Striking For Our Pensions
by Richie Venton, SSP national workplace organiser
"Nobody
wants to be on strike, but we're left with
no choice."
That was a common refrain from Grangemouth
workers as they picketed the gates of the
huge oil refinery during their 48-hour strike
in defence of pension rights - their deferred
wages, and those of future workers - at
the hugely profitable enterprise.
They proudly held aloft UNITE union red
flags on the picket lines, and at Sunday
morning's march round the site with hundreds
of family members and local supporters.
This strike by 1,200 workers has generated
more acreage in press coverage than any
industrial dispute for years. And most of
it has been hostile to the workers, with
myths peddled about them earning £40,000
and £60,000; paying nothing into their pension
scheme; and striking despite having their
own final salary pension scheme guaranteed.
Even the broadsheets, like the Herald, adopted
the tone of quiet assassins, accusing the
workforce and UNITE of being to blame for
the loss of up to £50m a day to the UK's
economy, demanding the workforce accept
radical changes to their pensions, seeking
to isolate them by portraying them as privileged
compared to the rest of the country.
In fact it is multi-billionaire owner of
INEOS, Jim Ratcliffe, who is holding the
country to ransom.
He bought over BP's petrochemical sector,
including Grangemeouth, in 2005, for just
under £5billion. This occurred alongside
his rapid-fire acquisition of numerous chemical
plants, incurring heavy debts, which he
aims to pay off by making his factories
'leaner and meaner' - which means firing
workers, cutting wages and conditions.
This former venture capitalist has had a
bad week; not only did his 'hired hands'
at Grangemouth dare to defy his brutal assault
on their incomes, but he fell from 10th
to a 'mere' 25th in the Sunday Times Rich
List! But before you weep for Jim - he has
a personal fortune of £3.3billion, a private
jet, lives in a
mansion - and has been almost single-handedly
responsible for provoking the biggest industrial
showdown in years.
The workers' union UNITE has negotiated
with INEOS for 8 months, after the new owners
declared their intention of ripping up the
Final Salary Pension Scheme inherited from
BP. INEOS cynically lied to the media about
workers' earnings; about the viability of
the pension scheme's funding levels; talked
up the impact of a strike to try and vilify
and alienate the workforce form the general
public. They threw a final incendiary device
into ACAS-sponsored talks with UNITE by
issuing a letter to workers' homes telling
them the new pension scheme would go ahead
regardless from 1st August 2008.
No wonder the workers voted by 97 per cent
to strike.
As Alec, one of the pickets told me, "This
is about our pension scheme, but also about
people. My son works here as well, and he's
just had a child we would like to think
had a future in Grangemouth. So we are forced
to strike to stop INEOS scrapping the Final
Salary Scheme for new workers as of 1st
August. And when the company say they have
withdrawn the threat to existing staff,
that's just not true. It would just mean
the scheme being withdrawn from us a in
a few years time instead of right now."
I made the point to him that some of the
press has attacked the strikers for taking
action in defence of future workers, when
that principled defence of the future should
be praised, not pilloried.
He replied, "Absolutely. And if the
scheme was in debt we could sort of understand
it being cut back, but it's hugely profitable.
And Ratcliffe is losing more from this strike
than it would cost to maintain our pensions."
In fact it is estimated the savings on pensions
would only amount to £1.5m - not the £720m
that INEOS says is required in investment
and which they have repeatedly linked to
pension savings in the business-friendly
media.
That points to bigger stakes for this gluttonous
capitalist. As another picket told me, "Even
if every one of the 1,200 of us keeled over
dead tomorrow and our dependents got all
the payouts they are entitled to, the scheme
would still be in surplus by £36-40million."
INEOS is the biggest private company in
the
Ratcliffe obviously wants to amass even
more wealth by making the pension scheme
'leaner and meaner'. He may also want to
teach the union a lesson, weaken it, and
then gradually whittle away wages in future.
Not that we found any £60,000 processing
operators of press legend! The starting
salary is about £21,000. And contrary to
the oft-repeated myth that these workers
don't pay into their pension, they do!
As UNITE has explained, "Other companies
in the Oil and Petrochemical sector do have
a specific amount deducted from their salary.
Ineos workers do not and the size of their
salary reflects that. That is, there is
a 'salary surrender' operating. Some other
oil company workers, eg Shell, have both
higher salaries and better pension arrangements."
A pointer to why the INEOS bosses are so
intransigent is the fact
Final Salary Pension Schemes are
very rare nowadays in the private sector.
In fact the same media which has vilified
the Grangemeouth strikers have in recent
years condemned public sector workers for
daring to take action in defence of such
schemes - on the grounds that it would make
them 'privileged' compared to private sector
workers.
And boiled down to its essence, this is
a blatant wage cut by any other name. Grangemeouth
workers stand to lose £10,000 a year through
the attacks on their pension scheme.
There is no justification for INEOS dismantling
the pension scheme. It is pure capitalist
greed, with the wider aim of weakening union
resistance to other future attacks on conditions,
using the device of a two-tier workforce
to force through changes that nobody would
accept if they were openly called wage cuts.
The workforce has done everything possible
to avert a crisis. All the strikers are
doing shifts on safety duties inside the
plant during the strike to prevent any damage.
As one picket told me, "We thought
this might get us some friendly mentions
in the press, but so far not a mention."
This dispute raises broader issues too.
Why should one monstrously rich man own
and control the country's oil refinery?
Why should petrol companies have the power
to rip off motorists by jacking up prices
during the dispute - when stockpiles of
supplies exist for at least 70 days with
no need to panic? Why should multi-national
oil companies amass vast wealth from
The Scottish Socialist Party is proud to
stand alongside Grangemouth workers in defence
of their deferred wages and those of future
workers - but we also feel strongly this
highlights the case for public ownership
and democratic control of the entire industry.