35 bin staff to leave jobs after 'devastating impact' of Coventry bin strikes
A number of bin collection staff at Coventry city council will leave their roles following a high-profile strike earlier this year.
A total of 35 senior drivers and crew have applied for voluntary redundancy (VR) and early retirement (EV) packages that were offered this month.
Some will get more than £100,000, mostly in pension costs that are not direct payments, which were approved at a restricted council meeting yesterday (30 August), the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) understands.
The council said it made the decision due to the "devastating impact" of the all-out Coventry bin strike by HGV drivers between January and July 2022.
Commercial waste contracts totalling £2 million were lost due to disrupted collections during the 7-month strike, and the authority says this will be a yearly loss unless staff are let go.
Trade unions agreed to the move as part of the deal in July to end strike action, according to a report for today's Audit and Procurement Committee.
Bin staff who accepted the severance packages will leave their posts today (31 August).
A spokesperson for Coventry City Council said: "It is no secret that the long-running strike action carried out by bin lorry drivers had a devastating impact on our commercial waste operations.
"It has created a loss of income to the Council of around £2 million and this looks to be a permanent loss.
"This devastating impact means that we need to make readjustments to the service accordingly, so we have started an early retirement and voluntary redundancy (ER/VR) exercise with our drivers.
"All local authorities are bound by nationally agreed rules when working out financial figures as part of this and the report going to Audit Committee is a precautionary one at this stage."
