The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Bid to avert strike action

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Sir, - Your readers may have read about a potential strike at Royal Mail by the Communicat­ions Workers Union (CWU).

Our postmen and women have the best pay – and the best terms and conditions – in our industry.

Average pay is 45-50% above the National Living Wage.

None of that is changing.

There are just no grounds for strike action.

Previous strikes at Royal Mail meant we let our customers down.

Some of our major rivals today were actually establishe­d because of those strikes.

There really is no point shooting ourselves in the foot. So, what’s at issue? Well, not the great terms and conditions postmen and women have, as I said before.

On pay, we have made a very good offer.

That follows a 10.8% pay rise in the four years since privatisat­ion.

That compares favourably with the 6.4% UK national average earnings increase over the same period.

On pensions, we are well aware how important pension benefits are to our colleagues.

Our proposal would be by far the best pension scheme in the industry – and one that benchmarks well to other large employers.

Many of our postmen and women are in a Defined Benefit scheme – 63%, in fact, compared to just six per cent of workers across the UK private sector.

We do need to change to a different type of Defined Benefit arrangemen­t.

That’s because – every year – it would cost us at least three times more than the cash we generate just to keep the existing pension open.

No business could do that.

There is no need to strike.

We want to work with our postmen and women, our great ambassador­s, to keep being the best delivery company in the UK. Rob Jenson. Royal Mail Scotland Operations Director, Edinburgh.

She was friendly and gracious to her many fans and having met her once in Manchester I remember her as charming, and of course her colleagues are deeply saddened

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