Blue chips at bay
MPs slam ‘fire and rehire’ plans at British Gas owner Centrica and BA
PRESSURE was today mounting on British Gas owner Centrica to U-turn on its controversial “fire and rehire” plans, amid threats of winter strike action.
The energy giant has been accused by unions of forcing 20,000 British Gas employees to accept worse contracts or risk losing their jobs. Workers face changes to conditions including their working hours and holiday entitlements under the plans.
British Gas followed British Airways in drawing the ire of unions with proposals to rehire 30,000 workers on lower pay and perks. Yesterday Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer condemned the practice of giving staff notice of redundancy and then hiring them back on worse pay and conditions.
MPs have now intervened, with 23 signing an early day motion calling for the company to withdraw its Section 188 notice of potential redundancies,.
Labour MP John Cryer, who brought the motion, told the Standard: “A lot of
British Gas engineers will be on good terms and risk losing those. They are skilled, valued engineers. If half the country has its terms and conditions ground into the dirt, it’s just wrong. Where will it end?”
He added: “The Government is going to be forced to make an intervention as it’s a not sustainable to have a strike at such a critically important business.”
Southwark MP Neil Coyle said: “For people who are more vulnerable to Covid it’s important their home is properly heated to avoid hospitalisation. There are also hundreds of thousands of people still working from home and people need heating in their homes.”
Centrica has argued using the Section 188 notice is a last resort and there will be no change to base pay and pensions. It said that “constructive discussions” are ongoing.
The talks with 20,000 staff are on top of the 5,000 redundancies announced in June, although sources said these may be pared back to maintain customer service levels.