attachments – Click to download
· LTB 28/16 Pillars of Security

· Attachment 1 to LTB 28/17 Pillars of Security

CWU Youth Conference 2017 – National Youth Committee Policy on Motions 

CWU Youth Conference 2017 – National Youth Committee Policy on Motions 

Branches would wish to know that the forthcoming CWU Youth Conference 2017 will be held on Saturday 21st January 2017 at:

The Mechanics Centre Ltd

103 Princess Street

(Major Street Entrance)

Manchester

M1 6DD 

Please find below a list of the policy positions for the National Youth Committee on the motions from the Youth Conference 2017 Agenda Pad. 

Motions

Policy

Composite Motion 1 Section 1 – Industrial Issues 

Support

Motion 2 Section 2 – National Issues

Support

Motion 3 Section 2 – National Issues

Youth Committee Motion

Motion 4 Section 2 – National Issues

Youth Committee Motion

Motion 5 Section 2 – National Issues

Youth Committee Motion

Motion 6 Section 2 – National Issues

Support

Motion 7 Section 2 – National Issues

Oppose

Motion 8 Section 2 – National Issues

Support

Motion 9 Section 2 – National Issues

Remit/Oppose

Motion 10 Section 2 – National Issues

Support

Motion 11 Section 2 – National Issues

Support

 

The Agenda Pad can be accessed via the following link:

Click to access youth-conference-agenda-pad-2017.pdf

Any enquiries regarding this LTB should be addressed to Jo Thair by telephoning 020 8971 7487.

Yours Sincerely, 

 

Dave Ward

General Secretary

Email Attachments – Click to download

LTB 029/17 – CWU Youth Conference 2017 – National Youth Committee Policy on Motions

Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) fit for women? Motion 56 – General Conference 2016

Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) fit for women? Motion 56 – General Conference 2016To: All Branches

Dear Colleagues,

The Health, Safety & Environment Department has liaised with the TUC and affiliated Unions in progressing 2016 General Conference Motion 56.

The attached presentation ’Is PPE fit for women?’ was made at the TUC, and is made available to Branches. It addresses what employers need to consider, suppliers need to consider and what Unions need to consider.

All stakeholders need to work together on this matter to:

raise awareness of these issues

challenge cultures and unconscious bias in male dominated workplaces

monitor progress and call decision makers to account

publicise success and share good practice

The full report is available on the link https://library.prospect.org.uk/download/2016/01299 and is also attached to this document.

Further updates will be published in due course.

Yours sincerely

Dave Joyce

National Health, Safety & Environment Officer

 

Email Attachments – Click to download

Attachment 1 – LTB026/17 Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) fit for women? Motion 56 – General Conference 2016

Attachment 2 – One size doesnt fit all – PPE survey

Attachment 3 – 2016-01299-Leaflet-booklet-Women’s-PPE_-One-Size-Does-Not-Fit-All-Version-26-09-2016

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)Please find below the latest Factsheet from the Equal Opportunities Department.

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)Please find below the latest Factsheet from the Equal Opportunities Department.

This Factsheet is also available online at the CWU website.

Any enquiries regarding this LTB should be referred to the Equal Opportunities Department.

Yours sincerely

 

Linda Roy

Assistant Secretary

 

Email Attachments – Click to download

LTB 024/17 – Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

Attachment 1: IBS Factsheet

TUC Women’s Conference 2017 – Visitors

TUC Women’s Conference 2017 – Visitors
The TUC Women’s Conference 2017 is being held from Wednesday 8th March until Friday 10th March at the TUC, Congress House, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3LS.
The Conference times are as follows:
Wednesday 8th March starting at 2pm, closing at 5.30pm

Thursday 9th March starting at 9.30am, closing at 5.30pm

Friday 10th March starting at 9.15am, closing at 1pm
The CWU are allowed a limited number of visitors to attend the Conference and places will be allocated on a first come, first served basis.
Should anyone be interested in attending the Conference, they will need to contact their Branch initially for funding, to include a £10.00 visitor’s ticket fee. 
Please let me know if you would like to attend the Conference as a visitor by no later than Monday, 6th February 2017. 
Please note that places will not be reserved until a cheque for the £10.00 fee (made payable to ‘TUC’) is received in my office. 
Any enquiries regarding this LTB should be referred to the Equal Opportunities Department.
Yours sincerely
 
Linda Roy
Assistant Secretary
Email Attachments – Click to download
LTB 023/17 – TUC Women’s Conference 2017 – Visitors

YDS Trainer Supply Issues 

YDS Trainer Supply Issues 

Dear Colleagues

 

We have been informed by Royal Mail that as a result of the factory which produces the YDS trainers failing a CSR audit, a decision by the company has been made not to order any further trainers from YDS. 

 

As a result Royal Mail has stated they are now starting to see shortfalls in some popular sizes in the remaining YDS stock and as such are waiting on delivery of the replacement trainers they have ordered from Magnum and Panther. 

 

They have also ordered additional Anvils to help with any shortfall, however are aware that the YDS are a popular option for our members.

 

As such Royal Mail has issued the below communication through their internal channels:

 

Due to a number of compliance issues identified in a recent audit at the factory where our YDS trainers are manufactured, Royal Mail has taken the difficult decision to cease placing any further orders with the supplier. We are currently trialling a new trainer, with similar features and benefits to the YDS, which will be available in the Spring.

 

If you need a pair of replacement trainers before that time, and your size is unavailable (we only have limited stock of YDS footwear) you will need to order an alternative style. You can order these, as usual, online.

 

If you have exceeded your current footwear entitlement we will provide Magnum shoes, unless you have a specific reason why these should not be provided.

 

We will update you when the new models arrive and, in the meantime, please accept our apologies for any inconvenience this may cause in the interim.

 

Further meetings with Royal Mail are being arranged to discuss this matter and the future provision of Uniform across all products.

 

Any queries to the content of the above please contact the Outdoor Department, reference 500

Email address: outdoorsecretary@cwu.org

 

 

Yours Sincerely,
Mark Baulch​

CWU A/Assistant Secretary

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