1 job vacancy at RMT - Solicitor (5 years PQE)

 

1 job vacancy at the Morning Star - Subeditor

 

The Morning Star Shop - Online now

 

Donate to the Morning Star Fighting Fund

Subscribe to the Morning Star Mailing List

Progressive Web Listings

Read about EDM 1334

 

 

The Morning Star on Twitter Friends of the Morning Star on Facebook

 

Ken Gill Memorial Fund

 

Revolting Europe - London-based writer, journalist and regular Morning Star contributor Tom Gill focuses on developments in the European left, trade union and social movements

 



Britain

BBC staff step up fight to save jobs from cutbacks

Tuesday 05 February 2013

BBC journalists said today that they will strike and work to rule across the corporation in a bid to save their jobs.

National Union of Journalists (NUJ) reps agreed to step up a work-to-rule action that started in Scotland on Friday.

The union said it would announce strike dates soon unless the BBC scraps compulsory redundancies.

The BBC's deceptively named Delivering Quality First programme involves more than 2,000 redundancies and service cuts in a bid to slash its spending by a fifth.

The NUJ said BBC bosses hadn't found other jobs for staff whose posts have been axed despite advertising vacancies.

NUJ general secretary Michelle Stanistreet said journalists had been forced into action because bosses weren't redeploying workers.

"This lack of engagement is particularly entrenched in BBC Scotland where nine members face losing their job at the end of March."

She said an employment tribunal victory last week had uncovered faults with key elements of BBC procedures.

"NUJ members at the BBC are determined to ensure that no one else loses their job because of such pointless bureaucracy and managerial intransigence.

Ms Stanistreet called on the BBC to "engage meaningfully" with the union "rather than waste public money on needless compulsory redundancies."

NUJ BBC organiser Sue Harris said it was "madness" that the BBC was advertising job vacancies while laying off qualified staff.

"It is a waste of money and talent," she said.

And NUJ Scottish organiser Paul Holleran said warned that specialist reporters could be lost and "result in a serious dumbing-down of output."

BBC journalists in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Selkirk and the Scottish Parliament began working-to-rule at midnight on Friday.

More compulsory redundancies are planned at Newsbeat, Five Live, Big Screens, Asian Network and the World Service.

Local BBC radio and TV centres are also affected.

The 20 per cent cuts over the next five years come on top of 7,000 job losses since 2004.

If you appreciated this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep developing your paper.

Donate to the Fighting Fund here

Editorial

Iraq ruling is no vindication

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond believes himself vindicated by the High Court ruling that his Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT) is independent.

Features

Turmoil set to continue

by Tom Gill

A look at the causes and possible outcomes of Silvio Berlusconi and his right-wing coalition's lead in the polls.

Our government has put us at risk

by Lindsey German

Attacks such as yesterday's horrific murder in Woolwich didn't happen before the 'war on terror.' It's time we recognised the consequences of the conflicts we've unleashed