Coventry bin staff got £4,000 payout each to work over Christmas after seven-month strike

Local, national, international and oddball news stories

Coventry bin staff got £4,000 payout each to work over Christmas after seven-month strike

Postby dutchman » Fri Feb 10, 2023 4:01 am

The buyout was part of a deal to end bin strikes

Image

Coventry City Council paid out a whopping £508,000 last year as part of a deal to make Christmas bin pick-ups compulsory for workers.

A total of 127 staff got £4,000 each in a one-off payment in return for having to collect rubbish in the week between Christmas and New Year.

The council struck the deal as part of negotiations to end last year's seven-month-long bin strikes. Money for the buyout came from council reserves.

Set against ongoing savings of some £150,000, the council spent £274,000 more on bin collections over Christmas this year.

Slides for a council meeting tomorrow say it "made collections on the week between Christmas and New Year compulsory in return for a one off payment."

"106 staff signed up for the change meaning that collections were carried out with no changes and no delays for residents."

Collections over Christmas and New Year had become "challenging" when bins started to be picked up every other week, the presentation adds.

It led to the council depending on agency staff and volunteers for cover - and people living in the city were sent clear sacks to store extra recycling.

This year, no clear sacks were needed, and the council also made savings from not needing temporary staff.

Alongside the change there was a sharp drop in complaints about bin collections in this period, according to the slides.

Complaints about pick-ups in December 22 and January 23 totalled 47, down more than 75% from the year before.

Asked for comment, a Coventry City Council spokesperson said: "In order to deliver a 52-week waste service, it was necessary to reach an agreement to buy-out a local agreement to achieve this.

"This was a one-off cost and not a recurring one meaning it will not be repeated for the service this Christmas."

Image
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 58254
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 12:24 am
Location: Spon End

Re: Coventry bin staff got £4,000 payout each to work over Christmas after seven-month strike

Postby dutchman » Fri Feb 10, 2023 4:03 am

Odd, I don't recall any extra collections over the Xmas/New Year period? :roll:
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 58254
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 12:24 am
Location: Spon End


Return to News

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests

  • Ads