Strike by waste workers in Scotland fills streets with garbage
(last modified Sun, 28 Aug 2022 06:38:08 GMT )
Aug 28, 2022 06:38 UTC

A strike by Scottish refuse workers over a pay dispute continues in Edinburgh, resulting in piles of rubbish and overflowing bins in the city center.

The city’s refuse workers started a 12-day strike on August 18 in an attempt to force Scottish council leaders to improve on a “derisory” 3% pay offer.

According to Press TV, the strike is set to continue until Tuesday, a day after the city's international arts and Fringe festivals ends. The festivals run through most of August and draw millions of visitors to the Scottish capital.

"Thousands of tourists visiting the city for the ... Fringe festival getting the wrong impression of this great city," a Twitter user wrote on Friday, posting pictures of mounds of waste near Edinburgh's Royal Mile thoroughfare.

Similar strikes have begun in more than a dozen other regions including Aberdeen and Scotland's largest city, Glasgow. Refuse workers’ strikes are due to spread to other areas, with nursery and school workers taking part early next month.

The latest development comes as pay negotiations between local authorities and union leaders are continuing after a round of talks on Tuesday failed to reach any agreement.  

However, no agreement has yet been reached to end a wave of bin strikes which have affected two thirds of Scotland's council areas.

Trade union leaders have accused the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (Cosla), the umbrella body for the country’s 32 councils, of failing to grasp the severity of the cost of living crisis.

The discussions are focusing on a new deal for the lowest-paid workers, with BBC Scotland being told that no deal is imminent but "slow progress" is being made.

The three unions, Unison, Unite and GMB, have urged councils to agree to a £3,000 flat rate pay award, which they say would significantly help lower-paid workers. After initially offering 2% and then 3.5%, Cosla’s latest offer is 5%, with a very slightly higher rate for the very lowest paid.

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