The Voice Newspaper: May 2023

Page 28

28 | THE VOICE MAY 2023

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023

BEING A BLACK UNION WORK Black workers have a long and proud history of fighting for rights in the movement

ORGANISING: Black reps stand up for their co-workers (Getty) By Richard Sudan

T

HE COST of living crisis is skyrocketing, disproportionately devastating Black communities across the country. Our rights remain fragile after decades of structural racism and austerity, while soaring prices and inflation have increased the burden on Black households immensely. This cold reality necessitates that black workers collectivise, organise and unionise like never before. We now have some - but not enough - Black people in senior positions, even leading unions, like Daniel Kebede newly elected as General Secretary of the NEU, only the fourth black union leader. He follows Dr Patrick Roach of the NASUWT, Maheta Molango of the PFA, and famously the trailblazer Bill Morris, who led the TGWU (now Unite) before retiring and being made a peer.

One of the positions key to a greater Black presence at the top is the role of workplace union representatives, otherwise known as ‘reps’ or shop stewards. Workplace reps arguably play the most essential function of all, acting as a bridge between unions and the workers on the ground they represent.

COMFORTABLE

Crucially, they stand up for their members in their places of work, safe in the knowledge that their demands are backed by all the members they represent. Glen Hart, currently an officer at transport union RMT, and a former union rep, outlined the value union reps bring to the table. “They are my eyes and ears on the ground in the workplace; I can’t do my job without them. “In the majority of workplaces where we organise, Black and minority communities are quite over repre-

Union movement is best with anti-racism at its core sented. People feel more comfortable talking to someone who can understand their experience. “If they need to talk about being discriminated against, they don’t want to have to explain why it is discrimination. They want to speak to someone who might have an understanding of their experience.” Unions have a long way to go before they truly reflect modern Britain. But, says Hart, the tide is finally shifting. New generations though, need to

take up the charge. “When I first started out, it was quite often the case that if someone had a case of racism, they would go to a branch meeting to sort it out, but everyone there was usually all white men. “They would just roll their eyes and didn’t want to hear it. But things are changing now. People are becoming more understanding of the issues and it’s because now we have more reps with that shared experience.” Hart, who has been active in trade unions for 25 years, and worked on London Underground, elaborated on the kind of battles that can be fought - and won - as a union rep, supporting workers taking on employers even giants like TfL. “Managers had been harassing a member. To actually get the managers on the spot in a tribunal - making them justify their actions - was actually vindication itself. “And then to actually get the win

where the company had to pay out money quite substantial for injury to feeling. It’s not about shaming companies. It’s about our members. When they’ve got aggressive management, they are left feeling very vulnerable. They’ve been gaslit. “Some of my Black reps now, are some of the best. But now I’ve got an opportunity to get others in. I don’t want to be doing this role just by myself. I want more people to join me as much as possible.” Abena Louisa St BartholomewBrown Morgan is a rep for the Film Artistes Association, a subdivision of BECTU, a union for people working in the entertainment sector. She worked for decades as an artist, singer, actress, commercial model and held administrative positions in a wide range of organisations while campaigning for period dignity and equality in the workplace, and against institutional racism throughout her life. With vast experience in the field


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Articles inside

Duo helping to conquer swimming fears head on

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page 55

SPORT ‘They understand me’

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page 54

Why being different is a strength and not a weakness

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pages 52-53

Tale of love and Haiti... and voodoo

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page 51

Don’t mess with ‘The Boss’

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Tate Britain celebrates 40 years of Isaac Julien

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pages 48-49

Loss, love and family are centre stage

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Miss Erica’s strutting her stuff

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The Gospel Truth Sadé Thomas Jesus and drill

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page 44

Ageing with the grace of God in a world untainted by sin

2min
pages 42-43

Nothing But Truth and Light Trust God for He is present

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Montel Gordon Stephen reminds us how far society still has to go

3min
page 41

Being young, Black and female is my superpower

4min
page 40

Lyndon Mukasa Is this Australia’s chance?

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pages 38-39

Blackstory Partnership event marks Windrush anniversary

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page 37

Maxiemum reward!

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page 37

Dementia Aid puts heart and soul into campaign

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Support grows for Diane Abbott after whip removed

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pages 35-36

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023

1min
pages 33-34

Scrap the Bill of Rights

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page 32

More Black union members are heading for the picket lines

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page 31

FIGHTING RACISM ISN’T AN OPTIONAL EXTRA

3min
page 30

WORKPLACE ‘REP’ IS EMPOWERING

3min
page 29

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 BEING A BLACK UNION WORKPLACE

2min
page 28

Putting race back on the agenda Kate Bell, Deputy General Secretary of the TUC, says the union movement is committed to anti-racism

2min
page 27

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 CENTURY OF BLACK SELF-ORGANISATION

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page 26

What the Year of Black Workers is all about

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BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 Empowering members to make a difference

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The Year of Black Workers

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Men suffering domestic violence ‘is still a taboo’

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Do you know your risk of type 2 diabetes?

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Thousands avoid type 2 diabetes with free evidence-based lifestyle programme

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Terence Channer Reflections on a world characterised by colour

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Dotun Adebayo Rate him or hate him - you can’t ignore him! Jah Shaka - revolutionary who inspired all rastas to the end

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‘Black business mag boosted my enterprise’

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Why it is so important to build generational wealth

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Microaggressions are really not that micro

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Sherae No child should face Afro hair school ban

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Momentum for reparations

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pages 11-13

£1bn fund ‘to decolonise colonial grant-giving’

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‘The prison staff don’t really care about you’

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