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Intifada
21st January 2006, 18:45
SACKED FOR WEARING A UNION PIN

Does your union have a pin or badge with the union logo? Many unions do. In
fact there are so many pins, with such a long and colorful history, that
collecting them has become a hobby for some people.

Those pins were designed to be worn by union members at the workplace, to show
co-workers (and employers) that one is proud to be a member of a union.

In many unionized workplaces, employers have no problem with this.

But in Dunnes Stores -- a retail chain that has been called the "Wal-Mart of
Ireland" -- wearing your union pin can get you sacked.

Joanne Delaney is a 22-year-old shop steward, a member of the Mandate trade
union, and two months ago Dunnes fired her for wearing her union pin on her
uniform. And despite pressure from her union, they are refusing to take her
back.

In a sense, this is not surprising coming from a company that was the subject of
a three-year long campaign in the 1980s against Apartheid. Dunnes is a company
which is notorious for its anti-union policies.

In fact, Dunnes so dislikes unions that it refused to meet with Joanne when she
was accompanied by a union official.

If this story makes you mad, and it should, there are two things you can do
right now:

1. Click here to send a clear message to Dunnes Stores:

HERE (http://www.labourstart.org/cgi-bin/solidarityforever/show_campaign.cgi?c=66)

2. Pass on this message to other members of your union, to co-workers and
friends. Spread the word throughout the world that no employer has the right to
sack union members because they wear union pins.

commiecrusader
21st January 2006, 23:23
I have leant my support to this cause, and I have been the victim of victimisation in the workplace before. I hope she gets compensated by her ex-employer. Arsehole :angry:

Intifada
27th January 2006, 18:35
Some news I received about this issue.

TURN UP THE PRESSURE ON THE "WAL-MART OF IRELAND"

Last week, we asked all of you to send on messages protesting the sacking of a
union shop steward who dared to wear her union badge to work. Your response was
phenomenal -- you flooded Dunnes Stores in Ireland with over 3,000 messages in
the first week.

More than that -- there's been a real ripple effect here. A British Labour
Party MP introduced a motion in the House of Commons supporting Mandate's
campaign, and Ireland's main television news channel twice broadcast a
two-minute report which talked about the impact of our international, online
campaign. That report closed with Joanne Delaney, the sacked shop steward,
expressing her amazement and appreciation for the campaign.

The pressure is now on for a company known as the "Wal-Mart of Ireland". This
is, therefore, a critical moment -- time to turn the pressure up, not to relax,
but to build the campaign.

* If you have not yet sent off a message (and 90% of those reading this message
are in this category), please do so today. Go here:

Here (http://www.labourstart.org/cgi-bin/solidarityforever/show_campaign.cgi?c=66)

* Watch the video from Irish television and show it to others. It's on
LabourStart TV, here:

Here (http://www.labourstart.org/tv/)

* Spread the word! Forward this email on. Tell your workmates and colleagues
and fellow union members. Call people over to your desk, have them send off
messages while you are standing next to them.

PRC-UTE
1st February 2006, 06:36
The anarchist group Organise! have called pickets of dunnes stores branches in Derry and Belfast city centre for 1 0'Clock this Friday in support of Joanne Delaney, a shop steward sacked for wearing her union badge. I hope it's well attended.

Eoin Dubh
2nd February 2006, 23:05
With or without a union watching your back, workplace sabotage can even the playing field with unscrupulous employers.
Intelligently applied, workplace sabotage can offer much more than just a fleeting sense of revenge.

http://www.iww.org/en/culture/library/sabotage