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The latest news affecting miners and the mining industry Dave turns in last duty as Union Delegate for Hatfield DVDof miners' strike to be released at "Loyal to the Last" celebration. Miners forced
down blazing pit 'to secure bonuses for bosses' 'Rebirth of coal' pit
closes down PRESS RELEASE Griffiths
Welcomes Court Judgment on Speeding Up Miners Compensation The BBC put their Faith
in Stainforth Second shot at
DSS Vibration White Finger Application MASS SEND OFF FOR FROGGY Coals
carried to Newcastle Death Of Eric
Fowler Coal comfort
T.V. DOCUMENTARY
ON THORNE COLLIERY. Death Of Paul Foot REDUCED EARNINGS ALLOWANCE FAMILY UNITED IN GRIEF
FOR 'FROGGY' Victory To The Utah Miners 120th Durham Miners Gala NUM Biannual conference
ends at Blackpool. Death of Ian Ferguson BOYCOTT MORRISONS
SUPERMARKET ! Ultra-high temperature
coal plants are more efficient More Confusion
Over Hatfield TRAGIC END
TO THORNE COLLIERY Wonderful Day at Yorkshire
Miners Gala France says
au revoir to coal HATFIELD COLLIERY
MOVES INTO LIQUIDATION NEW SHAFT FOR
THORNE ? NUM
Branch Meeting KELLINGLY CONTINUES STRUGGLE
AGAINST ANTI-SOCIAL SHIFT WORK LAST THREE DAYS
TO CLAIM FOR MINERS CHEST DISEASES. In China, Miners
Pay a High Toll GRAND
WORDS , SAD AND HAPPY MEMORIES Yorkshire Miners 20th
anniversary UDM Scandal DEATH OF HOWARD
WADSWORTH THE KELLINGLY NUM DELEGATE AND CONFERENCE STAR. David Murdock wins his
appeal against the NUM leadership. Le Monde / Living
with sorrow, dying too young / Jean-Paul Dufour German Coal
Seminar All Wind and Hot Water. Union leaders 'profit from
compensation' to workers Jan 12 2004 LYING FOR ENGLAND Letter
to Yorkshire Coal Task Force EMERGENCY
'ADJOURNMENT DEBATE' Reports
From Hatfield Main Jan 2004 Hatfield
Men Vote To Keep Up The Fight MYSTERY
IN THE WOODS SOLVED ? FINANCIAL
APPEAL. MINERS CHEST
DISEASES
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News Items
Dave turns in last duty as Union Delegate for Hatfield. This Monday 20th Dec, at the NUM Yorkshire Area NUM Council meeting, David Douglass attended as Union Delegate for the Hatfield Main Branch of the union for the last time. The branch will close entirely in March of next year, it will bring satisfaction to no-one except perhaps those employers who fought to kill the militant branch and ceased recognition of it back in 1994. The Branch fought on another ten years following this and finally just before Budge went bankrupt the coal owner had conceded our long running recognition fight and agreed to recognise the union and Dave as its senior official. Dave has been NUM delegate for the last 25 years and seen the branch through its stormiest years. We will not retell the story here, we are planning a major social and rally to mark the closure of the branch in March. Details follow. The Council expressed its unanimous congratulations for the efforts he made over the years, despite many stormy years via-a-vis of battles within the union fighting first the right wing and moderate tendencies and then for rank and file democracy.
DVD to be released Source - Dispatch Friday 10th December 2004
Miners forced down blazing pit 'to secure bonuses for bosses' Senior managers of the Chenjia-shan coal mine forced workers to descend
into the blazing mine in the week before Sunday's explosion because they
wanted to get a 400,000 yuan bonus each for exceeding their production
target, relatives of the trapped miners said yesterday. More than 100 trapped miners are still missing in what could be the worst coal mine accident on the mainland in recent years. There is little hope any survivors will be found. Zhang Xiumei, the wife of a missing miner, told the Chongqing Morning Post the mine director was only interested in profits and neglected the safety of workers. "They knew about the fire on November 23 but did not stop production. They forced workers to go underground after putting out part of the fire, but some layers of coal were still burning," she said. "My husband told me about it and said the heads of the mine did not care whether the workers lived or died. "They only wanted their 400,000 yuan per-person bonus for exceeding production targets," she added, pointing the blame at mine director Liu Shuangming and his deputy, Zheng Fumin. According to the Tongchuan mine bureau, the Chenjia-shan coal mine was expected to produce 1.8 million tonnes of coal this year. If it reached 2.2 million tonnes, the director and the vice-director would be rewarded with 400,000 yuan each. The mine achieved the 1.8 million-tonne target by October, and one worker told the newspaper that management bonuses would be slashed if production was suspended as a result of the blaze. Rescuers continued their grim search yesterday. Shaanxi coal industry department director Huo Shichang told the China News Service that the underground ventilation system had been destroyed and the mine was still riddled with fire and poisonous gas. Xinhua reported the State Administration of Work Safety had sent five gas, ventilation and fire-fighting specialists to the mine to aid rescue efforts. "The investigation team led by the State Council officials has already started work and we will seriously deal with anybody found to be at fault," Mr Huo said.
'Rebirth of coal' pit closes down Selby coalfield in North Yorkshire, an underground site the size of the Isle of Wight, supported 3,500 jobs in its heyday and yielded 120 million tons. The last of its five mines, the so-called "superpit" at Riccall, closed with most of its remaining 300 workers seeking jobs away from the coalface. When the industry was nationalised in 1947 there were almost 1,000 pits in Britain employing around a million miners. Yesterday's closure by Doncaster-based UK Coal, which blames economics and geological problems, leaves nine deep mines with a workforce of a few thousand. In 1976, when the coalfield became the first to be developed in 70 years, Tony Benn, then Labour's energy secretary, said it was "restoring King Coal to his throne in this country". Production began in 1983. The National Union of Mineworkers said the site, which still holds four million tons, could have been saved with government backing. Michael O'Brien, the energy minister, claimed that coal remained an important
part of Britain's energy resource. He said: "This is a very sad day
for everyone associated with Selby after 20 years of successful Selby recorded losses of more than £100 million in three years leading up to the closure announcement in 2002, with falling prices a major factor. Norman Haslam, spokesman for UK Coal, said it could no longer afford to support the mine. "Any coal that is easy to mine has been mined and any coal left is difficult to reach. We simply cannot sell it for what we can mine it for," he said. He added that everyone at the mine who wanted to stay in the industry had been given jobs at other UK Coal sites and that the remainder had been given training and support to find new careers. Steve Kemp, general secretary of the NUM, said it was a "disgrace" that the coalfield was being closed. "If there's no change in government policy and no more assistance given, the threat of pit closures is always going to be with us," he said. Some of the last workers to emerge from Riccall spoke of their sadness. Dave Marchant, 49, who hopes to become a coach driver, said: "I'll miss my mates. Some I've known for 27 years. You spend more time with them than with your family."
PRESS RELEASE Launch party & signing: 11th November 2004, 5pm onwards Hammicks Book Shop, 191-193 Fleet St. London With Paddy Joe Hill of the Birmingham 6, Mark Barnsley & Michael Mansfield QC
On this day the Court of Appeal will also hear an appeal against the conviction of Graham Huckerby, who was convicted of being the inside man in a major Securicor robbery in Salford, Manchester in 1995. The case - by bizarre coincidence - was the first Jill Dando featured during her time on the BBC's Crimewatch programme. Huckerby and his co-accused, Shay Power, were both sentenced to 14 years
imprisonment for their involvement in the biggest theft of cash in transit
since the great train robbery of 1963. Graham Huckerby is included in
a significant list of alleged miscarriage of justice victims in the book.
Strong, fresh psychological evidence has been presented to the Court of
Appeal - if Huckerby wins then it will clearly demonstrate how the criminal
justice system can sometimes punish the victims of crime, whilst letting
the This well researched layperson's guide to the British legal system's
appalling number of miscarriages of justice proves to be a startling revelation.
Even more interestingly, it is an exploration of how such 'Perhaps the strongest message to emerge is that there is no peace without justice. Anyone interested in Britain, social justice and human resilience should read this book.' Simon Hattenstone, the Guardian. 'What this timely book demonstrates with telling clarity is that the risk of miscarriage has not diminished and that the human cost involved is incalculable.' Michael Mansfield QC 'The public still don't understand just how easy it is to be put in prison for a crime you didn't commit. It could happen to anyone. Anyone interested in truth, law and justice should read this book.' Paddy Joe Hill, Birmingham 6 'A well written polemic that pulls no punches.' Dr. Michael Naughton, Bristol University For interviews with the author, directions and further information visit: www.writesite.org.uk Or email: [email protected] Launch details: 11th November 2004, 5pm Hammicks Book Shop, 191-193 Fleet St. London Tel: 07903 458703
Griffiths Welcomes Court Judgment on Speeding Up Miners Compensation DEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY News Release (P/2004/397) issued by
the Coal Health Minister Nigel Griffiths has today welcomed the High Court judgment which will result in faster compensation payments to up to 160,000 miners. The ruling, by Sir Michael Turner, will see miners in the largest personal injury scheme in the UK offered fast-track payments where initial medical tests show very low levels of lung disease. Their compensation will be paid quickly, freeing up specialist medical consultants to concentrate on assessing miners with higher levels of disability. Nigel Griffiths said: "I welcome the Judge¹s ruling. I believe this change to the scheme is essential in order to deliver compensation to miners." The fast-track payments will be based on the results of miners spirometry tests. They will be split into four bands: * Normal lung function with no evidence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. * Limited evidence of lung disease but with the possibility of other causes. * Unable to complete the medical test for reasons that are avoidable. * Tests likely to be affected by asthma. Miners more seriously affected and those medically unable to complete the test will receive a full medical assessment. Following the Judge¹s ruling, the department can now begin to calculate the offers for each band. Notes to Editors 1. The fast-track scheme will offer miners who have not undergone
a full 2. More than £1.2 billion has so far been paid out to 156,000
miners and 3. In 1997 and 1998 British Coal was found negligent in relation
to 4. More than 780,000 applications have been received under both
the Department of Trade and Industry 7th Floor 1 Victoria Street London SW1H 0ET Press Enquiries +44 (0)20 7215 5490 (Out of Hours) +44 (0)20 7215 3234/3505 Public Enquiries +44 (0)20 7215 5000 Textphone +44 (0)20 7215 6740 (for those with hearing impairment) Press Office Fax +44 (0)20 7222 4382 www.dti.gov.uk http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3676764
The BBC put their Faith in Stainforth Throughout the week preceding the end of September '04, several community
groups were contacted by Kaye Elliott, Community Liaison Coordinator of
Big Strike Productions. Plans had been made for their group to come to
Stainforth on Saturday 2nd October, where over 200 locals turned up to
have their photographs taken and to submit their applications to be film
extras. Faith will be a single drama about life in a fictional pit village during the strike of '84-'85. It is based on the social tension that was created within mining communities, and focuses on two sisters, one who is married to a miner, and the other to a policeman. For more on this story go to http://www.stainforthonline.co.uk/faith.htm
Second shot at DSS Vibration White Finger Application ? A new Social Security Commissioners ruling means that some
What happened in the past is, you went along to try and prove you had VWF and the Medical Assessor turned you down, thinks you don't have it. Suppose that happened say one or two years ago. You think a little later you will have another go, you gaan alang for the test and lo and behold, this time he thinks you have got it. The rules have always stated that he couldn't declare a date of onset (how long you have been suffering from the condition) earlier than your previous test. So the MA would declare although you were suffering from it, you only had it since 2003, or 2002, no good to claim the REA which has to have a date of onset prior to 1990. This new ruling, quoting higglypiggly hocuspokus Latin legal precedents says you cant make that rule about DSS law. Except of course this ruling itself is only confined to the judgements made after the Commissioner made that new ruling. This means that any decision that you didnt have VWF or that you only
had it from a date after 1990 can now be challenged, i.e. you can put
in again if that first decision was made after July 1999. OK ? So if you
were turned down, or got the wrong date of onset decision after July 1999
have another shot. This time make sure you describe your symptoms correctly
and explain how long you now think you've been suffering from it. If you have any queries about DSS claims or Common Law Claims, if your a miner or not better consult Dave who kens a wee bittie aboot these things.
MASS SEND OFF FOR FROGGY
In scenes reminiscent of Freddy Matthews funeral in 1972 the little mining town of Annesley in Nottingham was a sea of bodies, here today Friday 27 Aug., to show their respect to their mate, their comrade, their fellow worker. The family was in pieces as well might be expected. One of the most heart wrenching addresses came from Keiths daughter, her self lucky to be alive after the killer of her father turned against her and her partner. She spoke of the loss of her Dad and pal. Keith Stanley, Notts. Area NUM Gen. Sec spoke as a mate and gave many an amusing anecdote about this larger than life character, which brought a chuckle even from this most sombre of assemblies as people reflected of his nature and his life. His son gave another heart breaking address and Steve Kemp spoke movingly and sincerely on behalf of the NUM nationally. A procession of NUM banners had thronged the streets to the church, and Maltby NUM was prominent from the Yorkshire area, the national NUM banner together with the banners of the Nottingham NUM. The church was full to overflowing and throngs of people, of all ages came to pay their respects all round the grounds and out on surrounding streets, following the service and speeches on relayed loudspeakers. In the grounds many leading lights of the struggle for which Froggy had died, Arthur Scargill, Ray Chadburn, Henry Richardson, Billy Pye from Lancashire, Ken Capstick former York's area Vice President and now acting editor of the Miner. Chris Skidmore Yorkshire Area NUM President, Jeff Stubbs Yorkshire Area agent, and many many others too numerous to mention, and anyway lost in the crowd. The coffin was born in a traditional miners funeral of the old days, with two black horses with black plumes, drawing a beautiful glass sided horse drawn hearse. It was a bitterly sad day, that we should loose yet another comrade so long after the end of that dispute, but for identically the same reason as those who died during it. We hope that the next Annual Green/Jones memorial rally and lecture will be retitled Green/Jones/Frogson memorial rally and lecture in tribute to another of our comrades who paid the ultimate price for loyalty to the miners union. DD.
Coals carried to Newcastle The old saying, "to carry coals to Newcastle", has taken a
literal twist after a deal to import thousands of tons of coal to the
Port of Tyne from Russia. The Port of Tyne, which used to export 23 million tons a year from the Durham and Northumberland coalfields, has just received its first two consignments from Russia. It is expected to import 70,000 tons by December in an experimental deal with the Alcan aluminium smelting plant in Northumberland. Keith Wilson, the port's managing director, said it had not exported coal since 1998. "The Tyne was the largest exporter of coal. We do not export coal now and it is ironic that we are starting to import it." The development has been condemned by the mineworkers' union. Dave Hopper,
the north-east secretary of the NUM, said: "The Alcan smelter came
to the North East almost 40 years ago to benefit from cheap coal and was
built next to Lynemouth colliery to cut transport costs. Alcan said it had been importing coal for some time but this was the
first time it had been delivered through the Port of Tyne. "The company
has a contract with Ellington but the colliery has not been
Death Of Eric Fowler Hatfield miners will be saddened to learn of the death of our aud marra, Eric Fowler. Eric one a big family of Welsh miners who had emigrated to Hatfield Main
will be sadly missed. Anybody who ever had a shift with Eric will know
him to be a man possessed of the greatest pit comedy skills we have ever
come across. Getting a bla on the way inbye, Eric would start telling
the tale, and have the whole shift helpless laughing, tannoys would scream
to know where everyone was, as the shift was often late on the bank listening
to Eric. His was a sort of relentless humour which just built on image
after image, and all absolutely true and based upon his own life and experiences.
Nobody has ever written his tales down, nobody has ever recorded them,
they will live only in our memories and are impossible to reproduce out
of situ of time and place. Eric was also a militant, a man who would stand
his corner for rights and against injustice , and in defence of his work
mates. . He was classically a pitman, a man who could size up a job and
have it planned and be half way through carrying putting it right before
the gaffers had understood something was wrong. Eric managed to make it
through accidents and near misses and strikes and riots into his mid 80s
no mean feat for a miner of his generation ,used to working in clouds
of dense dust and shot firing fumes. We will miss Eric, a great club man
who rarely missed a night "taking his medicine" and telling
the tale. He had been in bad health with his chest over the last fifteen
years or so and his struggle to breath had been getting increasingly difficult
We do not have details of his funeral yet, but believe it to be on Wednesday-
details will follow. Slang Eric Lad, we'll be up on the next draw.
Coal comfort Professor Ian Fells said last week that the UK could secure its energy supply for decades if it could use its huge coal reserves, still lying unmined. He suggested that Labour should give high priority to developing ways of storing carbon dioxide underground to eliminate environmental damage done by coal. The Newcastle University professor, chairman of the New and Renewable
Energy Centre in Blyth, Northumberland, recommended using a process known
as carbon sequestration. He said the Government's target to make 10 per cent of Britain's energy
renewable by 2010 is wishful thinking. But I think we will be able to persuade the Government that - using
clean technology - we can get at least one mine reopened. That's not from
the heart, it's from the head. It's going to mean that the Government
is going to have to put money into the energy needs of the nation over
the next 30 or so years." If the NUM is able to convince the Department of Trade and Industry
to invest, it would be a stunning turnaround for the pits which were systematically
closed down by the Tory government. "This would allow power stations to produce electricity cleanly without the sulphur and carbon dioxide being excessive, which is the problem with coal. "The emissions can be completely reduced in line with Government objectives if they're burned correctly. The technology to burn coal correctly is readily available. And it's far more cost effective than nuclear power stations. "The NUM is looking in the very near future to get a paper produced
by some of the best clean coal experts in the world to show to Government
that this is the option we should take. At Ellington alone there are more
than 300 million tonnes of unmined coal. The extraction of the coal and
the burning of it is far cheaper than using nuclear and gas.> She said: "It's an area that we are definitely looking at as a viable option, but it's not the only one. Our commitment to renewable energy sources like wind, wave and tidal remains. "We believe that the 2020 target is attainable. One of the reasons that people think we are not going to reach it is that a lot of the wind farms haven't been built yet. But they will be by 2006. She added: "Coal does still contribute a lot to our energy needs." Climate campaigner Bryony Worthington said: "Our position is that we should exploit renewables first and in the meantime see if we can bring down the cost on clean coal. "To burn clean coal you need a whole new generation of power stations. It needs investment, but if we can't constrain our demand for energy than we may have to find alternative ways."
T.V. DOCUMENTARY ON THORNE COLLIERY. THORNE MINERS AND THEIR WIVES INTERVIEW
AN INDEPENDENT COMPANY IS MAKING A PROGRAMME ABOUT LESLIE GARRET THE DONCASTER OPERA STAR WHO ORIGINATES IN THORNE. THEY WANT AS BACKGROUND, TO FILM OLD COLLIERS AND THEIR WIVES WHO WORKED AT THE PIT OR REMEMBER THE TOWN IN ITS HEYDAY WHEN THE PIT WAS WORKING. WE WILL BE FILMING AND TALKING TO PEOPLE THIS WEDNESDAY 28 JULY FROM 10 AM AT MOORENDS SOCIAL CLUB, ON MARSHLAND ROAD. EVERYONE IS WELCOME. THIS MAY BE THE LAST CHANCE TO TELL THE STORY OF
THORNE BEFORE IT IS BURIED AND FORGOTTEN.
Death Of Paul Foot Revolutionary Socialist, ace journalist and campaigner.
We regret to hear of the death of comrade Paul Foot, a star of the far left and one of the country's top campaigning journalists. Although we never seen eye to eye politically, Paul was a life long supporter of the Socialist Workers Party- we agreed on much more than we differed over, although the left being left you wouldn't have perhaps guessed that listening to any conversation . Our paths passed many times over the course of our lives, beginning I think in 1972 down at Oxford and during the Miners strike of that year. Paul was a great supporter of the miners in all the great battles of the period from 72 to 92. He had been born in Nov. 8th 1937 and he died July 18th 2004. His funeral is July 27 at Golders Green London. He will be greatly missed by all workers and oppressed folk everywhere who could always rely on his comradeship and support.
REDUCED EARNINGS ALLOWANCE A MEANS ROUND THE 65 YEARS CUT OFF RULE
Many miners will be in receipt of REA usually as an ancillary to their Disablement Benefit award for Vibration White Finger or an industrial accident. If you apply for these awards before the age of 65, when you get to 65 the REA finishes and becomes retirement allowance' though it is then less than a quarter of the payment. If you don't apply for the benefits until age 65 or older, you get to keep both benefits for the rest of your life. The Miners Advice Centre has just discovered a novel way for men coming up to 65 (or women) to keep the benefit. It means finding a job for ten hours per week. You then qualify to stay on full benefits. Mind getting a job at 65 for ten hours a week could be difficult, either Tesco collecting trolleys, or being an MP are the only two which come to mind. The Hot Meal Component of DLA, which pays you £13 per week because your condition prevents you making yourself a hot meal, ends when you are 65 though. Presumably after 65 the state doesn't want you have a hot meal anyway since you are beyond normal working age.
FAMILY UNITED IN GRIEF FOR 'FROGGY' BY ALISTAIR HARRIS AND DAVID MARLEY 12:00 - 22 July 2004
But relations are still too upset to talk about the 62-year-old former miner affectionately known as "Froggy". Police believe Mr Frogson, of Bentinck Street, bled to death after being attacked outside his home. Officers have said a crossbow found in a neighbour's garden may have been used in the attack on Mr Frogson as he walked home from a domino night at his local pub, the Forest Tavern, at around 10.30pm on Monday. Inspector Barry Harper, local area commander for Ashfield, said officers were still trying to piece together the events leading to Mr Frogson's death. He told the Post: "We're not looking for a madman on the loose. "People should also be reassured that we have found the crossbow. We assume it was used by the offender. "We are trying to piece together the last known whereabouts of Mr Frogson and are conducting a thorough search of his house." Insp Harper said the public's response had been "very positive" and also praised the level of community spirit. More than a dozen bunches of flowers were laid near Mr Frogson's home in Bentinck Street yesterday afternoon. Someone also left a black cap - commemorating the 1984 miners' strike during which Mr Frogson lost his job - hanging on the road sign. Mr Frogson was described by friends as a "loveable rogue" who was often seen drinking in pubs around Annesley Woodhouse. After leaving the Forest Tavern on Monday night, he became embroiled in a blazing row outside his home. At 11pm, he was found dead with several cuts to his face and body. A neighbour told police they heard arguing at around 11pm, and saw a car tearing away from the scene. A post-mortem examination revealed more than one sharp instrument had been used in the assault. "We are very much in the early days of trying to piece together his character, his whereabouts, and everything else," Insp Harper added. "The community have been very helpful and I'm very grateful to them for that."
Victory To The Utah Miners We are pleased to announce that the ongoing strike by the Utah miners
in the USA is now over and the miners have won. The strike has been actively
followed and supported by the NUM Yorkshire Area with two sets of large
donations being sent over. The strike was conducted by the United Mineworkers
Of America and lasted a bitter nine months. The men had all been illegally
dismissed and now have been ordered by the National Labour Relations Board
to reinstate all the men to their jobs.
Sun 27 June NUM Biannual conference ends at Blackpool. Despite the minute size of the NUM these days (3000 members nationwide) VICTORY AT KELLINGLY In the course of the conference it was recorded that the Kellingly NUM Branch had won hands down its struggle against UK Coal, the employers, who tried to force so called 'flexible working' on the workforce. The men had been threatened with the sack if they didnt sign up to the new hours of work (compulsory 12 hour shifts). The men responded magnificently with two massive 'yes' votes in individual secret ballots, and rolling strike days which stopped the colliery dead. Sadly the down side to the victory is that the men transferring from Stillingfleet Colliery in Selby, after the rape and plunder and murder of their own pit by the company, have been force to sign up to the new hours. Worse than the 12 hour shifts if that's possible, is the fact that they are on regular night shift. The men were given the option, sign on these new shifts, or sign on the scrap heap. Knowing the Kellingly branch and the workforce at large, one can expect
that the Stillingfleet men will soon find their feet and soon be lobbying
for integration onto the normal shift cycle. If they will not concede
this , then the men should simply act the goat, go to work , but don't
work. After all who can seriously do the heavy and dangerous underground
work in a mine, after 12 hours of continuous work, and then on subsequent
shifts carry the accumulated tiredness and loss of concentration ? Whose
fault will it be if for 12 hour shifts they get four hours work ? Amazing
isn't it, that the 1909 Hours of labour Act limited the maximum scheduled
shift length in a mine to 8 hours. Mr Major abolished it. From Hatfield's point of view the conference had high spots , like being
able to confront Timms the Government Energy Minister, before the whole
conference, and put it to him that the fate of Hatfield Colliery and Hatfield/Thorne
reserves should not lay in the fate of one man's hands, Mr Budge. That
the Government if it is to be taken seriously at all, must take some steps
to ensure the development of coal reserves. He would give no commitment
to wider points but said he was confident the Hatfield project , including
the reopening of the colliery, would go ahead. However, as far as a coal
industry in Britain was concerned he said this would depend solely of
commercial considerations. In other words if the coal owners cant make
enough money out of it, the last of Britons mines will close, and 100
years and more of coal reserves, thousands of millions of tonnes nationwide
will be written off. Elsewhere, Timms agreed with the National Chairman,
that the appeals of the victimised men
The Yorkshire Area resolution, calling for a review of our membership of the IEMO, (Internation Energy and Miners Organisation) an organisation purportedly comprised of millions of miners world wide and set up by A Scargill, had been tabled from Rossington. The resolution simply enough referred to the run down of the British collieries, our current strength and the costs of the financial organisation which seemed not to do anything very much. Dave Douglass from Hatfield went further and suggested the bulk of the worlds miners were not in the organisation,miners like the South African's, the Australians, the Germans, the American's etc even the ones who were members, including ourselves, had little or no say over it whatsoever. In the last two years we had paid something like £250,000 to the organisation, which included an Executive trip to India, which cost in excess of £60,000. This was an organisation set up by and for leaders, it wasn't about us. We needed an international miners organisation run by the rank and file, this wasn't it. The criticisms drew furious responses from the platform, including total misrepresentation of the reasons for our opposition. It was suggested our objectives were totally mercenary, a charge which given the expenditure to stay in it was turning truth on its head. It wasn't that we didnt want to support our comrades abroad, far from it, but that this organisation didnt do that, indeed some would say was never intended to be about ordinary miners. It has likewise been described as a Saga holiday club for NUM officials, jaunting off around the world to chew the cud in far off exotic locations. When it came to the conference for discussion NOBODY seconded the Yorkshire resolution. Not a single other area, thought the issue serious enough to even warrant debate or investigation. So it fell flat , leaving Dave's impassioned speech as flat as a damp pancake. One can only conclude that delegations from all those other areas are hopeful of joining the Travel Club and seeing far off distant lands paid for by the Union. One wonders what their members think of their actions ? The conference was otherwise good nature'd and very detailed. The financial report reported a health surplus, and a hefty nest egg in the bank. The NUM official web site threatens to print the highlights of the conference and if they do, we will add them to this section, so readers can see for themselves the business of conference. Another of Arthur's gems was making the conference biannual rather than
annual
Comrade Ian Ferguson former Chairman of the Doncaster NUM Panel and NUM Branch Secretary at Yorkshire Main Colliery (Edlington ) has died 30 May. Ian was a dear friend and comrade of Hatfield Main Branch and was known to all of our members. We have no details of his death or the funeral but extend our deepest sympathies to his family and friends. Ian was a most likeable of men, a Scot and a leftist who took great joy in Class War especially its 84 strike editions. He also dearly loved Hatfields Hot Gossip which he subscribed to. It inspired him to start up the LINK a more glossy version of the piss taking , politicising militant Hatfield version. It will be best remembered for its cartoons, which were classic pit humour in pen drawings. Yorkshire Main was the first Doncaster victim of the new regime following the end of the strike in March 85. The men refused to accept new contracts and relations went into steep decline resulting in the spiteful closure of the Colliery, for no other reason than punishment. Volumes of coal still lie below Edlington, which is now a ghost town hit by bad areas of deprivation, unemployment and anti social crime .The Doncaster Option Scheme was imposed on most of the Doncaster coalfield on the strength of the premature closure of Yorkshire Main and the threat to do likewise at any other pit in Doncaster which wouldn't accept the scheme. Ian went on to join the TGWU after the closure of the pit where we believe he Rapidly became an official. We will miss him and his contribution to working class struggle.
BOYCOTT MORRISONS SUPERMARKET ! Morrisons have just announced their intention of de-recognising the TGWU
the union at all its firms and distribution centres. This it has done
because the union refused to accept unilateral imposition of new terms
upon the workforce, including a no strike rule . This is modern management
all right rather reminiscent of UK Coal at Kellingly Colliery. Trade Unionists
and people who believe simply in common justice would be rather amiss
to find any reasons to shop at Morrisons under these circumstances.
Ultra-high temperature coal plants are more efficient Palo Alto, Calif., May 28, 2004 -- Advanced materials now being evaluated by a consortium team under the technical direction of the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and others will allow higher temperature operation of power plants, making coal-based electricity generation more efficient and much cleaner. Critical boiler components in existing older plants can be retrofitted with these advanced materials to allow for the continued use of the types of coal that are locally available. "Efficiency gains by as much as nine percentage points and CO2 reductions approaching 22 per cent are expected through the advanced materials technology being developed in this collaborative program," said EPRI's Vis Viswanathan, overall technical manager for the project. "This will enable coal-based electricity generation to continue at competitive rates, while substantially reducing emissions of carbon dioxide and fuel-related pollutants." Now in its third year, the five-year program is funded by DOE through
the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), co-funded by the Ohio
Coal Development Office (OCDO), and managed by Bob Purgert of Energy Industries
of Ohio. Consortium members are Alstom Power, Riley Power, Babcock and
Wilcox, and Foster Wheeler, as well as DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Even if construction of an ultrasupercritical plant costs 12 to 15 per cent more than a comparable-scale facility utilizing conventional boiler and steam cycle designs, the additional expense is more than offset by fuel savings and reduction in balance-of-plant costs. Investigators have concluded that the capital cost of the boiler and steam turbine in an advanced supercritical plant can be 40 to 50 per cent higher than conventional components, and the ultrasupercritical plant will still be cost-competitive. > "Over the last decade, progress in developing high strength materials
for high temperature applications has been phenomenal," says Viswanathan.
"We lost the lead to Japan and Europe, but this exciting project
gives us the opportunity to become leaders in this key technology once
again." A great deal of information relating to this will be brought
forward during the upcoming EPRI/DOE/OCDO/ASM conference, "Advances
in Materials Technology for Fossil Power Plants," to be held at Hilton
Head Island, SC in October 2004. For more information, visit www.epri.com
or http://Inter.Viewcentral.com/reg/EPRI/2036.
TRAGIC END TO THORNE COLLIERY AFTER EVERYTHING WHICH HAS BEEN SAID AND WRITTEN ABOUT THORNE COLLIERY AND ITS RESERVES AND THE LINK TO HATFIELDS PROSPECTS, IN THE MIDDLE OF DELICATE EFFORTS TO GET THE CASH TOGETHER TO RESTART MINING AT HATFIELD, THEY TAKE THE DECISION TO WRECK THORNE. UK COAL WHICH IS TRYING TO GET OUT OF MINING SO QUICKLY IT IS SHUTTING ITS OWN PITS REGARDLESS OF RESERVES AND PROFITABILITY, GAVE THE THORNE SITE BACK TO THE COAL AUTHORITY. THE COAL AUTHORITY IN A CLEAR DEMONSTRATION THAT THEY INTEND TO END ALL MINING IN BRITAIN WITHIN THE DECADE HAVE NOW GONE AHEAD WITH PLANS TO FILL THE SHAFTS AND DESTROY THE HEADGEAR. THIS IS THE GATE WAY TO 100 SQUARE MILES OF PROVEN RICH COAL RESERVES, IN THE WEEK THAT ENERGY HITS THE PANIC BUTTON AGAIN, WITH THE END OF OIL RESERVES IN SIGHT. DO THEY KNOW YOU CAN EASILY MANUFACTURE MOTOR OIL, AND PETROL FROM COAL ? A SENIOR COLLEAGUE OF TIMMS THE ENERGY MINISTER DESCRIBED HIM YESTERDAY AS "ABOUT AS MUCH GOOD AS A CHOCOLATE FIREGUARD". A DESCRIPTION WHICH MORE THAN SUITES HIM. WE OURSELVES HAVE FOUND HIM TO LIE VERY CONVINCINGLY AS HE DID WHEN HE ASSURED THE HATFIELD MINERS THE PUMPS AND FANS WOULD NOT BE TURNED OFF, ONLY TO DO JUST THAT LESS THAN A WEEK LATER. THE FUTURE OF HATFIELD THEY SAY IS NOT DIRECTLY TIED TO THE EXISTENCE OF THESE THORNE SHAFTS. THAT IS TRUE THEORETICALLY, ACTUALLY IN PRACTICAL TERMS IT MAKES THINGS A MILLION TIMES MORE DIFFICULT AND DEMONSTRATES CLEARLY THAT BRITISH COAL MINING IN THE VIEW OF THIS GOVERNMENT IS FINISHED IN ITS ENTIRETY. BLAIR "THE SON OF THATCHER" ? TOO TRUE.
Wonderful Day at Yorkshire Miners Gala The sun blazed down, Hatfield Band was in fine fettle, and the Hatfield Main banner flew magnificently through the streets of Barnsley. Two busses were provided for the Hatfield contingent, and in the event, although nobody turned out from Moorends or Thorne there was a sizeable contingent to march with the Hatfield Branch. A number of other bands were also marching with a good turn out of banners and supporters. Although Barnsley itself seemed strangely silent and subdued, the fields of Locke Park abounded with kids out with their families and sampling all the rides and amusements. The speakers tent was packed and overflowed outside in all directions. Star of the speakers was Mark Thomas a comedian with a cutting political wit who left nobody in any doubt as to what he thinks of New Labour and despite earlier pleas from the platform to the contrary Mark told us he would not be voting for that lot. This drew massive support from the crowd and at the end of his speech he received a standing ovation. Bickerstaff was as usual comical and topical and Tony Benn is everyone's favourite uncle. Ian Lavery the National Chair of the NUM laid into the tactics and attitude of UK coal in their new impositions and harsh management style, he roundly condemned their indifference and mismanagement in thunderous tones. Although the newly elected Vice Chair of the Yorkshire Area Mr Kitchen, in his brand new suite, shirt and tie for the occasion was introduced to the crowd, there was no mention of the new Area Chairman, who apart from not chairing the meeting, wasn't even on the platform although he stood in the wings. Many thought this odd. These occasions are wonderful for meeting old friends and comrades and this was no exception. Davie Guy the president of the Durham Area, who sent a banner. Peter Heathfield, still bright as a button but looking very frail. The comrades from Class War who came up with a banner from London. Loads of different people from the movement and the struggle. That evening, at the Fox against a backdrop of the Hatfield Main banner a most excellent programme of miners music, song and a play by an old lad who didnt start writing until he was 58, Roy Blackman was provided. The play was performed by Rotherham Red Choir and was watched with rapped attention by the crowd who crammed into the Fox Concert room. Toein the Dark, our frequent guests over the last 20 years and more went down a storm and a number of floor singers got up and give it some welly, including Dave Humphries the former COSA president at the pit. It was a sensational day all in all . Many thanks go to the performers who sang and entertained us for nowt, and Tony Clegg the landlord who not only marched with the banner, listened to the speeches but provided us with the room for free, and to his wife who provided a fine big buffet likewise free of charge.
France says au revoir to coal FRANCE closed its last coal mine yesterday, marking the end of a trade that lasted for nearly three centuries and underpinned the Industrial Revolution. One last, symbolic lump of coal was extracted from La Houve mine during a ceremony last night that launched three days of events commemorating an industry that once employed 300,000 people.
HATFIELD COLLIERY MOVES INTO LIQUIDATION Thus it would seem any hope of the pit being bought and brought back into production is gone. A damn sorry state of affairs. Half of all Britain's known coal reserves already accessed from Hatfield / Thorne will now undoubtedly be written of and abandoned. If you arnt going to mine this coal , lets face it, this spells the end to any medium term never mind long term future for the coal industry overall. UK coal are waiting with baited breath to destroy the head gear and fill the shafts at Thorne, and we presume this will move ahead rapidly now. The fate of Hatfield's headgear rests with any bidders who buy the land the pit stands in. Overall where will this lead Britain's energy supply ? It will leave only two sources, an expansion of nuclear energy, or increasing reliance on gas pumped overland from the former USSR and the middle-east. An island built on coal, with reserves of at least 250 years reliant on far off distant lands for its energy. Well done Tony, youve made the place as secure in energy terms as you just did in security terms. People can write to Tony Blair and the DTI and The Coal Authority and demand the development of Hatfield Colliery coal reserves gets government investment while a buyer is sought, rather than IF a buyer comes forward first, but frankly we don't think they actually want any British coal industry at all, they want to see the miners dead and buried as a social and political force.
NEW SHAFT FOR THORNE ? Don't get excited its not the pit, its for Yorkshire Water!!
NUM Branch Meeting for Hatfield For an update on the above. All the latest battles within and without
the Meeting THE FOX, STAINFORTH. 11 am SAT 3RD APRIL.
UK Coal the owners of Kellingly have confronted the workforce with a
demand that
LAST THREE DAYS TO CLAIM FOR MINERS CHEST DISEASES. THE SHUTTERS COME DOWN ON 31 MARCH WITHOUT EXCEPTION DAVE IS AVAILABLE IN THE OFFICE MON., TUES. AND WED TO
HANDLE LAST MINUTE CLAIMS 01302 841 365 IT MIGHT BE WORTH A TRIP TO DONCASTER TO FILL THE FORM IN THEN AND THERE.
In China, Miners Pay a High Toll JIXI - They all knew the work was dangerous. In the mud-brick village encircling the Baixing coal mine, so many lives had ended already with an explosion deep in a hole that it seemed part of the regular flow of time. When officials inspected the mine in early February, they condemned it as a graveyard in waiting and ordered it closed. But the work went on, in violation of the rules and in accord with the economic realities of this grim corner of northeastern China, where a job in a coal mine is about the only job there is. Weeks later, after the miners went off as usual with shovels slung over shoulders and headlamps flickering off the snow, methane gas ignited in the shaft and killed another 37. "He had to go to the mine," said Li Guixiang, whose husband, Xi Chuancai, was among the dead. Five months earlier, Xi's older brother died in an explosion at a nearby mine. Another brother lost both legs when a shaft caved in four years ago. Li's neighbor, Liang Shouhua, sat beside her, mourning the loss of her own husband, the third of three brothers to die in a mining explosion. "If they didn't do this job, they wouldn't have any money for living," Li said. "You have to eat." Miners occupy the treacherous underside of China's economic ascent. As factories on the bustling coast churn out goods for the world, and as urbanites move into high-rise apartments and buy new cars, miners are bearing the often deadly burden of extracting the resources needed to keep the lights on and the machinery turning. By the government's own reckoning, more than 6,700 miners died in accidents last year, about 18 per day -- and experts say the real figure is probably twice that. The fatality rates in China's mines are as much as 350 times those in the United States and Britain, according to government reports. Despite efforts to improve safety in recent years, the balance is tipping toward increased production and greater risk, say miners, government officials and industry executives. China is struggling to find enough energy. Coal makes up 70 percent of the fuel for electric generators. China's coal production exceeded 1.7 billion tons last year, a leap of more than one-fifth from the previous year, yet the increase still not kept pace with demand: Coal prices have nearly doubled over the past year. "Local governments, because of their own interest and profit motives, secretly tolerate these dangerous coal mines," said Zhai Guangming, a top official at China National Petroleum Corp., who recently briefed Premier Wen Jiabao on the country's energy situation. "Now, it's more severe because of the shortages. There is even more incentive to tolerate danger because the price has gone up." In recent years, the central government has pushed local authorities to improve mine safety and more than 15,000 mines have been closed, according to the State Administration of Coal Mine Safety. Beijing has imposed strict targets for improvement on provincial authorities, allocating acceptable numbers of fatalities per ton of coal mined and punishing local officials when quotas are exceeded, according to an industry source with knowledge of this policy. "The pressure from the central government to the provincial government is really tough now," a former official in the Ministry of Coal Industry said. "If there's an explosion in your territory, you can be kicked out now." Even in the best of circumstances, the safety campaign would be difficult. Coal mining employs 6 million in a nation with 150 million unemployed. The need for jobs and local tax revenue, combined with the willingness of many officials to take bribes, has kept thousands of mines open after inspections found them to be dangerous -- lacking in ventilation gear needed to suck out dangerous gases and the equipment that detects them. Pressure to limit reported accidents has led to cover-ups, undermining the credibility of official statistics. "Mines are closed, but then they spring up again," said Mark Dougan, China representative for Barlow Jonker Pty. Ltd., an Australian based energy consultancy. "It's greed. Dig coal, make money." In the Jixi area, 42 officials have been punished over the last three years following accidents at mines under their supervision, according to documents reviewed by The Washington Post. Last May, the vice chief of the city's Hengshan district was sacked after an investigation found that he had been protecting 48 unlicensed and unsafe coal mines while collecting about $2,500 in bribes. Coal mining is inherently dangerous. Methane gas is often present and can build to explosive concentrations. Unlike gold and other minerals, coal is a soft material -- carve a tunnel through it and it will eventually cave in. In many places, the situation has worsened with China's ongoing transition from Communism to a market-based economic system. Large state-owned mines are going bankrupt, selling off their holdings to private hands -- often, local officials or people with connections to them. Thousands of new unlicensed private operations have come to life, and now supply about a third of China's coal. The state mines have traditionally lost money while fulfilling a social compact, handing out wages, housing subsidies and medical insurance. Miners and industry executives say the state operations have historically been more likely to follow codes. The private operations often skimp on safety equipment to cut costs. According to the United States Mine Rescue Association, which maintains a database of accidents worldwide, the fatality rate in small, private mines or those owned by township and village governments in China was more than 10 times higher than that of major state-owned operations in 2002. Jixi, an industrial enclave in Heilongjiang province, is a living testament to the changes that have remade China's coal industry. This part of China is where Chairman Mao Tse-tung concentrated steelworks, refineries and factories in a bid to make the country a modern power. Today, it is a Rust Belt. On the broken sidewalks of Jixi city, where garbage piles up next to discarded machinery atop soot-stained snowbanks, people in tattered clothes stand in minus 20-degree cold, hoping for work. A decade ago, state-owned companies operated more than a dozen large-scale mines here. Nine of those state operations remain, all now owned by the city, but more than 300 private mines have sprung to life. They have been the scenes of the worst accidents. In January, 16 miners died in an explosion here. Two years ago, more than 100 miners were killed. Baixing was one of the mines spun off by the city into private hands. Most of the miners there lost jobs when state-owned operations failed, and many remain bitter. They claim the managers applied to the central government for millions of dollars worth of compensation that was supposed to go to laid-off miners, but pocketed most of the funds themselves. One such miner, who gave his name as Zhang, said he was laid off from the No. 7 mine in the city's Lishu district in 1999. The central government sent in about $10,000 per miner as compensation, but he only received about $1,000. Baixing offered another paycheck to about 170 miners, with wages based on how much they produced. Most earned about $125 per month -- decent money by local standards. But the wages came with special risks: Baixing had a primitive ventilation system. "Everybody knew the mine had too much gas," said Liang, one of the widows. "They had people detecting gas with handheld machines, but they always had too much, and they always kept working." Even more than most mines, Baixing had special incentives to keep operating. It produces a "hard coking coal," which is key to steel production and has nearly doubled in price in a year. On Feb. 6, a team of inspectors from the city's Coal Production Supervising Department visited Baixing, according to state media reports. They found nine separate violations of the safety code, ordered immediate closure and fined the owner of the mine, Wang Shijun, about $2,500. Reports carried by the official New China News Agency have since claimed that the mine did indeed shut down for three days following the order, though Wang later reopened it. "The city inspected it, and blocked the entrance," said Sun Qinglong, a supervisor at the Jixi Coal Safety Supervising Group. "But still he went in in the middle of the night and ignored the order." Miners at Baixing and people who live near it said the mine never closed. "My husband started work on Feb. 1 and until the accident," more than three weeks later, "he only had one day off," Liang said. "There wasn't one day the mine was locked," said a barber who gave his name as Du, whose shop sits across the street from the mine entrance. His 34-year-old son-in-law, Dong Zhengxing, died in the accident, leaving behind a wife and 11-year-old daughter. The barber recalled a day about a week before the accident when he noticed several miners hiding behind his shop. They told him the vice mayor was on his way for an inspection. The mine owner planned to pretend the mine was closed. The workers had been sent away as part of the ruse, returning as soon as the inspection ended. On Feb. 23, in the pre-dawn hours, 35 men and two women worked the night shift more than 1,000 feet down in the hole. No one knows what happened, because no one who was there survived. The State Administration of Coal Mine Safety claims a miner was trying to fix his headlamp when he caused a spark that triggered the explosion. The aftermath brought the sort of crackdown that is common in China when the government seeks to demonstrate its resolve. Wang was promptly arrested and lodged at the Jixi police station. Hundreds of small mines were swiftly shut down. The families of the dead were handed compensation of about $5,000 each, plus about $750 for a funeral if they agreed to a quick cremation. Pictures torn from magazines hung above the bare concrete platform that serves as Li's bed like portals to another world -- images of living rooms with French doors, velvet covered couches, cantilevered chairs. Her wedding picture hung on the wall. Li wore a white gown and her husband a tuxedo, the clothes rented from the photo studio in the city. Liang sat with a ball of red wool at her feet, knitting a pair of trousers. When she began, they were for her husband. Now, she would give them to her 16-year-old son. Up the muddy lane, the Baixing mine finally sat lifeless, rusted rail cars tipped on their sides. A plywood barrier covered the entrance to the tunnel, beneath a sign that said "Produce Safely." "It's closed now," Liang said, her tears welling up. "But two hundred percent, it will open again."
GRAND WORDS , SAD AND HAPPY MEMORIES AT THE DAVY JONES,
JOE GREEN MEMORIAL LECTURE. SATURDAY David Douglass laid a wreath on behalf of the Hatfield miners at the monument to the miners who have died over the years supporting the miners unions. This would include Freddie Matthews of course, the young Hatfield picket killed in 72, picketing at Keedby, as well as all those others in strikes in the century before that one, shot down, or clubbed to death by the states armed forces defending coal bosses. Women Against Pit Closures had their wreath laid by Anne Scargill, and Davy Jones's father also laid a wreath. The national chairman and the national secretary also laid wreaths on behalf of the NUM Nationally and at Area level. A number of other flowers and wreaths were also laid by organisations and individuals. The guest lecturer was Dennis Skinner in fine fettle, though I couldn't help thinking he had read this weeks Weekly Worker and borrowed certain points ! Some of which were almost word for word. Not that he needs to read the Weekly Worker for content, the bulk of his speech was clearly Dennis's own unique reading of things. Brenda Proctor President of Women Against Pit Closures and Ian Lavery Chairman of the NUM made excellent contributions. The rally was chaired by Steve Kemp the National Secretary and the miners hall, was packed to capacity. The following social heard Banner Theatre and then later Mark Jones, Davie,s Dad make a heart wrenching speech about the strike and the irreplaceable contribution made by his lad.
Important!! Tickets for the Yorkshire Miners 20 th anniversary Gala bus, from Moorends, Thorne Stainforth and Hatfield, (1st May ) are going fast, if anyone wants a free ticket please contact Dave 01302 841 365
The following appeared in a national newspaper, we therefore regret
the use of the word 'union' when describing the UDM. The paper is also
wrong in saying that other mining unions request "donations"
from compensation, at least in the case of the Yorkshire Area this suggests
such payments are voluntary when of course they are not, a fixed percentage
is charged 3% up to a maximum of £750 plus back subs which can amount
to a further 10%. Many branches and branch representatives have agrued
over the years against this charge, but at present it remains a rule in
operation with no sign of being changed. The leaders of the strike-breaking Union of Democratic Mineworkers, which represents just 1,431 members, were criticised last night after it emerged that they receive pay and benefits of more than £150,000 each. Neil Greatrex and Michael Stevens, the Nottinghamshire-based union's
two most senior figures, were branded "fat cats" over their
huge remuneration deals in an organisation which has dwindled almost out
A doubling of the pair's basic salaries in four years catapulted them to the top of the UK union pay league with only Gordon Taylor, leader of the Professional Footballers' Association, on a bigger package. The basic £100,250 earnings of Mr Greatrex, UDM president and general secretary, and £91,313 of Mr Stevens, vice-president, are well above the £73,834 paid to Dave Prentis for running Unison, Britain's biggest union with 1.3 million members. The pair also receive payments into a pension fund equivalent to a third of their salaries plus money towards mortgages, fuel, phones, council tax and water bills for their homes, as well as cars. In 2002, the latest available figures, Mr Greatrex, who lives in Kirkby
in Ashfield, Notts, received £17,869 in benefits and Mr Stevens,
who lives in nearby Edwinstowe, £19,702. National insurance The UDM was formed by Nottinghamshire colliers who worked during the year-long 1984-85 pit strike and opposed NUM president Arthur Scargill. The strike erupted 20 years ago this week. The big jump in earnings of the two UDM chiefs dates from 1998 when the
UDM created Vendside, a no win, no fee health claims subsidiary. Vendside
was recently criticised by the Department of Trade and Under a deal with the government, the DTI pays the UDM up to £1,550 plus VAT to cover the cost of every application made under a £2bn compensation scheme for two common miners' ailments, chest diseases and vibration white finger. Vendside, according to documents seen by the Guardian, is also charging non-members as much as £587 from compensation packages. Mr Greatrex and Mr Stevens are directors of Vendside, wholly owned by the UDM, and the company paid £500,000 to the union over a three-year period in office rent and administration. The certification officer, Whitehall's union watchdog, has launched a
preliminary investigation into the UDM's operation of Vendside following
a formal complaint from the industry spokesman of Plaid Graham Allen, the Nottingham North MP and a former Labour minister who has complained in parliament about Vendside's charges, said: "The UDM's defence is legally watertight but the ethics are questionable. This needs to be thoroughly investigated." Vendside is based in the UDM's Mansfield headquarters but its website does not mention the union by name. Instead it boasts of having recovered more than £215m for more than 33,000 claimants since 1998. A parliamentary answer obtained by Mr Price showed the average payment won by Vendside under the chest disease scheme was £5,213, more than £1,500 less than the average £6,810 obtained by solicitors in England. The UDM leaders declined to speak to the Guardian, but the union recently issued a statement accusing critics of targeting it ahead of this week's 20th anniversary of the start of the momentous strike. The union argued it had settled the highest compensation claim, £394,000 for chronic bronchitis-emphysema, and charges imposed on non-members were a backdated membership fee. "These accusations appear to be generated from old-style mining
unions and are politically driven by certain people who still harbour
hatred against the UDM due to how the union was formed in 1985,"
the Other mining unions refer claimants directly to solicitors, though parts of the National Union of Mineworkers seek a "donation" from successful chest and finger scheme claimants to fund work in former coalfields. The minister responsible for coal health claims, Nigel Griffiths, has
criticised claims firms and solicitors charging pitmen on top of DTI fees.
"We believe that 100% of the compensation we pay must go to the
DEATH OF HOWARD WADSWORTH THE KELLINGLY NUM DELEGATE AND CONFERENCE STAR. We regret to report the death of our old sparing partner Howard Wadsworth. A man despite our disagreements , one couldn't help but like. His wit was cutting, as was his intellect. He was a star of conference with often more in common with a top line comedian than a coal mining trade unionist. Conference would frequently be left in stitches at his dry sarcasm, and po faced delivery of devastatingly funny commentary. Arthur and the NEC were the frequent butt of his humour, which wasn't always appreciated by them, but went down a storm on both militant and moderate wings of the union.I myself was often the centre of his satire and few conference went by without my coming in for some verbal swipe. Howard was a moderate himself and a hard critic of the strike and its progress. His constant call for a ballot, and condemnation of militant picketing often took him into harsh conflict with me and others on the left, although Howard stayed out to the last day and never wavered in his determination to hold the line, despite his misgivings. Despite that, and especially after the end of the strike, Howards true magic shone through. At times especially over health and safety matters he could be as militant and determined as the next. But it was his stance against all things iconoclastic and holy within the union that was his forte. All structures and leaders were worthy of having the P taken out of them, something he did with pernash. Howard who also ran the pit shop, doubled as a salesman, always on call to flog you a pile of towels or something newly on offer from the shop. At such times he lapsed into Jewish banter and humour, although whether he really was Jewish I never really found out. Certainly his wit and intelligence would suggest he had picked up more than a little of their blood somewhere along the line. I commend the conference reports, throughout the period of Howards
term of office to those who knew him.Read them and see something of Howard
you might not have been aware of. I have little doubt he is making them
rock with laughter up in heaven right now, and since my ears have been
burning lately I fear I could be the butt of his jokes once again. I will
miss him terribly. My deepest condolences to his family and his work mates
and all those in his community he served so faithfully. Ye tell a canny
tale Howard lad God speed yi.
Murdock wins his appeal against the NUM leadership. David Murdock the colourful Scottish left wing former COSA official, who was sacked in a bitter internal row by the NUM disciplinary committee, has won an unfair dismissal appeal. He will now receive three months back money, although it seems he will not be reinstated into his job. News that he had to pay £7652 to the NUM because he delayed the tribunal by sacking his legal team mid flight, is only partly true, since we believe his former legal team where found to be negligent and it is they who will have to pick up the tab, not Dave. During the trial Dave had claimed Arthur Scargill had operated a vendetta against him. Dave had previously won a court case against Mr Scargill for unpaid wages, he was paid £61,000 in back money from the NUM. The case was tied up with the confusion of the status of the Yorkshire Compensation Recovery Unit, which eventually ended up in competition with aspects of the NUMs own work. A conflict of interest was suggested since Dave an official of the Union had the YCRU a private firm operating out of the COSA back premises. It is unlikely the judgement will end the bitter internal row, as this
is part of a much bigger struggle about political differences in the Union.
Situation In The Former Mining Communities Of France, Sound Familure ? Le Monde / Living with sorrow, dying too young / Jean-Paul Dufour Living
with sorrow, dying too young. Pride and stoicism have left the former
mining communities in the Lens region of France stuck in a dangerous time
warp Jean-Paul Dufour "Legionnaire's disease? We talk about it, but not
all that much. It mainly affects old people, you know." Claude and Colette,
who for the past 40 years have run a bistro opposite 11-19, a coal pit
(now closed down) in Loos-en-Gohelle, near Lens in northern France, quickly
change the subject: they are more interested in the many miners in their
mid-40s who died of silicosis during the 1960s.Yet since the epidemic
of legionnaire's disease took hold in the area last November, no fewer
than 85 cases have been reported, resulting in 13 deaths [including two
on February 7 and 8]. In Harnes, the town near the Exxon Mobil-owned Noroxo
factory believed to have been the source of the outbreak, a television
crew was politely shown the door of a cafe on two occasions. Customers
had warned the proprietor that they would walk out if they were filmed.
It was a question of self-respect. "We don't want people to make a spectacle
of us," says Yvan Druon, the Communist mayor of Harnes. "Obviously we'd
like to see improved prevention and monitoring of high-risk sites. But
we're also used to coping with accidents. We get together and talk about
how we can go on as before. I regard that as a quality, though it could
be described as fatalism." The special relationship that the inhabitants
of the coal basin have with pollution and illness is confirmed by sociologist
Chantal Lamarre, who runs a cultural centre in the derelict premises of
11-19: "People tend to be aware of the danger, but they're reluctant to
talk about it, almost as if they were afraid of losing something." A century
and a half of coal mining has left an indelible mark on people's attitudes,
as well as on the landscape and the environment. "When the mine was still
in operation, their way of life was completely governed by the mine's
production needs," she adds. "To work, you had to accept certain duties
and agree to put your health and life at risk." After the second world
war, nationalisation gave miners a high-quality health service and free
hous ing and heating. But those privileges were designed to pin down labour
in the area. "They imprisoned the miners a little more - they entered
a system from which they could no longer extricate themselves." This strong
social and cultural legacy has a number of positive aspects, argues Jean-Francois
Caron, the Green mayor of Loos-en-Gahelle: "Successive generations of
Italian, Polish and North African immigrants have become integrated. That
legacy has also resulted in solidarity and courage, which mean that people
round here can be relied on." But there is also a downside. When whole
generations of people worked down the mine, they very soon lost the ability
to take any initiative in running their lives. Boys could look forward
to a job and a home for life, so there was no great incentive for them
to go to university. As for girls, financial security and social pressure
encouraged them to become housewives and mothers. As a result, the adaptability
and mobility required by modern life are not qualities found in local
inhabitants. "We keep people here who are incapable of moving and lose
those who have degrees - which only makes the situation worse," says Caron.
"That passivity can be found at every level of society. Even if things
have improved in recent years, for a long time we saw life in terms of
protest, along trade-union lines, rather than constructively." The legacy
of the past has also affected the population's health. "People here are
tough. They don't consult their doctor at the drop of a hat," says Dr
Jean-Luc Mayeur, who practises in Lens. "That attitude often results in
delays in the detection of certain complaints, particularly cancer." The
health service in the mines was very effective. But its doctors, who were
on the payroll of the Coal Board, dealt with a captive clientele. "Miners
had this sense that doctors were somehow their superiors. They were reluctant
to ask them questions." The region has an appalling health record. Dr
Olivier Lacoste, head of the Regional Health Observatory (ORS), says:
"Before the second world war, the health situation in the coal basin was
the best in France, and until the early 70s it was on a par with the rest
of the country. It is now the worst in France. In Europe similar health
conditions are found only in southern Poland and the northern Czech Republic."
In the Lens area the percentage of men who die before the age of 65 is
65% higher than the national rate; in the case of women it is 50% higher.
But Lacoste says that the collapse of the miners' health system is not
responsible for this state of affairs. "The under-20s are in satisfactory
health, as are the over-60s. In the latter group, there are still some
15,000 people suffering from silicosis, but with improved treatment their
life expectancy is distinctly higher than before." Those who pose the
greatest problem are of intermediate age and account for about 10% of
the population. They tend to be men, who have been worn down by decades
of economic crisis, and whose fathers and grandfathers were unemployed
or on income support. "The unemployment map and the high mortality map
correspond very precisely," says Lacoste. The Lens and Valenciennes area
suffers from the same problems as all of France's economically depressed
regions, but to a greater degree. "The crisis began here earlier, and
involves 1.3 million inhabitants," Lacoste says. They used to lived in
a very well-structured community, whose three pillars were the mines,
the trade unions and the church. When all that collapsed, people fell
by the wayside. "On top of that, this is a region with a strong work ethos,"
says Caron. "Round here, 'layabout' is the worst possible thing you can
say about somebody, and unemployment is felt to be deeply shameful." Lacoste
says: "People still have a lot of respect for the community. So there's
less delinquent behaviour and a lower Aids rate than elsewhere." But in
the Lens area, the number of men who die young from tumours in the upper
aerodigestive tract (caused mainly by alcoholism) is 2.6 times higher
than the national average. The depressed economic situation prompted locals
to accept highly polluting industries, which is why many of them now oppose
the closing down of Noroxo. But attitudes are changing. People were shocked
when Metaleurop closed its factory without warning in January 2003, making
830 workers redundant. The way that its Swiss chief shareholder, Glencore,
had carefully planned the closure seemed to them to be corporate behaviour
at its most brutal. The Greens had long denounced the lead pollution caused
by Metaleurop. "People really went for us Greens," Caron recalls. "They
accused us of being responsible for the closure of the factory. Today
they are behind us." People who file complaints are now accepted by the
community. "This region needs a cultural revolution," says Lamarre. She
can detect the beginning of such a change among women, who are now much
more prepared to take up a job, and among young second-generation immigrants,
who are less prone to fatalism and keener to gain qualifications. "Miners
were regarded as France's finest workers when the country needed to be
rebuilt," she says. "Then the government phased out the mines, and within
20 years the heroes of the working world had turned into people who relied
on handouts." In her view the most urgent thing is to change the image
of the mining basin - "not the image that outsiders have, but the image
that people who live there have of themselves and their environment. They
need to recover their self-respect and convince themselves that they are
no worse than people anywhere else."
WE WOULD LIKE TO DRAW OUR READERS ATTENTION TO THE FOLLOWING FORTHCOMING
CONFERENCE IN GERMANY. CERTAINLY ONE WHICH THE MINERS WEBSITE WOULD LOVE
TO GET INVOLVED IN AND REPORT ON. IT WOULD BE NICE IF SOME RICH READER
(WE SAID READER ! ) WOULD PAY OUR CONFERENCE EXPENSES, ACCOMODATION AND
FARES ETC. ANY TAKERS ?
At a similar seminar in the year 2002, we found out that the German RAG group has become an international supermonopoly all around coal. A chapter in the book "Twilight of the Gods - Götterdämmerung over the New World Order" contains the results of our Seminar. We spoke to the author who gave us the permission to make this chapter available to you. In the meantime, we received reports that miners in other countries have the same or similar problems. For example, the miners in Poland who face the same enemy as we do, an enemy who uses the same methods with which the German miners are confronted: destruction of jobs on a mass-scale, pit closures, increased exploitation, dismantling of security standards and so forth. The miners of different countries are to be driven into the competition against each other over the lowest wages and the worst working conditions. But united, the millions of miners world-wide are a powerful force. This Seminar has the purpose of getting to know and understand the situation in the hard-coal industry and, above all, the situation of the miners and their families. It will be a forum for an exchange of experience. It is intended to be a contribution to gain strength for the struggle for our interests and for our future. Today, this must be coordinated beyond national borders. The Seminar will be held in Gelsenkirchen in the facilities of the Workers Education Center (Arbeiterbildungszentrum, ABZ e.V.). Accommodation will be in the homes of miners families and their friends. We have attached an official invitation which you can use to apply for a visa. Also attached are the proposal for a new coal contract, the chapter from the book "Twilight of the Gods - Götterdämmerung over the New World Order" and the schedule of the seminar. We will take over the costs for accommodation and food. If you wish that we support or take over your travelling expenses, we request that you reply as soon as possible. If possible, send your replies in German or English by e-mail. ( [email protected]). 0We are eagerly awaiting your reply,
Christian Link
Our proposal for the time during the seminar: Thursday, 20th of May: In the evening: public reception with dinner in the Arbeiterbildungszentrum (workers education centre)
Friday, 21st of May: During the day: sightseeing, perhaps with a mine-tour or a visit at the mining-museum in Bochum In the evening: occasion for watching and discussing the summary of the first seminar (Duisburg) And also: perhaps theatre by an austrian group The actual seminar is on the 22nd and 23rd of May. Saturday, 22nd of May 9 - 18 o clock 1. Greeting 2. Country reports. Reports should be prepared of about 15 minutes in national language which can be supported by dias, film or other means. In the following the possibility is given to discuss each issue for about 15 - 30 minutes Sunday, 23rd of May, 10 - 18 o clock 3. The main emphasis then is on the discussion about the question "How to coordinate our cooperation, our struggles?" 4. At the end (after lunch) there should be a final plenum where also a final declaration can be passed c/o Link Sincerely yours,
17/ 1/ 2003
Faithfully David Douglass NUM Branch Secretary Hatfield Main.
Union leaders 'profit from compensation' to workers
Jan 12 2004
Today Plaid Cymru's parliamentary spokesman on industry, Adam Price, will be writing to the Certification Officer for Trade Unions calling for an investigation into payments made to the UDM's top two officials. Mr Price, the MP for Carmarthen East and Dinefwr, believes hundreds of
ex-miners in Wales may have had their compensation claims processed by
a company called Vendside, without realising it is owned Vendside has received millions of pounds in fees from the Department of Trade and Industry. It also charges fees to non-members of the UDM. The UDM was formed in 1984 in opposition to the national miners' strike called by Arthur Scargill. Its power base is in Nottinghamshire, but miners from other coalfields, including Wales, joined as the dispute dragged on. Previously undisclosed accounts filed with the COTU, show that the UDM's general secretary, Neil Greatrex, received a pay package worth £151,536 last year - or over £67,000 more than the salary paid to Dave Prentis, leader of the UK's largest union, Unison. Unison's membership of 1.3m is 1,000 times more than the UDM. Even without pension contributions worth a third of his salary, Mr Greatrex's deputy Mick Stevens was paid £111,015 - more than the packages paid to the secretaries of Britain's big unions. Mr Greatrex received just £11,856 of his pay and benefits via the
UDM national account with the rest coming from the Nottingham section.
That section's accounts show that Mr Stevens was paid £13,277 in
car benefit and £1,236 towards the mortgage of his detached house
in Edwinstowe, Nottinghamshire, together with payments for his council
tax and water rates. The union regulator is not obliged to make Unlike the larger mining unions, the NUM and Nacods, the UDM has been
allowed by the DTI to pursue legal claims directly on behalf of former
miners, through an exclusive handling agreement with the Under the terms of the agreement, the union receives a lower payment for each claim that it processes than the solicitors of other claimants, but in return is allowed to charge up to £587.50 to successful claimants. Mr Price said, "The Nottingham section's accounts reveal the extent to which the UDM is bankrolled by Vendside. There should be an investigation to see whether the UDM has fallen foul of labour relations law that requires unions to act in the interests of their members. "Mr Greatrex and Mr Stevens have exploited the suffering of former miners and their families to feather their own nests with fat cat salaries while using a loophole to hide behind. "The regulator urgently needs to investigate whether Vendside has
a commercial interest in ensuring a quick turnaround of claims. And the
succession of ministers responsible at the DTI, including Peter Hain,
"It will particularly stick in the throat of most Welsh miners that
UDM officials have been allowed by this New Labour Government to gain
such massive financial benefit from a compensation scheme meant for In 2001, Vendside's gross profit was just over £6m. Up to November 2003, the company had received £26.5m from the Government in legal fees as part of the miners' compensation schemes. Last month Nigel Griffiths, the current minister responsible for coal health claims, said, "The government's position on solicitors' charges is clear. We believe that 100% of the compensation we pay must go to the claimant without anyone else taking a slice of it. "I deplore any attempt to charge sick miners or their widows and families for legal expenses which are already covered by the DTI."
LYING FOR ENGLAND Following our successful lobby in London, we thought we had got the job cracked. Our banner was filmed by at least two TV stations outside Big Ben and parliament, people on busses cheered and we were able to make press reports onthe struggle to save Hatfield. Inside our local MP Kevin Hughes was talking miners and our agent with Timms about the case for Hatfield. In the debate in the commons, in front of a dozen MP's and a dozen miners and more press men, he promised the pit would be saved, the fabric of the mine ensured for at least two months. Kevin Hughes pressed him, would the pumps be kept running and the fans working. He was assured, before all these witnesses and on record they would. Friday night, management on instruction from DTI knocked them off. Our men, miners and officials refused to do so. Or as one senior overman commented to a bloke sent to pull out the switches "touch them and I'll break your legs." Not the usual language for officials but at Hatfield they are in the NUM ! Uproar has broken out in parliament, with all the MP's to whom this assurance was given including Dennis Skinner, demanding Timms hide for lying in the House Of Commons ( a serious offence). Power and pumps have been kept on over the week-end "for the present", but the men were all made redundant on Friday, so what will happen Monday we do not know. We urge all readers to write letters and telegrams of protest to Timms Energy Minister, and Prescott Deputy Prime Minister, at the House Of Commons. Many folk were shocked rigid during the strike at seeing, senior police officers lie through their teeth under oath in the witness box, we have just witnessed a Government Minister do the same, in front of the Deputy Speaker of the House and numerous MPs, recorders and press members. Should we be surprised ? The campaign to save Hatfield continues. Budge still thinks he can put a package together. We continue to think it will require the Government stepping in to take over charge and finance of development while a buyer is sought, at least.
Dear Minister, Thank you for your letter of 19 January promising to "look at all the options" before a final decision on Hatfield. Unfortunately we have heard today from the NUM and reported in the Yorkshire Post that pumps have been switched off at the pit. This would condemn it to rapid deterioration and put it beyond any hope of being brought back into production. The Yorkshire Coal Task Force would strongly oppose such a move and ask you to intercede to resume maintenance pending further efforts to keep Hatfield in production. Regards, on behalf of the Yorkshire Coal Task Force
EMERGENCY 'ADJOURNMENT DEBATE' RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF HATFIELD MAIN
Reports From Hatfield Main Jan 2004 Hatfield Main Colliery
IF THE GOVERNMENT LETS HATFIELD FOLD IT IS TELLING
THE WORLD LOUD AND CLEAR ,IT HAS NO COMMITMENT TO BRITISH COAL, NO COMMITMENT
TO A MIXED ENERGY POLICY AND WILL BE DELIVERING THE 'COUP DE GRACE' IN
INDUSTRIAL David Douglass
Hatfield Men Vote To Keep Up The Fight In a noisy and at times angry meeting at The Fox, on Saturday 17th Jan,
the Hatfield Miners voted unanimously to continue their fight Next branch meeting, Saturday 24 Jan. 2.pm. The Fox. Market Place. Stainforth.
MYSTERY IN THE WOODS SOLVED ?
Readers of our news page would remember the odd story about armed men stalking the fields of Dunscroft, while new excavations are being dug adjacent to the explosives dump at the former ICI site. Despite letters to the local MP Caroline Flint being ignored and her remaining tight lipd on the matter (she is a big wig in the Home Office now and cant be getting involved in anything which might be political you see ?) we have now got some answers thanks to the detective work of Hatfield Parish Council clerk Duncan Wright. The Parish Council had been quick to point out that they knew nothing whatever of either of the strange events and certainly hadn't approved them. Duncan has checked with the community bobby lady and she tells us, the two Rambo characters have shooting rights on the land , which actually belongs to the farm of Mr Durdy. He complains about people walking on his land and youths riding motor bikes on it, so , in return for acting as security guards and warning youngsters and walkers off the land, they get to shoot things on it. Although not the walkers or bike riders, we expect, the obvious intention is to frighten the beJesus out of anyone who encounters these Rambo types with their battle fatigues and cropped hair and more bandoleers of bullets than Zapata. The trenches ? Well they are just for drainage and construction of an irrigation lagoon for the same farm land, we are told. So there you have it, if you believe it, it is
still surely far from satisfactory to have two armed youths, enforcing
security regimes on Dunscroft fields which folk have walked on for decades
? The motor bike riders are pains up the arse by the way, but wouldnt
really like them shot or in fear of being shot, just for being prats.
FINANCIAL APPEAL. THE HATFIELD NUM BRANCH IS VITAL TO THE CAUSE OF THE SURVIVAL OF HATFIELD COLLIERY, OBVIOUSLY WITH A REDUCING WORK FORCE INCOME IS MINIMAL. IF YOU OR YOUR UNION / ORGANISATION WISH TO MAKE A DONATION TO THE NUM BRANCH FUND, IT WOULD BE WARMLY WELCOMED AND APPRECIATED . CHEQUES SHOULD BE MADE OUT TO HATFIELD MAIN NUM BRANCH FUND. C/O The Branch Secretary, Dave Douglass 16, Abbeyfield Road, Dunscroft, Doncaster, DN74AF
MINERS CHEST DISEASES Ex-miners, and families of miners now deceased ONLY THREE MONTHS LEFT TO CLAIM !!! AND IN REALITY IT IS PROBABLY SOME WEEKS SHORT
OF THAT
dave [email protected]
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