User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#92600
Add them to the list of people who think the only political battle that matters is the Left v “Starmer centrists”. The Tories and Farage are laughing their socks off.
Oboogie liked this
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#92619
Nice to see Unite standing up for working people.

https://www.gmblondon.org.uk/news/staff ... timisation
Unite’s failure to act over bullying and victimisation allegations is ‘unacceptable’ and GMB members have ‘quite simply had enough’.
GMB Union members working in Unite the Union's National Bargaining and Disputes Support Unit (BDSU) have voted to strike over 'bullying and victimisation' from management.



A group of workers will now walk out for four days of strike action, from Tuesday 3 to Friday 6 December, after Unite failed to investigate and take action following complaints that some managers in the BDSU bullied staff and victimised those who spoke out.



The ballot, which opened on 8 November and closed today [Monday], resulted in 83% of the members who participated backing strike action.



Despite attempts by GMB to resolve this dispute, Unite has been unwilling to address the members’ concerns or take any meaningful action.
User avatar
By Yug
#92655
Er, if demand has fallen, doesn't this imply that there is a surplus of butlers, not a shortage?

Demand goes up. Not enough trained staff - shortage.
Demand goes down. Job market flooded with trained staff who can't get jobs - surplus.
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#92696
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... verty-plan
Jones cites Labour support for local community group Ambition Lawrence Weston – still thriving today – as well as a taxpayer-funded “gifted and talented” scheme, as crucial in helping to signpost him towards university, as the first in his family to go. He went on to qualify as a solicitor, and was an in-house lawyer for BT before being elected in 2017.

With projects like these in mind, he is now announcing that the Treasury will invest £500m over a decade, alongside private backers, in a new “social outcome partnership” to fund grassroots projects tackling child poverty.

He says he made it a personal mission since arriving in the Treasury last summer to dramatically expand this form of “social impact investment”.

Pioneered by Gordon Brown’s Treasury, it is an approach that involves private investors matching taxpayer funding for neighbourhood-level anti-poverty projects.

These backers earn a modest return, but only if the scheme meets specific targets – which might be, Jones says, getting a certain number of children into college, or university, or parents into secure jobs, for example. The fund is expected to be the largest such vehicle in the world. Jones hopes it will be worth £1bn in total.


“It’s really trying to just unlock those opportunities, like it did for me,” he said. “I’ve now had a great career and I get to do this job. And a lot of that stems from what the New Labour government did. So essentially this type of funding mechanism, this investment into tackling the root causes of poverty is something that’s very personal to me.”

The detailed proposal emerged from a social impact investment advisory group, set up by Jones last year. It was due to wind down this summer, but will now continue at his request, to draw up plans for a more general template for social impact projects, that could be applicable across Whitehall.
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