Daily Record

Sacked union man wins IKEA cash battle

- BY ANNIE BROWN

A SHOP steward sacked after fighting against cuts in workers’ sick pay has won a financial settlement against furniture giant IKEA.

Richie Venton was fired this year from the company’s Glasgow store after bosses claimed he “breached confidenti­ality” by warning staff of new sick pay rules before management announced them.

IKEA has now awarded Richie a payout, rather than face an employment tribunal.

After hiss f iring, thee Reinstate Richie Ventonn Campa i gnn won nationwide support f rom w or k e r s , customers and politician­s.

Although itt failed to get him his job back, a spokesman for the campaign said the settlement was a victory.

He said: “IKEA wanted to sack Richie silently, behind the backs of his workforce, without any damage to their glossy, happy-clappy reputation.

“The submission of a powerful legal case, combined with the sledgehamm­er impact of the public solidarity campaign, drove IKEA into retreat.”

Richie worked for the company for 12 years and was a union rep for USDAW at IKEA’s store at Braehead.

He had opposed a new system which meant staff absent more than twice in the previous year would go straight on to statutory sick pay of £95 a week.

Staff feared they would feel pressured to go back to work if they contracted coronaviru­s or had symptoms, putting colleagues and customers in danger of infection.

Colleagues claimed Venton had been victimised for standing up for staff after he organised opposition to the changes.

A Joint Statement was signed by more than 30300 trade ununioni st s demdemandi­ng he gget his job bbackac and demdemonst­rationtion­s were held outside IKEA stores.

A petition gathered almoalmost 10,000 signatsign­atures and an earlyea day motion in suppor t of R i c h i e was signed by 51 MPs.

Af t e r the Record reported the row, IKEA were forced into a U-turn. The company, which made prof i t s of £ 11.2billion last year, agreed to pay contract hours wages to anyone sick or self-isolating with Covid-19 across the UK and Ireland.

Richie lodged an employment tribunal claim but the company settled and he has withdrawn the legal action.

An IKEA spokespers­on said: “Unfortunat­ely we are unable to comment on individual cases, owing to our obligation­s to co-worker confidenti­ality and data privacy.”

The public solidarity campaign drove IKEA into retreat REINSTATE RICHIE SPOKESMAN ON VICTORY

 ??  ?? U-TURN
U-TURN
 ??  ?? PAYOUT Richie had lodged an employment tribunal claim
PAYOUT Richie had lodged an employment tribunal claim
 ??  ?? PROTEST Demo outside store
PROTEST Demo outside store

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