by René Lavanchy
Civil servants across Britain will vote from this week on strike action over cuts to their redundancy pay. But the Public and Commercial Services Union will be balloting alone after five other unions agreed to put an improved offer to their members.
The vote, covering 270,000 workers, comes after two months of talks over changes to the civil service compensation scheme designed to save £500 million.
In a joint statement, Unite, Prospect, the GMB, the FDA and the Prison Officers Association said: “We recognise the requirement for reform and believe that the terms that have been reached are the best that might be negotiated.” One union negotiator said some payoffs had been increased, but he was still “not pleased” with the offer. Details were unavailable as Tribune went to press.
PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said it was “no surprise” the other unions had accepted, adding: “Some of them would have accepted even the original proposals and have since then argued for each new proposal to be accepted despite the detrimental effect on the majority of staff.”
In a letter to civil servants, Cabinet Secretary Sir Gus O’Donnell called the strike ballot “misguided” and urged PCS members to “think hard about how to vote”.

