Wednesday, January 27, 2010

British Post Office & Postal Workers Under Attack

The British love of the tabloid press to put the blame for every labor dispute, each working to rule, every strike and all the woes of the industry people who actually do the work that produces wealth.

Take British postal service a public service that has a long tradition of excellence from the days when Queen Victoria sat on the throne. Excellence is, until this government and the management of the post office decided to start tinkering with it in their haste to provide all services of public property to their friends in the private sector.

The press recognizes this time the Royal Mail management is being intransigent and manipulative in an effort to break the postal workers union, the union of media workers. But they can not quite put all the blame on his peers, oh no, it's the fault of the workers also of course.

They are so stubborn, yelling the Oligarch-owned London equating and other British standard wallpaper most of the song to the same tune. Do not make more work for less money or receive reduced benefits. They reject modernizing shout.

They are often repeated demands for the roles of the post office on reduced mail volume. The lyrics are apparently taking a blow to the ten-percent per year but in this day of online commerce and goods so delivered volumes are small packets and parcels up.

By modernizing the means of privatizing the post office of course, but what kind of fur modernize the general public the real reasons for the isolation backed government. To modernize the sounds not so unreasonable for the postie, how dare they live in the past who have secure employment and good pay. How dare they have a decent holiday, work, reasonable hours and a pension when they retire. Devils selfish!

Of course the man at the top, the crozier of Adam, who want these reforms driving in a negligible £ 9 million a year, estimated poor. That much, you might think, work with a service that worked well for decades under the management of staff.

The British public would do well to complain to your member of parliament against what is happening to this well-loved institution essential and shamefully the union of media workers being treated by management of the PO.