Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Unions suspend planned Tube strike

Tube strike: Unions suspend strike after reaching deal

Crowds at Finsbury Park Tube station Last week's Tube strike caused widespread disruption

A second planned 48-hour strike by Tube workers has been suspended after unions reached a deal with London Underground.

The TSSA and RMT unions have agreed to pause the industrial action, which was due to start at 21:00 GMT, so that further talks can take place with LU.

A 48-hour strike last week caused major disruption across the capital.

Talks to resolve the dispute, which centres on the closure of all 260 Tube ticket offices and 960 job cuts, have been held at conciliation service Acas.

LU said it had proposed two months of intensive talks with the unions, starting on Wednesday.

A station-by-station review will also take place, which Tube bosses said could result in some ticket offices remaining open.

'Unnecessary disruption'

RMT general secretary Bob Crow said the union had received proposals to halt the implementation of the job cuts, which gave the union the opportunity to discuss the changes "away from the pressure cooker".

"We now have a golden opportunity to look again in detail at all of the concerns we have raised about the impact of the cuts on our members and the services that they provide to Londoners.

"That is exactly what we have been calling for throughout this dispute."

Mr Crow added that the strike action would be back on if there was "any further attempt to impose change from above".

Speaking to BBC London, Mr Crow said he did not regret last week's strike.

"They weren't taking us seriously until we called the strike action and we got more done over that period of time when the strike action took place," he said.

"I think having a two-day strike was absolutely crucial."

A TSSA spokesman said: "We have now agreed a process where all our serious concerns over safety and job losses will be seriously addressed through the normal channels.

Passengers during the Tube strike Millions of commuters were hit as Tube staff walked out for 48 hours last week

"We are obviously pleased that we have agreed this process, which will allow us to suspend our strike immediately, and cancel it later when the agreement reaches us in a formal document."

TfL has claimed its proposals - which do not involve compulsory redundancies - would save £50m a year.

LU managing director Mike Brown said he welcomed the suspension.

"We have always said that we want the unions to engage fully with us, to help shape our proposals for the future of the Tube.

"The hard work of both the LU and union negotiating teams and the progress we have made at Acas over the last few days means we can do that without further unnecessary disruption to Londoners."


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