Call Centre Workers and 30K Openreach Engineers Vote for Historic National Strike Against “Insulting” Real-Terms Pay Cut

COMMUNICATION WORKERS UNION

30/06/2022

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

CALL CENTRE WORKERS VOTE FOR HISTORIC STRIKE ACTION, ALONGSIDE 30,000 OPENREACH ENGINEERS, AS BT GROUP EMPLOYEES REJECT “WEAK, INSULTING” REAL-TERMS PAY CUT

 

Call centre workers have voted for the first national call centre strike in British history, as Communication Workers Union (CWU) members at BT Group – notably including 30,000 Openreach engineers – have voted to strike against an “unjust”, “unsustainable” pay imposition.

 

At a press conference today (30th June), the CWU – the union for all BT Group employees – announced that on a 74.8% turnout, the union’s 30,000 Openreach engineers have voted by 95.8% to take strike action.

 

This number was followed by workers in BT, approximately 9,000 of whom are call centre workers, who have voted by 91.5% on a 58.2% turnout for strike action.

 

The dispute relates to BT workers opposing company management’s imposition of an incredibly low flat-rate pay rise.

 

Earlier this year, BT offered and implemented a £1,500 per year pay increase for employees.

 

In the context of RPI inflation levels hitting 11.7% last month, this is a dramatic real-terms pay cut.

 

It is also in the context of the company making £1.3 billion in annual profit, with the company’s CEO, Philip Jansen, gaining a £3.5 million pay package – a 32% increase.

 

If strike action goes ahead, it will be the first at BT Group since 1987.

 

The potential strike action will have a serious effect on infrastructure, particularly on the roll-out of broadband, and may cause significant issues for those working from home.

 

Commenting, CWU General Secretary Dave Ward said: “For the first time in nearly four decades, we are faced with national level strike action across BT Group.

 

“Our membership faced the challenges of home working, high staff turnover, and a real culture of fear created by senior management to deliver an overwhelming show of support for strike action.

 

“I want to pay specific tribute to our call centre workers in BT, who have delivered a historic move by voting for the first – and biggest – national call centre workers strike in British history.

 

“Call centre workers are some of the most casualised and isolated workforces in this country. They are notoriously difficult to organise, and the unprecedented vote they have taken today demonstrates the anger so many people feel in this country today.

 

“Our members were never going to accept imposition. BT Group thought they could get away with bullying treatment – they were wrong.

 

“These workers kept this country connected during the pandemic. Without CWU members working across BT Group, there would have been no home-working revolution.

 

“This work, which was done under great difficulty and often came with tremendous personal sacrifice, delivered £1.3 billion profits for the company.

 

“Over £700 million was paid out to shareholders. The company’s CEO, Philip Jansen, handed himself a £3.5 million pay package – a 32% increase. Over £700 million was paid out to shareholders, and the Chief Financial Officer was handed £2.2 million – a 25% increase.

 

“The reward for our members? The imposition of a below-inflation increase – the very same workers who delivered profits that more like lottery numbers than actual wages.

 

“Our members, and working people in general, have had enough.

 

“We will not accept seeing workers use food banks while executives use Swiss banks. For too long now, corporate bosses have been rewarded for wrecking companies, chipping away at workers’ conditions so their rich mates to get even richer.

 

“This situation is unjust, but it’s also untenable – people will not work harder and harder for less and less forever.”

 

CWU Deputy General Secretary Andy Kerr said: “I would firstly like to pay tribute to our members, who have resoundingly rejected the undignified way they have been treated by BT Group.

 

“This vote has shown the power of our members, who will not simply accept such a dramatic deterioration of their living conditions.

 

“At the beginning of this ballot, we said we would be still open to negotiations. Our word still stands, and we still commit to meaningful discussions.

 

“We invite BT Group to remove this weak, insulting pay imposition in favour of a fresh offer.

 

“I sincerely hope that this result will make them come to their senses. But make no mistake – if BT Group do not respond in kind, we will not hesitate to serve notice for strike action.

 

“Our members deserve respect and dignity. That means a proper pay rise – and they are going to get it.”

 

EDITORS NOTES

 

Over 40,000 members across BT Group were balloted.

 

Openreach Engineers work mainly as lone workers, accounting for approximately 30,000 of the workers balloted.

 

Approximately 9,000 of those balloted in BT Group work in call centres, and over 80% of them work from home, making traditional methods of trade union organising incredibly difficult.

 

Openreach Engineers work mainly as lone workers – this accounts for almost 30,000 of the balloted workers.

 

The CWU’s strategy was one of extensive multifaceted engagement, including in person and virtual membership meetings, live Q&A sessions between members and representatives, video messages hitting over 2,000,000 views, and an overall social media reach of well over 5,000,000.

 

We have also extensively utilised phone banking and peer-to-peer texting, with help from the Trades Union Congress.

 

The BT Group ballot represents the biggest call centre strike ballot in British history.

 

Members voting in EE voted in favour of strike action by 95% on a 49.7% turnout, falling short by less than a single percentage of passing the threshold imposed by the 2016 anti-union laws.

 

 

ENDS

 

For more information or interview requests, please contact CWU Press Officer Marcus Barnett at 07812590450 or mbarnett@cwu.org