
Trade unions and Scottish Water at standstill in dispute
Representatives from GMB and Unite the Union have expressed frustration as the company's chief executive has not attended pay meetings, and the pay offers proposed to workers 'have effectively meant a wage cut'.
Sam Ritchie, regional officer for Unite the Union, said there was an 'excellent' strike turnout last week.
'There was good weather and good spirits. I think there's also a lot of anger towards Scottish Water and the way that they've treated their workers,' he said.
READ MORE: Pro-Palestine activists target Glasgow office over weapons companies ties
The pay dispute began in July 2024, with surveyed trade union members asking for a flat pay rise of £3000 before strike action took place.
Following negotiations, Unite members were balloted in October of last year and rejected a pay increase of £1200 from Scottish Water.
A pay rise of £1400 was rejected by members in December, which Scottish Water said was its final offer. Since then, it has 'refused to budge'.
ACAS, a human resources consultancy that Scottish Water used to aid negotiations, reportedly asked Scottish Water to return to the negotiation table with a new offer for employees.
Claire Greer, GMB Scotland organiser, said: 'The last ACAS meeting instructed them [Scottish Water] to give one simple pay offer, and one red line for trade unions was that the offer would be no less than it was before.
'This was agreed in good faith, but Scottish Water, combined with ACAS instructions, gave the exact same offer bar £125 in the first year. We're tied in knots, it's a long, drawn-out, complicated offer that they keep putting on the table.'
Greer added that Scottish Water is refusing to negotiate on the first year of the pay deal after unions rejected Scottish Water's pay offer for 2024-2025, now only focusing on pay for 2025-2026.
'This went from being a very simple dispute, to a dispute that is centred around Scottish Water wanting to explain, re-explain, and re-explain again how to do negotiations, and that's not what we want,' she added.
'Scottish Water is very good at holding meetings and talking at its staff, not letting them ask any questions, and saying that it has consulted with staff. That's not how you consult with staff, and that's not how you negotiate'.
The frustration is shared by Ritchie, who says that management is 'out of touch with reality', and that Scottish Water's chief executive has not been present at pay deal meetings with unions.
'Alex Plant received, with his salary and his remuneration package combined, just below half a million pounds,' he said.
'For someone who receives such a large package, I would at least expect that he'd get around the table and listen to the voices of his workers, rather than just those voices that are a part of the board.'
READ MORE: Thousands of people turn out to pro-independence march in Wales
Within his first 10 months in his role as chief executive, Plant received £483,000 from his salary, performance bonuses and benefits, and pension combined.
Ritchie added that 'the arrogance of management is also shocking', and that Plant 'should be treating his workers with dignity and respect'.
'Managers at Scottish Water negotiate their own contracts privately, as they're above pay grade eight. Managers are offered bonuses to retain talent, but what about the workers on the front line?'
The change in Scottish Water's pay anniversary has also proved to be an issue, with the change itself being approved by trade unions, but the way it has changed the pay offer was not.
The 3.4% raise that Scottish Water claimed would be provided came in the form of £1400 for July 2024 to March 2025, but since the change in anniversary date, this has changed to the raise being spread over 12 months, which unions say makes the raise only 2.8%, or £1050 for Scottish Water employees on pay grades 1-6.
On the change the proposed offer would make to workers, trade unions agree that this would not be substantial, with Greer saying: 'Look at the rising cost of household bills, mortgages, rent, that £1400 is not meeting any of that.'
Ritchie added: 'The numbers don't add up, it feels like they're trying to pull the wool over the unions' eyes.'
Scottish Water's chief operating officer, Peter Farrer, said: 'No one benefits from industrial action and our focus is on continuing to deliver for our millions of customers across Scotland.
'Our above-inflation pay proposal is fair and progressive, prioritising the highest percentage increases in the business for those on the lowest salary grades – money that should be in employees' pockets now.
'We met with ACAS and the trade unions on April 15 to explore options to resolve the current dispute. Following that, we made a different, further improved proposal in an effort to reach an agreement.
'This is a good proposal and we are disappointed that union officials have not shared it with their members and given them the opportunity to vote on the offer in a ballot.
'We urge the unions to get back round the negotiating table as soon as possible.'
READ MORE: Case of tuberculosis confirmed at Scottish school
On the 'progressive' offer, Greer said: 'We completely disagree, and that's our members, the joint trade unions, GMB, everyone that's providing support is in complete disagreement with this.
'There are other public bodies across the pay sector that have gone on strike for higher pay offers than this, we've yet to find a pay offer lower than this.'
Ritchie backed this claim: 'The NHS were offered 5.5%, the Irish equivalent to Scottish Water were offered 5.5% or £1500 to all staff, we're seeing failing water companies down south get offered 4%.'
On returning to the table, Greer said: 'The trade unions haven't left the table, we've been open to any offer or suggestion, we've not backed ourselves into a corner here, we're not being precious about what we're willing to do. But we won't come back for the same offer, that's just a waste of everyone's time.
'There's no time for trickery and sleight of hand when it comes to pay talks. Everyone's there for the same reason, everyone wants these people back at work, so let's do it properly.'
Industrial action is set to continue, with the next strikes taking place on May 2 and 6 across Scotland.
Greer confirmed that 'workers right across the whole spectrum of jobs at Scottish Water, from the daily admin and office type roles right out to the more industrial roles' will be on strike.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
‘Let down by a world that claims to be humane but does nothing': Palestinians speak out as Israeli bulldozers raze West Bank villages
Jaber Dabbaseh sits upon a pile of dust-strewn rubble. 'We feel oppressed, let down by a world that claims to be humane, while it does nothing,' the father-of-five says. The ruins once formed his family home in Khalet al-Daba'a in the West Bank, before his village was almost entirely demolished by Israeli bulldozers. A crippling 2025 for Palestinians in the West Bank has seen 14 children among 80 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in the north of the territory alone. In late May came a hammer blow when Israel announced that 22 new settlements had been approved. Far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich warned Israel would 'not stop until the entire area receives its full legal status and becomes an inseparable part of the State of Israel,' a lucid illustration of the aggressive pro-settlement policies of Benjamin Netanyahu's government. On Thursday 5 June Palestinians marked Naksa Day, a commemoration of the forced displacement of around 300,000 Palestinians during the June 1967 war. Nearly six decades on, demoralised West Bank residents tell The Independent that the current situation is worse than ever. 'Their future is lost and we cannot provide for them, even a little,' says Dabbaseh, lamenting the life awaiting his five boys. 'The situation is very, very tragic.' Dabbaseh is one of the residents of Khalet al-Daba'a that have remained on the land, living in tents and residential caves since Israeli machinery razed it to the ground on 5 May. The IDF says the village is 'built illegally within a military firing zone' and that Palestinians live there illegally. This is disputed by the UN, EU, and rights organisations who say the forced expulsion of Palestinians in Masafer Yatta is illegal. 'Israel must immediately halt illegal practices leading to the forced displacement of Palestinians, including attacks on residential areas, destruction of property and infrastructure, pervasive access and movement restrictions imposed on Palestinians,' Amnesty International said on Thursday in a statement marking Naksa Day, as it accused Israel of presiding over a 'ruthless system of apartheid'. Since Khalet al-Daba'a's destruction, settlers have roamed the remnants of the village daily, grazing their sheep and vandalising remaining structures in the hope of pushing Palestinians away from the land, residents say. Footage shows settlers stood among the wreckage of Khalet al-Daba'a as three soldiers watch on, hands in pockets, relaxed and chatty. 'Our children are struggling to reach school and live in anxiety and fear. We cannot protect them from the settlers. We have no clinics, no schools, no recreational facilities for children,' Dabbaseh says. Nine houses, ten water tanks, four animal shelters, a community centre and most of the village's solar panels in the village were flattened by the army of bulldozers in less than two hours, according to activists. Residents watched on helplessly from a nearby hilltop, witnessing the stark transformation of their small village into a bleak landscape of lost livelihoods. Masafer Yatta, a collection of hamlets in the South Hebron Hills which the Israeli army declared a military firing zone in the 1980s, has faced some of the most brutal manifestations of Israeli occupation. After decades of legal wrangling, the High Court ruled in 2022 that there were no legal barriers to prevent the expulsion of Palestinians from their homes. Many Palestinians have repeatedly rebuilt their homes after they have been flattened. Others have moved into caves which have been renovated by locals and activists to make them habitable for families. Jaber Dabbaseh says the latest eviction was the eighth he has seen his home demolished in as many years. Increasingly emboldened by the Israeli government's pro-settlement policies, the rate of settler attacks on Palestinian villages has increased over the past year, residents say. Each week, footage emerges on social media of settlers, often masked and armed, descending on Palestinian villages in the West Bank. 'We are full of sadness, full of weakness. What can we do?' asks Mohammad Hesham Huraini, a 22-year-old activist who lives in the nearby village of at-Tuwani. 'The people are scared and afraid. They want someone to stand by them to at least feel that we are not alone.' Speaking in a phone call last Friday, Huraini says he is due to join join fellow activists and resident to visit the remnants of Khalet al-Daba'a. 'I don't know if we will come back in an ambulance, or a military jeep, or a police jeep,' he says. 'It's really worse than ever before, more dangerous than before. The people feel that they are alone, the international community just watches.' Days later, Huraini was detained while sitting in a tent with other activists in Khalet al-Daba'a. Israeli police have routinely detained activists and residents on the land, including 70-year-old Irish woman Deirdre Murphy - who as of Friday remained in detention as she appealed her deportation - and Swedish national Susanne Björk, both UK residents. The army says entry into is prohibited under military orders. 'Every day it's getting worse and worse, and we expect there is more worse to come,' says Mohammad Hureini - a cousin of the previously-quoted Mohammad Hesham Huraini. Speaking of the settlers, he said: 'There is no power to stop them, they are roaming daily, shooting, stealing land. Anyone who stands up for their rights will be attacked.' The Israeli military says its troops are 'required to act to stop the violation' in instances of violence against Palestinians and 'to delay or detain the suspects until the police arrive at the scene'. But Palestinians say Israeli authorities offer no such protection. Activists including Basel Adra, the Oscar-winning director of the documentary No Other Land, which depicts settler and military violence in Masafer Yatta, have issued an urgent call for journalists and activists from the international community to flock to the West Bank. 'It's not easy for me to write this, but my community Masafer Yatta will be destroyed unless more activists and journalists don't urgently come and join us on the ground,' Adra wrote on X along with a video showing Israel settlers standing among the ruins of Khalet al-Daba'a. During one such visit led by Adra earlier this week, masked Israeli soldiers barred around 20 journalists from entering the villages. As the conversation draw to a close, Huraini thanks the international community for their support. But now, he says, as the community of Masafer Yatta looks ahead to a gloomy future: 'We need you here on the ground.' The IDF said: 'The mission of the IDF is to maintain the security of all residents of the area, and to act to prevent terrorism and activities that endanger the citizens of the State of Israel. 'Enforcement against illegal structures is carried out in accordance with the law, operational priorities, and subject to approval by the political echelon. The structures built in [Khalet al-Daba'a] and nearby areas were constructed illegally and were therefore demolished after the owners were given the opportunity to present their claims. 'The IDF monitors developments in the area and acts in accordance with regulations.' Israeli police were also contacted by The Independent.


The Guardian
11 hours ago
- The Guardian
Conference to recognise Palestinian state to weaken scope of its ambition, diplomats say
A planned conference in Saudi Arabia this month that supporters of Palestine had hoped would push western governments to recognise a Palestinian state has weakened its ambition and will instead hope to agree on steps towards recognition, diplomats have said. The change to the aims of the conference, due to be held between 17 and 20 June, marks a retreat from an earlier vision that it would mark a joint declaration of recognition of Palestine as a state by a large group of countries, including permanent UN security council members France and the UK. Emmanuel Macron, the French president and a co-sponsor of the event, has declared recognition of Palestine as 'a moral duty and political requirement', but French officials briefing their Israeli counterparts this week reassured them the conference will not be the moment for recognition. That is now seen as a prize that will emerge from other measures, including a permanent ceasefire in Gaza, the release of Israeli hostages, reform of the Palestinian Authority, economic reconstruction and a definitive end to Hamas's rule in Gaza. France and Saudi Arabia have set up eight working parties to prepare the necessary ingredients for a two-state solution, and Macron is hosting a conference of civil society under the banner of the Paris Peace Forum immediately before the three-day conference. The UK is overseeing the humanitarian working party and other working groups cover reconstruction, economic viability of a Palestinian state, promoting respect for international law, narratives for peace and 'peace day', an imagining of the benefits to both sides from a peaceful settlement. Israel and the US have attended run-up meetings to the conference but have not spoken, prompting speculation they may boycott the event. Israel has fought hard to prevent stateless Palestinians achieving self-determination. Polls show only a fifth of the Israel electorate favour a two-state solution and 56% of Jewish Israelis supported the 'transfer of Arab citizens of Israel to other countries'. Israel has also approved plans to build a further 22 settlements in the West Bank – the biggest expansion in decades. Israel's defence minister, Israel Katz, said it was 'a strategic move that prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state'. Macron's initiative has been described as 'disastrous' by the Israel's ambassador to France, Joshua Zarka. Recognition of a Palestinian state was previously seen as an outcome of a failed 1990s-era two-state plan. However, governments in Europe increasingly doubt Israel has any intention to ease its control over Palestinians and see recognition as a possible lever to force a change of thinking among Israeli officials. Ireland, Spain and Norway recognised a Palestinian state last year. Macron has insisted he would only recognise a Palestinian state without Hamas – the same stance as the UK. In an open letter to Macron, The Elders, a group of former senior UN diplomats, say recognition is 'an essential transformative step towards peace' that should be taken as a matter of principle, divorced from negotiations over the ultimate form of Palestinian statehood and how and when Hamas should be disarmed. Anne-Claire Legendre, the president's adviser on the Middle East, has said the conference 'must mark a transformative milestone for the effective implementation of the two-state solution. We must move from words to deeds, and we must move from the end of the war in Gaza to the end of the conflict.' She met Israeli officials this week to discuss the conference and Israel's often cloudy long-term vision for the region. She also met the Palestinian prime minister, Mohammad Mustafa. Israeli newspapers reported the travelling French officials as saying: 'The recognition of a Palestinian state remains on the table, but not as a product of the conference. This will remain a bilateral subject between states.' The British foreign secretary, David Lammy, who is expected to attend the conference, is under massive backbench pressure to do more to punish Israel and is, at minimum, being asked flesh out the conditions for the UK recognition of a Palestinian state. Hamish Falconer, the Middle East minister, told MPs this week the UK thinking was evolving. 'One reason that the traditional position of the UK government has been that the recognition of a Palestinian state should come at the end, or during, a two-state solution process was the hope that we would move towards a two-state solution,' he said. 'Many minds have been changed because of the rhetoric of the Israeli government – the clear statements by so many that they are no longer committed to a two-state solution.' But the British are looking for firm undertakings at the conference on the future government of Palestine, including the exclusion of Hamas from any future governance of Gaza, which is something Hamas itself has appeared to accept in the various plans drawn up by Arab states. A growing number of Conservative MPs have broken with their frontbench on the issue and now back recognition, including the former attorney general Sir Jeremy Wright. France hopes that a group of western states recognising a Palestinian state could be counter-balanced by Muslim states normalising relations with Israel. However, Saudi recognition of Israel seems impossible. The Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, the other co-host, has asserted repeatedly that Israel is committing a genocide, a view that is shared widely by Saudi public opinion.


Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Grace Tame sensationally AXED from her $100,000 ambassador role at Nike after probe into pro-Palestine posts
Global sports brand Nike have officially cut ties with advocate and athlete Grace Tame over her pro-Palestinian posts on social media. The former Australian of the Year, who received the top accolade for her work speaking for sexual assault victims, shared several posts in solidarity with Palestinians during the ongoing conflict with Israel. Nike released a statement on Monday stating Tame's team were being spoken to, although it's not been confirmed exactly what sparked the probe. On Friday, speculation grew that the brand and Tame had split, with the athlete removing references to Nike on her Instagram profile. A spokesperson for the brand then shared a statement confirming the end of Tame's Nike era, writing: 'Grace and Nike have mutually agreed to part ways'. 'We wish Grace the best as she continues her running journey.' Daily Mail Australia has contacted Tame's team for comment. A Nike spokeswoman earlier this week told Daily Mail Australia the brand 'does not stand for any form of discrimination, including antisemitism'. Tame, who received the top accolade for her work for sexual assault victims, shared several posts in solidarity with Palestinians during the ongoing conflict with Israel 'We take this matter very seriously and are in touch with Grace's team to understand the matter further,' the spokesperson said. The 30-year-old is an ultra-marathon runner and was appointed as a brand ambassador by Nike in January. She shared a gushing message at the time, writing: 'I couldn't be more excited to announce that I am officially an ambassador for Nike. 'This has been a long time in the making.' Prior to accepting the role - believed to be worth $100,000 - Tame had added her voice to Oxfam Australia's demand for a ceasefire in Gaza in November 2023. Over the last few weeks, she has been outspoken in her support of the Palestinians' cause and joined a panel of speakers at the Feminism in the Time of Gaza forum. At least 450 people heard from four speakers at The Edge in Federation Square, Melbourne , during the May event organised by the Australian Palestine Advocacy Network (APAN). Tame said it was the first time she had spoken publicly about Palestine and revealed she had been asked not to speak about the Gaza-Israel conflict at several events. 'Empathy should have no boundaries,' she told the crowd. On Monday, the same day Nike released a statement, Tame shared a quote from climate activist Greta Thunberg who is currently on board a Freedom Flotilla aid mission sailing to Gaza aimed at breaking Israel's blockade. 'We are doing this because no matter what odds we are against, we have to keep trying, because the moment we stop trying is when we lose our humanity,' she wrote. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned Gaza is at risk of famine as a result of the blockade. Last week, Tame reshared a statement on Instagram from Palestinian writer Mohammed el-Kurd. He had criticised journalists who reported on the fatal shooting of an Israeli embassy couple in Washington DC as a 'random anti-Semitic attack'. Sarah Lynn Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky were leaving an event at the Capital Jewish Museum when they were shot dead. Elias Rodriguez, who police say shouted 'free Palestine' after being taken into custody, was charged with two counts of first-degree murder. Tame's has never shied away from socio-political discussion, with her Instagram handle called 'tamepunk' in perhaps a reference to the punk movement. In January she came under fire for wearing an incendiary T-Shirt to a morning tea event with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his fiancée Jodie Haydon. It featured the slogan: 'F*** Murdoch.'