The Birmingham bin strike has reached its fifth week. Rubbish is piled high, rats are infesting the streets, and experts are concerned about Weil's disease.
🧵on how the Equality Act contributed to this, and how it may cause similar strikes across the country.
1/ In 2012, 174 former Birmingham Council employees brought an equal pay appeal to the Supreme Court.
They argued Birmingham City Council had provided lower pay to women in predominantly female jobs (cooks, cleaners & care staff) compared to refuse collectors and road workers.
2/ They won their case.
Birmingham Council was found to have contravened equal pay legislation because they failed to provide bonuses to cooks, cleaners, catering and care staff, but did offer them to bin men, street cleaners, and grave diggers.
3/ This is not a case of women being paid less than men for the same work.
The claimants drew a comparison between manually taxing jobs, with higher labour shortages, and unsociable hours (bin men) and more popular jobs like cooking and cleaning.
4/ Because they lost the case, Birmingham Council have had thousands of equal pay claims brought against them.
So far, they have paid out £1.1 billion to former employees in equal pay compensation.
They estimated further liability in the region of £650m and £760m.
5/ The first consequence of this is obvious - it caused the council to go bankrupt.
In September 2023 they issues a Section 114 notice declaring the council to be “in a negative General Fund position” due to “the cost of providing Equal Pay claims”.
6/ The second consequence - the council urgently had to equalise pay for bin men and catering staff - or risk further payouts.
Because they were bankrupt, there was only one way to do this, by cutting pay for refuse collectors.
7/ Birmingham Council have been finding ways to cut the pay of those in male dominated professions.
Unite report they've cut £1,000 in shift pay already. They've also cut the highest paying refuse collection job-Waste Recycling and Collection Officer (an £8k pay cut for some)
8/ The council is at a total impasse. They have to make these cuts - if they don't they risk further equal pay lawsuits.
They are bankrupt so they simply cannot afford to bring up the pay of cooks, social care workers, and cleaners instead.
9/ Birmingham won't be the only council to experience these problems.
Refuse collection is tough work. Councils need to pay more in recognition of this.
But, the workforce is also around 73% male. So will always be vulnerable to equal pay lawsuits.
10/ Equal pay for the same work is a hard won right that should be defended at al costs.
But equal pay for similar work, as deemed by a judge, is madness.
It will bankrupt businesses and councils, and make it impossible to provide basic services.
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Shakespeare's Birthplace Trust are "decolonising" their collection. They think the artefacts in their care are "racist, sexist, homophobic, or otherwise harmful".
In 2023 they received £948k from the taxpayer. In 2020, £5.69 million.
🧵on historical vandalism at the site
1/ On Sunday, the news broke that the trust tasked with conserving Shakespeare's birthplace would be "decolonised" following claims the author was being used to promote "white supremacy".
This is ridiculous, and raises serious concerns about their ability to conserve the site.
2/ The Esmee Fairbairn Foundation have given the trust funding to work with researchers "from South Asian diaspora communities in the West Midlands" to re-examine what Shakespeare's work "can teach us about the impact of colonialism".
Victims of grooming gangs were described by the police as "child prostitutes". In some cases, they were arrested instead of the perpetrators.
No one has been arrested for this negligence.
🧵of girls failed by the institutions which were meant to protect them.
After being groomed and trafficked by a violent sexual predator, an assessment by the Police and the Children's Social Care authority blamed a 13 year-old girl for "placing herself at risk of sexual exploitation and danger"
A 14 year-old girl's mother voiced concerns that her daughter was being groomed. Her social worker concluded that the mother "was not able to accept her growing up".
One of the worst things about these crimes is the scale of institutional cover-up.
Back in September 2016, local officials in Telford - including current Labour MP Shaun Davies - said that further investigation of child sex abuse wasn't "necessary".
In 2016, when Lucy Allan (former MP for Telford) requested an inquiry into the grooming gangs which had scarred the area, the council leader and 9 of his colleagues wrote a letter to the Home Secretary.
Despite the fact that the signatories admitted they were "under no illusions that there are significant concerns around the sexual exploitation of children in Telford", they told the Home Secretary "we do not feel at this time that a further inquiry is necessary".