Birmingham bin workers smelling rats

At 0600hrs on Tuesday, March 11, 2025 refuse workers employed by Birmingham City Council began an all-out strike. The strike, which is still ongoing at the time of writing this article, is the latest in a series of actions that have taken place in Birmingham since the beginning of the year.

The origins of this dispute, which is growing increasingly bitter, can be traced all the way back to 2010, but it came to a head in September 2023, when Birmingham City Council issued a Section 114 notice. This notice, issued under Section 114 of the 1988 Local Government Act, declared the Council’s insolvency and amounted to a de facto declaration of bankruptcy. At the time of the notice’s issuance by the Council’s financial officer, an £87 million deficit remained unresolved.

In accordance with the Local Government Act, the government in Westminster appointed commissioners (in effect administrators) to scour the Council’s financial records and inevitably implement swingeing cost-cutting measures in an attempt to eliminate the deficit.

Birmingham City Council is by no means an outlier in its financial struggles. It has joined a growing list of councils that had experienced insolvency over the last three years. These councils included prominent institutions such as Thurrock in Essex, Woking in Surrey, Croydon in London, and, just two months after Birmingham City Council, Nottingham City Council. In the case of Croydon Council, it was the third time that they had declared insolvency in just three years.

Councils’ finances over the last fifteen years have been driven on an inexorable path towards insolvency, chiefly because of the throttling of central government funding, which began with the austerity drive under David Cameron’s coalition government of 2010, but also because, with the tacit approval of central government, councils have speculated considerable sums of Council Tax-payer’s money on risky schemes.

Often, councils have speculated their paltry reserves on hair-brained schemes in the hope that the anticipated returns could bridge the gap between the finances that they had to hand and the amount that they needed to provide anything like a minimum level of public service. These councils either did not understand, or more likely were not willing to consider, the potentially huge risks that they were taking with public funds.

In the case of Birmingham, their troubles centred not as much on profligate speculation but on serious financial mismanagement: Principally a £100m cost overrun on the implementation of a new Oracle IT system, which the Council reportedly demanded be heavily customised to fit in with their pre-existing HR processes and practices. The subsequent delays and costs which resulted from this demanded customisation led the Council leader, John Cotton, to seek approval for the extra money needed to fix the problems. The Council only approved £46.5m, less than half the estimated cost.

Despite years of cuts to public services, the City Council finally admitted defeat with the issuing of the Section 114 order. Commissioners, appointed to hack and slash the Council’s financial obligations, decided that to save costs by decreeing that some of the city’s refuse workers (specifically the refuse lorry drivers and loaders) would have their role abolished and be downgraded, in turn having their pay reduced – in some cases by £8,000 per year, which was a hammer blow to the affected workers in the midst of an ongoing and seemingly never-ending cost-of-living crisis.

The all-out strike which followed has resulted in household refuse piling high in Birmingham’s suburban streets, with reports of dozens of rats scurrying from pile to pile of refuse in broad daylight. According to social media, when Council-appointed agency refuse trucks arrived residents were seen to be scuffling in the streets to be first to dispose of their rubbish.

There appears to be little sign of the Council seeking a swift end to the dispute. On 25 March, Unite the Union, which represents the bin workers, criticised the Council’s apparent reluctance to negotiate. According to Unite, there had been a full week between negotiation meetings with the Council and they have refused to rule out further attacks on the terms and conditions of refuse workers who are not currently affected by downgrading and pay cuts. Unite’s General Secretary, Sharon Graham, asked:

Are the Council’s decision-making abilities being hobbled by unelected commissioners? If that’s the case, the Council needs to be honest with its workers and the public and tell them exactly what decisions it can and cannot make without the commissioners’ permission.”

Meanwhile, the trade union movement as a whole has done very little in the way of giving tangible support to the strikers. In fact, the most tangible support given to the strikers by the trade union movement amounted to an open letter, signed by the General Secretaries of twenty-five trade unions, including the train drivers’ union ASLEF, the civil service union PCS and the Fire Brigades’ Union. The letter stated that:

After 14 years of austerity that have a damaging impact on our communities, services and society, it is imperative that urgent investment be made to deliver the transformative change that the people need.

”The proposed cuts to Birmingham bin workers, up to £8,000 annually, represent a continuation of austerity, not its end.

”We reject the council’s assertion that these cuts are driven by a desire for equal pay.

”Consequently, we reject the notion that pay equality is synonymous with reducing pay in a ‘race to the bottom‘ and instead advocate for a more equitable approach of ‘levelling up.‘”

The reference to the Council’s assertion that the huge pay cuts proposed for bin workers were “being driven by a desire for equal pay” refers to a legal claim against Birmingham City Council which dates back to 2010.

The case was brought by 4,000 female claimants at employment tribunal who worked in a wide variety of of jobs, including cooks, cleaners and administrative staff. They claimed that they were financially disadvantaged by not being paid bonuses which were given to male employees, including awards for exemplary attendance.

It was claimed that men could earn up to 160% of the amount paid to women in the equivalent pay grade as a result of these schemes. Amongst the roles which were in equivalent grades was the Waste Recycling and Collection Officer (WRCO) role – the very role which Birmingham City Council’s commissioners have proposed be abolished, slashing these workers’ wages to the tune of up to £8,000 per year. Indeed, it was in February of this year that the Council’s own auditors warned its leadership that the role must be abolished if they are to avoid future legal liabilities.

At the time of the legal victory in 2010, solicitors estimated that the cost to the Council in compensating the affected female workers could be as much as £200m. As it was, the Council then went on to spend the next fourteen years and an estimated £1.1bn of Council funds, both in paying compensation to workers and paying for legal fees in fighting against the ruling. In some cases, it took the workers fourteen years to receive their settlements from the Council after protracted negotiations with their trade unions.

The only other tangible action which the labour movement has participated in to support the striking workers was a one-day so called ‘Mega Picket’, which took place in Birmingham on 9 May, that can best be described as tokenistic. Organised by Strike Map, the picket was attended by organisations specialising in token protests, including the Socialist Workers’ Party, the ‘Revolutionary Communist’ Party (who sent a contingent of mainly students) and the Socialist Party – in effect the bulk of the British Trotskyite organisations, along with the Peace and Justice Project, People’s Assembly and some representatives from trade unions.

Altogether, the Mega Picket was attended by some 200 to 300 people which, while being the largest mobilisation of support for the strikers to date, is not by any means a ‘Mega Picket’. As ever, choosing to descend on a picket line on a weekday would preclude many working class people from attending, quite apart from the general futility of single day ‘actions’.

What is remarkable about this dispute is the complete failure on all sides to strive for a solution.  On 21 May, Graham took part in an interview for Radio 4’s Today programme, where she was questioned by host Justin Webb on the dispute, with Webb opening the interview by asking Graham if there were any talks taking place. Graham responded by saying that the government and the Council’s government-appointed leadership had said that Unite should accept the ‘fair’ offer made to the union – an offer which Graham said that the union had not seen and believe does not exist!

She went on to state that if there was in fact a ‘fair’ offer that could be put to the membership, then the Council’s negotiators should put that offer on the table, albeit almost three weeks after negotiations at the Arbitration, Conciliation and Advisory Service (also known as ACAS) had begun.

Mr Webb said that, while Graham was calling on the Council’s commissioners and negotiators to put their much-vaunted offer officially before Unite, she was also in effect calling on the ‘relevant government minister’, namely Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, to put a tangible offer in front of striking workers.

Graham said that Unite had expected an offer to be put before them on 8 May, but, as of 21 May, no offer was forthcoming as it was awaiting a ‘sign-off’ from the government-appointed commissioners. Graham accurately stated that ‘government-appointed commissioners’ was nothing more than a pseudonym for the government itself and that the leader of the Council had not been seen at any time during negotiations.

The thrust of Graham’s point was that Unite’s negotiators have not been in discussions with the real decision-makers – in effect, the leadership of the City Council, and the government. Graham also said that she had asked Angela Rayner for ‘a conversation’ (what exactly Graham meant by this was not made clear) but seems to have been stonewalled by the Deputy Prime Minister.

The link with Labour

It should be pointed out that Sharon Graham leads a trade union, Unite the Union, which has bankrolled the Labour Party that led Birmingham City Council into bankruptcy to the tune of millions of pounds of its own members’ money. At no point during this dispute or indeed any other dispute with Labour-led councils affecting Unite members (and there have been many over the years) has Graham or her predecessors ever made the funding of the Labour Party an issue for consideration. Effectively, like the leaders of every other Labour-affiliated trade union, Graham makes a show of ‘challenging’ the Labour leadership, but keeps both her hands tied behind her back.

The tactics of Unite the Union and Unison, which organise the workers, must also be brought into question. To date, only the Waste Recycling and Collection Officers have been balloted for strike action – Unite have failed to mobilise any other waste management workers, while Unison have been strangely reticent during this dispute. The Council’s commissioners appear to be focused on mass privatisation of services and the trade unions appear simply to have been sidelined as irrelevant.

In the meantime the rubbish continues to pile in the streets, the rats continue to run free and the lives of Birmingham’s working class, already affected by the cost-of-living crisis, are made even worse.

Councils across the length and breadth of the country have been in a parlous financial state for decades, but fifteen years of austerity, imposed by the Conservatives and then ramped up by the Labour government, means that Councils, whose council tax rises are capped at 5% (which explains why so many Councils raised their tax bills by 4.9%), will follow the likes of Birmingham, Nottingham, Croydon and others into bankruptcy.

It is the working class who inevitably suffer the effects of central government-sponsored austerity and council profligacy and speculation. It is they who are deprived of basic services, suffering higher and higher council tax bills for less and less in return. There is no choice for workers but to sweep away the tinkering at the edges of the ruling class and to replace them and their system with socialism, where services are provided on the needs of the people, free at the point of use and fully funded, run by and for the working class.

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