Unions have welcomed confirmation that the UKâs new Labour government will scrap âminimum service levelsâ demanded during industrial action, which the previous Conservative administration had wanted to extend to higher education.
Ministers announced on 6 August that they would repeal the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act 2023 via an upcoming Employment Rights Bill, which would be introduced during the first 100 days of Sir Keir Starmerâs tenure as prime minister.
The Toriesâ legislation had allowed public service employers to issue notices to unions to ensure that a minimum service operates during periods of strike action. It initially applied to sectors such as rail, ambulance and fire and rescue services.
At last yearâs Conservative Party conference, Gillian Keegan, who was then education secretary, said she would consult on extending the legislation to higher education â in a speech given in the wake of years of on-off strike action in UK universities, plus a marking boycott that affected thousands of students.
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The University and College Union (UCU) was quick to oppose the announcement as an attempt to âforce our members to cross their own picket linesâ, but the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (Ucea) also expressed significant doubts about the move, warning that it could end up being counterproductive by damaging industrial relations further.
Leaders in other sectors appear to have taken a similar view, with no employer ever invoking minimum service levels, and Labourâs general election manifesto had pledged to repeal the act.
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Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, said the Strikes Act âhas not workedâ.
âBy removing minimum service levels, we will reset industrial relations, so they are based on good-faith negotiation and bargaining, ending the chaos and restoring trust in public services,â he said.
UCU has been without a mandate for industrial action since last November, when its last ballot fell short of the 50Â per cent turnout threshold required for strikes.
But the union is now locked in a fresh dispute with Ucea over this yearâs pay offer of a minimum increase of 2.5 per cent, climbing to 5.7 per cent for the lowest-paid. Only ÂŁ900 of the rise would come next month, with the rest to follow in March 2025.
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The 50Â per cent turnout threshold is another Conservative-era rule that Labour pledged to repeal in its first 100 days prior to being elected.
Jo Grady, UCUâs general secretary, said minimum service levels âaimed to crack down on one of the most basic rights of the trade union movementâ.
âThe Tory plan to restrict the right of workers to strike and force them to cross their own picket lines was pernicious, unworkable and counterproductive, and we are glad that the legislation will be repealed,â Dr Grady said.
âUCU, alongside unions from all sectors, fought against these plans from day one and will continue to ensure that the incoming Labour government does right by those it was formed to represent.â
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