Border Force Dispute Heathrow 2021-03-22

2021-03-22

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Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Ian Lavery Lab
Blyth and Ashington
Context
The Border Force staff have been on the frontline during the pandemic, playing a crucial role in keeping the country covid-secure. A new roster imposed at Heathrow is causing chaos, with 96% of the affected staff balloting to strike next week.
I am not surprised that the Minister is astonished, but as we all remember, Border Force staff have been on the frontline during the pandemic, and have played a pivotal role in keeping the country covid-secure. The imposition of a new roster at Heathrow airport is creating chaos. It is making staff feel less safe, as there are unavoidable covid-19 breaches; and as the Minister mentioned, there has been a 96% positive ballot result. The staff are set to walk out next week, at a time when the airport's own workers are striking over the shameful fire and rehire abuses. Will the Home Secretary intervene to pause these counterproductive changes and allow proper negotiations to take place with the PCS union before Heathrow airport grinds to a halt over the Easter holidays?
These measures have been introduced on a temporary basis, for just a few months, to protect the health of the Border Force workers, and it is frankly astonishing that the union has decided to go on strike. These measures will cease to apply in July and over 90% of the affected Border Force staff now have rosters that they agree with, so I call on the PCS union to withdraw any proposal to indulge in this completely unnecessary, counterproductive strike against—absurdly—measures that are designed to protect its own members.
Assessment & feedback
The Home Secretary did not directly address the specific request to pause changes and facilitate negotiations with the PCS union.
Response accuracy