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A bin lorry blocking a depot entrance, with workers milling around it
Police and picket lines at a council depot in Tyseley, Birmingham on Wednesday. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
Police and picket lines at a council depot in Tyseley, Birmingham on Wednesday. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Birmingham bin strike to continue after talks end without resolution

Union says Labour-run council could end industrial action with ‘decent rate of pay’, but town hall says offer is fair

Talks aimed at ending a strike by waste collectors in Birmingham have ended without a breakthrough.

Members of the Unite union in the city launched an all-out strike on 11 March in a long-running dispute over pay, leading to rubbish piling up and bins remaining unemptied for weeks. Residents have complained that rats are rummaging through the waste, leading to fears over public health.

Last Tuesday, nearly 400 council bin workers in the city began indefinite strike action. United said the Labour-run city council could end the dispute “by agreeing to pay a decent rate of pay”. Union officials met council officers on Thursday, but the strike continues.

A Unite spokesperson said: “The talks were inconclusive. There was an exchange of information and Unite asked for clarity on a number of points raised by the council, which are currently being worked on.

“It was agreed that there would be further regular negotiations, but dates for further talks have not yet been set.”

A Birmingham city council spokesperson said: “Birmingham city council and Unite met this afternoon to discuss the current industrial action. Whilst no resolution was reached today, there are points for discussion, the tone was constructive and we are working on the matters raised.

“We have contacted Unite representatives to schedule the series of future meeting dates.”

The council had previously said the “escalation” of industrial action would mean greater disruption to residents despite a “fair and reasonable offer” made to Unite members.

The Conservative councillor for Edgbaston, Deirdre Alden, said the excess rubbish around the city had caused an “explosion” in the local rat population.

“I have heard reports of rats in gardens, in rubbish bins and eating the cables in people’s cars – it’s like something out of the Pied Piper of Hamelin,” she said.

The industrial action was referenced in parliament on Thursday, with an MP saying that “rats the size of cats”, which she nicknamed the Squeaky Blinders, were “not welcome” beyond Birmingham’s boundaries.

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The Conservative former minister Wendy Morton told MPs that people in the West Midlands fear fly-tipping throughout the region because of the strikes and that local authorities were taking a “proactive and determined approach” to tackling it.

The union has claimed that the council ending the role of waste collection and recycling officer has hit 150 workers with pay cuts of up to £8,000, which the local authority has disputed.

According to the council, the number of staff that could lose the maximum amount of just over £6,000 is 17 and a town hall spokesperson said their “door is still open” for Unite to “come back to the table”.

More on this story

More on this story

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