The Live Wire



Press Release

East of England councils and Remploy

29 November 2011

GMB ASKS 40 EAST OF ENGLAND COUNCILS NOT WORKING WITH REMPLOY WHICH PUBLIC CONTRACT THEY ARE PROVIDING TO REMPLOY FACTORIES THREATENED BY THE GOVERNMENT WITH CLOSURE

These 40 councils will be spending the money anyway and they should be spending it with Remploy

GMB has written to all 40 East of England councils that were revealed in a recent GMB report not to be providing a single public procurement contract to Remploy factories and asking which contact they will now provide and when. Councils are allowed to provide work to disabled workers sheltered employment factories under EU procurement rules.

The 40 East of England councils are Babergh, Basildon, Braintree, Breckland, Brentwood, Broadland, Broxbourne, Cambridge, Castle Point, Chelmsford, Colchester, Dacorum, East Cambridgeshire, East Hertfordshire, Epping Forest, Fenland, Forest Heath, Great Yarmouth, Harlow, Hertsmere, Huntingdonshire, Ipswich, King`s Lynn & West Norfolk, Maldon, Mid Suffolk, North Hertfordshire, North Norfolk, Norwich, Rochford, South Cambridgeshire, South Norfolk, St Albans, Stevenage,

Suffolk Coastal, Tendring, Three Rivers, Uttlesford, Watford, Waveney and Welwyn Hatfield.

The East of England has 1 Remploy factory which is in Norwich. GMB is urging the East of England public to lobby their local councillors to provide work to Remploy. In Britain as a whole there are 201 out of 408 councils not placing working with Remploy factories.

The Government is planning to stop funding Remploy and thereby close all remaining 54 UK factories. The Remploy workers crucial campaign objective is to get the workload up from the current 50% of capacity to 100% and to keep Remploy factories open.

The deliberate policy of starving Remploy factories of work has rendered them less economic, being only 50% loaded with work because either public bodies have failed to support them with work as allowed under EU rules or their own managers are turning down work.

Remploy workers want help to get their factories fully loaded. Members of the public can help if they are involved with any of these bodies or can lobby MPs, councillors and others to get them to place work with Remploy.

These factories have a successful track record going back to 1946 till the public authorities stopped loading them with work in 1990s due to then EU directive. The EU rules have been changed and the factories can be successful again when they are fully loaded. Making uniforms for the armed forces, emergency services and medical staff, and supplying schools would more than keep them busy.

Glen Holdom, GMB East of England Organiser responsible for GMB members working at Remploy said, " GMB has asked all 40 East of England councils that are not taking advantage of the EU rules, that allow them to provide contracts to disabled workers in sheltered company like Remploy, which public procurement contract they are providing to Remploy and when.

It is not good enough for these 40 councils to ignore the situation when they have it in their power to provide work to Remploy factories that will keep them open by providing work. They will be spending the money anyway and they should be spending it with Remploy and employing the 4,000 disabled workers whose jobs are under threat from the government.

GMB want a reply from each of the councils before Christmas tell us which contract is going to Remploy, how much it is worth and when it will be transferred.

If abled bodied workers are having trouble getting jobs it will many times harder for these disabled work to find jobs in main stream industry if the Remploy factories are closed down by the government.”

Richard Howett MEP for the East of England said, “Remploy gives people with disabilities the chance to participate on an equal footing in the workplace and the closure of the last factory in the region would be a body-blow for its workers.

I successfully fought to change the European rules on procurement to encourage councils to buy from organisations like Remploy and I'm deeply saddened that so many in the region haven't yet done so.

I call on all our local councils to look again at their spending and make every effort to support Remploy and keep their factories open and viable."

Regional table of councils NOT providing work to Remploy factories

Region

Number of councils by region that don't provide contracts

Total number of regional councils

South East

51 out of

74

Eastern

40 out of

52

East Midlands

33 out of

45

South West

25 out of

42

North West

17 out of

41

West Midlands

16 out of

33

Yorkshire & the Humber

8 out of

22

Scotland

7 out of

32

Wales

2 out of

22

London

1 out of

33

North East

1 out of

12

National

201 out of

408

3 Here is the full list of 54 Remploy factories across the UK under threat of closure when current public funding ends in April 2013. If these proposals go ahead 4,000 workers will lose their jobs. The alphabetical list of Remploy factories facing closure is as follows: Aberdare, Aberdeen, Abertillery, Acton, Ashington, Barking, Barrow, Birkenhead, Birmingham, Blackburn, Bolton, Bridgend, Bristol, Burnley, Chesterfield, Cleator Moor, Clydebank, Coventry, Cowdenbeath, Croespenmaen, Derby, Dundee, Edinburgh, Gateshead, Heywood, Huddersfield, Leeds, Leicester, Leven, Manchester, Merthyr Tydfil, Motherwell, Neath Port Talbot, Newcastle, North London, North Staffordshire, Norwich, Oldham, Penzance, Pontefract, Poole, Porth, Portsmouth, Preston, Sheffield, Southampton, Spennymoor, Springburn, Stirling, Sunderland, Swansea, Wigan, Worksop and Wrexham.

4 Keep up to date with the campaign to keep Remploy at live at http://www.gmb.org.uk/andhttp://www.svaeremployfactories.co.uk/

5 Remploy goods and services

Remploy goods and services are used by many public sector organisations including central government departments, local government, police, fire and rescue, schools and universities are benefitting by procuring goods and services from the many enterprise businesses that Remploy have to offer. From supplying furniture to thousands of schools to contracts with the Royal Mail, CCTV monitoring to local authorities, the Flexible New Deal contract for the Department for Work and Pensions, Employment Service Operations to Job Centre Plus, Automotive services to over 30 police forces, IT recycling (E-cycle) services to the Welsh Assembly Government, Remploy is providing a cost effective, efficient and valuable service to these organisations amongst many hundreds of other satisfied clients.

6 A 100,000 strong signature petition calling on the government to save Remploy factories was presented to 10 Downing Street on Monday 7th November 2011.




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