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Tube staff are given 52 days holiday
By Paul Marston, Transport Correspondent (Filed: 24/11/2004) Station staff on the London Underground will have 52 days off a year, excluding weekends, under an agreement struck yesterday. Transport for London, which runs the Tube, said a new 35-hour working week had been negotiated under which staff would be on duty for 37.5 hours, and then "roll up" the extra two and a half hours into additional rest days. The 7,000 station staff would gain nine further rest days to add to their previous six, plus 29 days' annual leave and eight bank holidays, giving an overall entitlement of 52 days or 10 and a half working weeks. The RMT union, which has strongly supported Ken Livingstone, London's mayor and the TfL chairman, said the "ground breaking" deal would mean that with weekends included, staff would have 43 per cent of the year off work. Station assistants typically earn £20,000 a year, with supervisors on £35,000. London Assembly Conservatives expressed fury at the settlement, which follows threats of strikes from the union. A one-day stoppage took place in the summer after negotiations ground to a halt. Roger Evans, the transport spokesman, said: "This deal is beyond comprehension. It is an outrageous insult to every hard-working Londoner. Yet again we're seeing the unions holding the capital to ransom. They know the threat of strikes always pays off. The answer is to ban strikes on the Underground. "Londoners will want to know what role Ken Livingstone played in this mind-blowing agreement. The role of mayor is to put Londoners' interests first. He has absolutely failed in this case." Bob Crow, the RMT general secretary who was appointed for a period to the TfL board, hailed the agreement enthusiastically. "Once again our members' solidarity has brought results, and we have hammered out a deal that sets the standard for the industry," he said. Bobby Law, the union's regional organiser, defended the two-year package. "This gives our members more quality time away from a very stressful job. Tube staff work long shifts in difficult conditions keeping an underfunded and fragmented system moving," he said. "With abuse and assaults rising at an alarming rate, our members had demanded better terms on working hours." A spokesman for London Underground maintained that the arrangements would be "self-financing" because the union had agreed that employees could be deployed "more efficiently". It would allow Tubes to run through the night on New Year's Eve and lead to later close-downs on Friday and Saturday nights. Pay and conditions on the Underground are becoming the most favourable in the public sector. Tube drivers earn about £35,000 a year, but manage with just 43 days off. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ or http://tinyurl.com/52a9s Cheers, Jason. |
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