Unite for JobsUnite for Jobs for IT and communication workers

IT and Communications workers in the UK are being affected through both the domestic and global implications of the current financial crisis.

Thousands of IT and Communications workers have lost their jobs since the effects of the financial crisis began to become apparent. Many of these job cuts have been on a massive scale:

  • Siemens announced that 500 jobs would be cut in Scotland in November 2008
  • In January 2009 Dell made public its plans to cut 1200 jobs across its UK operations.
  • After falling into administration in January, Nortel cut over 220 jobs from its workforce across the UK in March, and up to 3,000 jobs were lost globally.
  • Nearly 3,400 workers at HP/EDS are being made redundant over a two year period through to October 2010 as a result of restructuring plans following the takeover of EDS by HP in 2008.

 

Longer terms trends such as the rise of agency working, the drift of jobs eastwards due to offshoring and aggressive restructuring programmes are continuing apace:

Many IT workers are engaged on temporary contracts or have been deployed from an agency. These workers are particularly vulnerable during the current economic climate because of a lack of basic legal protection, either to dismissal or pay cuts.  At HP in Scotland, 150 agency workers were made redundant at the end of January.

The knock on effect of the banking collapse

IT is an integral function of most modern workplaces, and especially so in service sectors such as finance.

As financial services companies and banks have embarked on large scale redundancies IT workers have often been the first to suffer.

  • In January 2009 Barclays announced that it would be cutting over 400 IT staff in the London area.
  • At the end of January Edinburgh- based Aegon cut 100 jobs, the first of which were among the IT department.
  • In February the Nationwide Building Society cut 45 jobs from its IT department in Swindon.

 

And in manufacturing IT workers are also finding themselves among the first to face redundancy:

When Jaguar Land Rover first announced plans to make 850 people redundant in the West Midlands in November, the IT and Engineering departments were among the first to cut jobs.

Unite is fighting job cuts and closures at every turn:

Nortel
At Nortel Unite has been working to get a fair deal on redundancy payments. Nortel and its administrators Ernst & Young sacked over 200 people out of its 2,000 UK workforce without consultation or redundancy pay, predominantly in Northern Ireland, Maidenhead and Harlow.

More on this: http://www.unitetheunion.com/news__events/latest_news/unite_denounces_nortel_for_usi.aspx

HP
Unite has been fighting HP’s proposal to cut the pay of over 300,000 workers worldwide. The company announced in February that it would be seeking to cut pay by 5% across the board despite positive first quarter results for 2009, showing revenue growth of 1% to £20bn and profits of £1.3bn.

More on this: http://www.unitetheunion.com/news__events/latest_news/unite_astonished_at_hp_proposa.aspx

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Comments
  1. alanjenney says:

    At the end of August 2009, 6,000 workers within Fujitsu - almost half the workforce - have been put at risk in a national redundancy programme aiming to maintain profits (the company is not due to make a loss) at the expense of an expected 1,200 jobs.

    9/22/2009 4:34:56 PM
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