It’s not a different scenario - one is a transport industry that has been fully supported through Covid by the Government as it’s revenue collapsed, the other is a transport industry that hasn’t.
I’m not at ScotRail, and you will clearly know the strength of feeling in the grade better than I do - I completely respect that.
But, and I can’t stress this enough, these are very tough times for the industry, and that means all of us have a part to play. It will be a smaller railway in future - at least in terms of passenger numbers and numbers of services (see the ScotRail or SWR consultations; these won’t be the last). There is a limit to how much money Government(s) will be willing to fund a railway with fewer passengers. A lot of people will be leaving the industry - some have already left. The more expensive we make ourselves, the more people will need to leave. It’s that simple.
I’m afraid it is a different scenario because they’re different sectors which are run differently and have been affected differently by the pandemic. Passengers use one service to go on holidays or long distance which was severely prohibited while another sees mostly local travel with people attending places such as their work. The railways had to keep moving as a public service, airlines were severely restricted with travel restrictions and altered demand. I have sympathy for the airlines and workers but it’s a different scenario entirely.
I do appreciate the Rail sector isn’t invincible and there has been reduced income, but there’s a feeling amongst workers in ScotRail that they have been treated with contempt since the start of the pandemic. There’s also a feeling that the company, due to lose the franchise, has done the bare minimum and continues to do the bare minimum to take revenue.
Furlough is a dud argument, many workers would have taken it over having to work front line during a pandemic without even adequate PPE and the company taking pops at the grade left right and centre. I personally wouldn’t have minded furlough so that I could have worked a second job like most of the people I know who were furloughed.
This could still be done, in order to fund a pay rise. But you're unhappy with that too?
I don't agree with that, and I don't agree with Grant Shapps on just about everything.
You don’t agree with me or with Shapps?
Isn't that just reality? As it seems unlikely there will be cash thrown at Scotrail to fund a payrise, it's going to have to be funded at least in part by cuts elsewhere. If they don't agree the two together, what are they supposed to do when the bill for the payrise turns up?
I don’t know if it’s reality, they seem to want to close booking offices regardless and so one might argue this tactic is slightly underhand
I am a conductor and a generally union minded person. I consider my pay claim for the moment to be well settled by the shifts I've spent at home spare or in doing 3 hours instead of a 9 hr 15 day over the last 18 months, or sat in the back cab venturing out to do the doors for several months and nothing else. It was, for quite a while, nothing short of a paid holiday camp. Subsidy for the moment has far better uses than settling a pay claim.
That’s fair enough, are you at ScotRail or another Toc?
I don’t see it as a paid holiday personally, I see it as showing up to your work and doing what you’re told to do. It’s certainly not felt like a holiday for me.