This is the motions booklet for the AGM(s) on 20 February. We will be voting on which motions we want to become branch policy. You can download the booklet as a PDF by clicking on the link below.
Author: Lambeth Unison
Rest in Power – Professor Benjamin Zephaniah
15 April 1958 – 7 December 2023
We have sadly lost a great voice, who no matter what he went through he always rose-up.
Professor Benjamin Zephaniah achieved so much in his life; he made everyday count. He needs to be celebrated and honoured for all he has achieved.
Continue readingNotice of Annual General Meeting 2024
The Lambeth UNISON 2024 AGM will be held on Tuesday 20 February
Two AGM Sessions, both at Lambeth Town Hall
- 1pm-3pm (Council Workers)
- 4.30 – 5.30pm (Schools and Private Sector)
The purpose of the annual general meeting is to bring the branch committee and its officers to account:
- agree policies and plans for the year;
- to elect branch officers and branch representatives to external bodies for the coming year
- to report on the branch’s finances;
- to report on the branch’s activity during the past year ;
- to receive a report on the annual assessment.
If you would like to submit a motion or an agenda point to the AGM agenda, please email the full text of your motion to Ruth Cashman rcashman@lambeth.gov.uk or to UNISON, Room G.3. Lambeth Town Hall, 1 Brixton Hill, London SW2 1RW
Please see below if you would like to stand as, or nominate a candidate to be an Officer of the Branch. If so write to our nominations officer Paul at PDFitzgerald@lambeth.gov.uk If you have any questions about roles and responsibilities or particular officers do not hesitate to contact us.
Please see below for important deadlines.
12 December 2023: Nominations for Officer and delegate elections close
9 January 2024: Motions and rule change deadline, motions will then be circulated a few days later.
23 January: Alternative motions deadline. Due to nature of the AGM we cannot accept amendments, instead members are asked to write alternative motions.
6 February: AGM papers distributed
16 February: Deadline for emergency motions.
Officer posts at the UNISON branch
Branch Secretary In charge of day to day running of the branch, overall strategy, campaigns, etc (5 days facility agreed)
Assistant Branch Secretary Currently three roles for overseeing policy, casework and campaigns
Branch Chair The branch chair facilitates branch and committee meetings, and may also be a senior negotiator.
Branch Vice Chair Chairs meetings when the branch chair is unavailable
Branch Treasurer Responsible for finances in collaboration with the secretary
Deputy Branch Treasurer Assists the branch treasurer
Publicity Officer Helps produce newsletters, manage social media accounts, press releases and so on.
Membership Officer Assists with recruitment and retention, managing our membership database.
Health and Safety Officer## Watch that badly fixed light! Is work making you stressed? Health and safety is the name of the game.
Environmental Officer Helps keep the branch up to date on green issues and develops campaigns and policy (will be a very important role in years to come!)
Equality Officer Is responsible for equalities issues, assisting self-organised groups and being a union lead on equalities at work
International Officer Keeps an eye on the news, is informed about international issues and feeds campaign ideas into the branch (e.g. anti-fascism in Brazil, solidarity with trade unionists in Colombia, anti-war campaigning in the Middle East)
Welfare Officer The lead person for assisting members with any welfare issues and providing access to UNISON’s welfare fund.
Learning Co-ordinator# Works with employers and co-ordinates the work of union learning reps in supporting members with lifelong learning and skills for life
Education Officer Helps arrange training courses and education programmes for members, stewards, health and safety reps and branch officers.
Returning Officer Oversees elections for the AGM and any by elections that may be held for officer posts or convenor roles.
Branch Auditor Checks over our finances and ensures we have complied with UNISON regulations.
Deputy Branch Auditor Helps the branch auditor carry out their duties
Young Members Officer** Coordinates campaigning and organising work among younger members – are you under 30 and interested?
Labour Link Officer++ A crucial role in liaising with local Labour Parties and coordinating delegates from UNISON to Labour to advocate for our unions agenda.
** must be under 30 at end of their term of office (early 2023)
++must be a Labour Party member who pays into the Affiliated Political Fund
# must be a trained ULR (training provided)
## must be a trained safety rep (training provided)
All posts are open to job share
Open Letter to Conservative and Labour parties on the Palestine/Israel conflict
Agreed at the Lambeth UNISON branch committee 17 October 2023
Lambeth Unison and Lambeth Black Worker’s group are gravely concerns by the current war in Israel and Palestine and the atrocity being committed in Gaza. We urge the UK Government and the opposition Labour Party to STOP blindly supporting and funding the Zionist Israeli regime in bombing the Gazi strip and indiscriminate killing of innocent Palestine civilians’ population.
Hamas attack may be wrong, but two wrongs does not make it right. Two million innocent Gaza residents who are trapped and imprisoned cannot be condemned. British people do not support killing of innocent peoples. Not in my Name. Please do not kill innocent people in our name. We do not want to be in the side of the oppressor and be party to the mass genocide of innocent impoverished Palestine people of Gaza and wider Palestinian people.
Arab minority Jews, Christian and majority Muslim were peacefully coexisting in the land of Palestine for many centuries. The seed of the problem in the region was actually started by British colonialist/imperialist in 1917 with the establishment of Balfour Declaration ( see Balfour Declaration – Wikipedia) and their ongoing support led to the establishment of the Zionist regime , the state of Israel around 1948.
Since 1948 the Zionist Israeli government has been pursing policy of ethnic cleansing ‘ Naqba’ (see Nakba – Wikipedia) and their ongoing oppression, killing and seizing of Palestinian Muslim land and creating illegal Israeli settlement at the expense of Palestinian and contrary to the UN Resolution.
The UN and the World’s community watched and ignored the Palestinian plights. The Zionist government’s apartheid system been allowed to flourish without consequences, which resulted in the largest open-air prison of refugee, where the Israeli government and its powerful military force in the region with tight land, sea and air blockade of Gaza deny residents their basic Human Rights and Freedom of Movement. It is a very abhorrent state of affair, where the Zionist government do not even recognise the 2 million people of Gaza as human but reduce them to mere “animals”. Furthermore, they continually occupy more and more Palestine land in breach of international law.
The Zionist at their whim stop food, water, electricity, medicine, other necessity and oppressed the people as they wish. This is exactly what they are doing now applying a medieval seized tactic. A war crime, indiscriminately killing innocent civilian population; baby, children, women, elderly, medics, and aid workers by carpet bombing residential buildings in Gaza.
Shamefully the UK governments and many of the western allies are ignoring and supporting the oppression in the region.
Given the history and gravity of situation in the region the British Government has duty of care to ensure peace is established as a matter of urgency. A lasting political solution needs to be found. This need to be done with fairness, justice, and equity without any bias. We demand the following from our government:
Our demands
- UK Government, rather than stoking up the war must immediately persuade Israeli Government to exercise restraint and stop immediately its military actions and seize against Gaza population and allow Humanitarians aids.
- UK government, EU countries, USA and Arab countries must work together and negotiate ceasefire and find political solution for ever lasting peace. Which is fair and just. For example, recognising and help establishing Independent Palestinian state with full freedom of an independent state without any interference and occupation. The Palestine state as minimum must be based on pre-1967 borders. This position reflects the international consensus, successive UN resolutions and international law, and provides the most realistic chance of peace.
- UK government use its special relation to persuade USA to support the establishment of Independent Palestinian based on pre-1967 borders and stop the USA from supporting Israel with arms and monies.
- UK government and the EU ends all arms trade and military collaboration with Israel. We support a mandatory UN arms embargo on Israel and believe that companies supporting Israel’s military industry should end their complicity.
- The suspension of the UK-Israel trade and partnership agreement and the European Union/Israel association agreement until Israel is in full compliance of its human rights clauses and international law;
- Support from the UK Government to Palestinians in referring human rights violations to the International Criminal Court;
- The immediate recognition of an independent Palestinian state by the United Nations and the UK government;
- Force Israel to return land to Palestinian people that was illegally seized.
Emergency motion on the Israeli-Gaza war
Adopted at the Lambeth UNISON branch committee on 17 October 2023
This branch notes:
- That Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared war on Hamas on 8 October in retaliation to Hamas firing hundreds of rockets into and invading Israel with dozens of soldiers/volunteers.
- That US President Joe Biden has promised to send to Israel billions of dollars worth of weaponry and ammunition and has already sent the Ford carrier group of six of the USA’s most modern warships to the eastern Mediterranean.
- That over 1,200 people have been killed, thousands injured and millions of dollars of damage done in just a few days, with the certainty that these numbers will be multiplied in the following days, weeks and months ahead.
This branch believes:
- That Israel is a settler colonial state that has denied the Palestinian people their right to self-determination for 75 years and millions of the original inhabitants of Israel-Palestine the right to return to their homeland, killing tens of thousands in wars.
- We do not endorse the atrocities committed by Hamas and Islamic Jihad against Israeli civilians and young people in their incursion into Israel but we recognise the boiling rage brought about by decades of occupation, discrimination, arbitrary detention and killings – the de-facto establishment of an apartheid like state by Israel in occupied Palestine. We do not equate the oppressor with the oppressed and continue to support the Palestinian resistance and its right to defend itself against the Israeli army and armed settlers by any means necessary.
This branch resolves:
- To publicise all protests against this war and in solidarity with the Palestinians, encouraging members to attend and, where possible, sending our branch banner. This branch affiliates/donates to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign
- To demand Lambeth Council declares its solidarity with the Palestinians and flies their flag from the Town Hall. Calls for an immediate ceasefire, the lifting of all blockades, the return of all stolen and occupied land to the Palestinians, and a just and lasting peace acceptable to all Palestinians.
- To affiliate/donate to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign
- To call for an immediate ceasefire, the lifting of all blockades, the return of all stolen and occupied land to the Palestinians, and a just and lasting peace acceptable to all Palestinians. Trade unionists, workers and socialists have a duty to speak up for the Palestinians and anti-Zionist Israelis, who are resisting the Zionist state’s attacks on Palestinians.
- To send this motion to the NEC for discussion and voting.
Why are we being balloted for strike action?
Since 2010 the Conservative government has slashed funding for local government, including keeping our wages down. This means in the last 13 years we have lost around 25% of our pay in real terms. Essentially we are all working a day for free.
Despite Sunak’s promise to halve inflation by the summer, inflation is still sky high. Food and energy bills in particular are much higher than they were two years ago, with no sign of the prices reducing.
If pay had kept up with inflation (not even a pay rise just keeping up with inflation) we would all be on much better wages.
Last year Local Government workers were offered a flat rate increase of £1925 (£2355 in inner London). Well below inflation for every member of staff.
Although Lambeth UNISON members rejected this pay offer as being yet another real terms pay cut, UNISON members nationally voted to accept it.
This year the joint trade unions that negotiate wages for local government (UNISON, GMB and Unite) put forward a 12.6% pay increase for all staff. This was rejected by the employers, instead we were offered the same amount as last year (£1925/£2355). UNISON representatives rejected this outright and moved to a strike vote.
This is now a fight. It is a fight for not just decent pay but also the future of local government, of public services in general. The money is out there to provide decent, well funded public services like health, education and social care, as well as invest in new modern social housing. But the Conservative government don’t want to properly tax the super rich or the corporations that are making huge profits. The four major super markets made £4bn profit last year. The oil companies are making millions of pounds profit a week. There are 3 million millionaries in the UK, and 177 billionaies with a combined wealth of £600bn (this increased by 150bn in the last two years alone).
We need every UNISON member to vote. UNISON is recommending a YES vote for industrial action. A vote for action is a vote for dignity at work, for a future for the public sector. It is a vote to say that we are not going to take it any more and we will resist and fight to defend our standard of living, for ourselves, out families and our communities.
Whether you work in social care, libraries, parks, crematoriums, leisure centres, housing, ICT, HR, civil planning, education, community safety or any of the other hundreds of crucial jobs that local government workers do – this is your fight. Together we can win.
The UNISON ballot is from 23 May until 3 July. It is a postal ballot. If you do not get your ballot papers or you lose them call UNISON Direct to order a new one 0800 0 857857.
New members who join before 21 June will be eligible to vote.
If there is a YES vote for industrial action then you will be expected to take strike action, that means no crossing picket lines and no working from home.
Any questions please contact your UNISON rep, convenor or branch officer.
VOTE YES IN THE STRIKE BALLOT!
UNISON members are being balloted for strike action against yet another below inflation pay offer.
UNISON is recommending a YES vote for strike action and action short of a strike so we can win higher pay.
This is a postal ballot – you will receive a red envelope from UNISON in the next few days that looks like this

RISE UP TO GET PAY UP COUNCIL AND SCHOOL PAY 2023
You will be contacted by a UNISON representative to confirm when you have voted so we can tick you off our list.
If you have any questions about the pay strike please contact the following people
Branch Secretaries:
Jocelyn Jcruywagen@lambeth.gov.uk
Ruth Rcashman@lambeth.gov.uk
Convenors
Adults and Public Health – Jackie Jlewis@lambeth.gov.uk
Children’s Services – Andy Atullis@lambeth.gov.uk
Resident Services- Simon Shannah@lambeth.gov.uk
SGO – Hassina HMalik@lambeth.gov.uk
Housing – Sam SKamara@lambeth.gov.uk
Libraries – Tim TOdell@lambeth.gov.uk
Finance and Investment/Strategy and Coms/Legal and Governance – Eleesha Esmith@lambeth.gov.uk
Policies agreed at Lambeth UNISON AGM 2023
Motion on fighting the anti union laws
- The Conservative government is waging a war on working people. They want to make it almost impossible to take industrial action in the UK, imposing ballot thresholds and restrictions on action that would effectively end the right to strike.
- The ultimate power that we have as workers is to withdraw our labour. Denying us the right to strike is a flagrant attack on trade unionism and will create a society in which working people are blocked from taking any meaningful action to improve wages or terms and conditions.
- The Conservative government wants to build on the anti union laws already in place since 1980. We cannot strike for non-workplace related reasons, we cannot carry out solidarity action with other workers, we are forced to have postal ballots for strike action and agency workers can be specifically brought in to break strikes. The thresholds for calling legal action are now very high, making it hard to organise action in large bargaining units like Local Government.
- There is a fight back. Free Our Unions was initiated Lambeth Unison in 2017. It is now backed by dozens of unions branches, committees, and local Labour Parties. Four national trade unions – IWGB, FBU, RMT, and PCS – have supported the campaign via their Annual General Meetings and/or National Executive Committees. It was initially established to promote and amplify policies passed at Labour Party conferences calling for the abolition of all anti-union laws, not only the most recent, and to demand Labour fight for this policy in opposition and commit to enacting it in government.
- There is also the Campaign to Defend Trade Union Freedoms.
- This AGM reconfirms our affiliation to Free Our Unions and agrees to a £250 donation.
- Lambeth UNISON will work with others across our movement to help convene a conference in 2023 about fighting the anti-union laws.
Motion – Kill the Anti-Strike Bill
This branch notes
1. The Tories have proposed a new anti-strike bill in an attempt to silence and cow the unions.
2. That this Bill will
(a) require some unions with a legal mandate to strike to instruct some of their members to break their own strike in order to provide a ‘minimum service level’, which could even be at a higher level than is normally provided due to staff shortages.
(b) will apply initially to transport, health, education and emergency services, but could be extended to other public services.
(c) If the unions do not agree a minimum service level the Minister will intervene and set one.
(d) The employer will name individual workers who will have to break their own strike; if they refuse, they could be sacked with no recourse to appeal (e.g. unfair dismissal).
(e) Under such circumstances the union could also be sued by the employer or a member of the public for ‘loss of earnings’, the highest fine being £1 million.
3. The provisions of the Bill, let alone any amendments it attracts will take away workers’ right to strike, a fundamental right according to the UN and the ILO.
4. The TUC has called a political day of action to oppose the Bill on 1 February and some unions have also co-ordinated their economic strikes on the same day. All unions and union branches are invited to join in the protest.
This branch resolves
4. To write to the CEO and Leader of the Council to demand that they oppose the Bill.
5. To contact all members, with workplace or directorate meetings where possible, leaflets and posters, exposing the Bill and promoting the action against it.
6. To call on members to come to a lunchtime demonstration on 1 February and encourage them not to return to work in protest at the Tory attack on workers’ democratic rights.
Moved by J Drinkall
Seconded by A Tullis
Motion on the four day week
- This branch notes the successful trial of the four day week that reported in February 2023.
- The four day week is becoming more and more popular in different workplaces as efficiencies over work processes and computerisation should lead to a reduction in workload, not increases.
- The benefits of a four day working week, where there is a reduction in hours with no loss of pay are clear
- Less stress at work
- Less sick days
- Better work/life balance
- Helps create more employment opportunities
- This branch also notes that the Chief Executive rejected our proposal for a four day week trial at Lambeth Council saying that ‘now wasn’t the time’
- This branch resolves to launch a public campaign for a 4 day week at Lambeth Council, with regular stalls to promote the idea and talks for staff to educate themselves on how it might work.
- Let’s make Lambeth a 4 day week Council by 2025!
Motion on Affiliation to Campaign Against Climate Change
This branch/trades council notes that as global temperatures rise, impacts on humans and ecosystems are multiplying, including extreme weather events such as heatwaves, drought and flooding. These have the greatest impact on those who have done least to cause the problem.
It notes the inspiring mobilisations of civil society and trade unions around COP26 in November 2021 but that despite this the outcome failed us all.
It also notes that since COP26, the government has failed to take the urgent action needed to address the climate crisis: encouraging fossil fuel expansion and neglecting basic measures to cut energy demand, such as insulating homes. Continuing the UK’s dependence on fossil gas contributes to unprecedented levels of fuel poverty.
It believes a comprehensive programme of climate jobs is needed, as proposed in “Climate Jobs: Building a Workforce for the Climate Emergency”, to cut emissions and create the infrastructure needed for a sustainable future, including warm homes, integrated public transport and decarbonising industry.
It further believes that trade unions have a vital role to play in bringing about urgent climate action and a worker-led just transition rooted in workers’ rights and social justice.
The branch/region/ trades council therefore resolves:
1. To affiliate to the Campaign against Climate Change.
2. To make a bulk order for copies of the Climate Jobs: Building a Workforce for the Climate Emergency” report for sale to members. [Copies can be ordered here].
3. To notify the Campaign against Climate Change Trade Union Group of our decision by emailing climatetradeunion@gmail.com
[Affiliation fees: branches and trades councils £25, regions and County Associations £50, national unions from £150, depending on size]
Motion on Reparations
Lambeth UNISON Branch notes
After centuries of silence and denial the realities of slavery and its legacy are entering public discussion. Black Lives Matter has directed attention to the histories and impacts of chattel slavery, especially the capture and exploitation of Africans and people of African descent, notably from the transatlantic slave trade.
The government of Barbados was perfectly correct to summon Tory MP Richard Drax to a meeting on the Caribbean Island, whereby a process to return his private ownership of a sugar plantation back to the people of that country can begin. Richard Drax is one of the wealthiest politicians in the Commons.
The Barbados government is discussing plans to secure reparations from South Dorset MP Richard Drax for his family’s role in pioneering and maintaining slavery in the Caribbean.
Barbados, which became a republic last year, is considering direct measures to secure reparations justice. Richard Drax still owns Drax Hall Estate – a sugar plantation established by his family almost 400 years ago. The Drax’s have accumulated vast wealth from their slavery plantations: today Richard Drax is the largest private landowner in Dorset and has properties across the UK. His personal wealth is estimated at £150 million.
Barbados’ National Task Force on Reparations has advised the country’s Cabinet to take legal action against Drax if the Dorset MP is unwilling to agree compensation. The Task Force is also recommending that 621-acre Drax Hall Estate should be used for housing for the local community and that Drax Hall Great House should become a museum of slavery. The Task Force says it expects Drax to fulfil his “moral duty”.
Stand Up To Racism has actively supported campaigners in Barbados and now joins the call for Drax to address the legacies of slavery (See ‘Time’s Up, Mr Drax’: https://tinyurl.com/5d2n7x4u)
See the recent Observer article by Paul Lashmar and Jonathan Smith: https://tinyurl.com/56tbmcf6
The campaign in Dorset led by local trade unions, activists in Barbados and supported by the TUC to relieve Richard Drax of his Barbados estate should be the start of a wider call for reparations, including financial institutions, the Church of England, universities and wealthy philanthropic individuals and institutions.
Our branch resolves:
1. To follow the initiative taken by Hammersmith & Fulham Unison last year (2021) and invite appropriate speakers and activists on reparations at Lambeth’s Black Workers Group and Branch meetings.
2. Invite Sir Hilary Beckles (historian and Vice Chancellor of university of West Indies) (via zoom or in person), Asher Craig (Deputy Mayor of Bristol), Rosemarie Mallet, (Archdeacon of Croydon), Weyman Bennett (co-Convenor, Stand Up to Racism) and Phil Martfleet to address a reparations conference to be held in South London in 2023 and advertise the conference.
3. This branch resolves to be part of the Reparations conference. Send attendees and circulate information to members. A proposed Reparations conference is currently being discussed by activists in Lewisham, Croydon and Lambeth.
Proposed: Jocelyn Cruywagen
Seconder: Tim O’Dell
Win the ballot: Fight for Pay meeting

Dear Colleague
This is an invitation for you to join thousands of other London council UNISON members at this meeting on Pay!
A groundbreaking event is taking place on Tuesday 21 March 6.30-7.30 pm when UNISON members from other London councils will be signing up for the first ever London Wide UNISON council & school workers meeting.
Barnet UNISON Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86358706964?pwd=aFQyZmFsVXVqL2tNTk02dTlQd2pFZz09
Meeting ID: 863 5870 6964
Passcode: 869860
The Cost-of-Living Crisis is unrelenting, and more and more workers are under pressure to keep up with increases in costs such as Food, Heating, Rent, Mortgages, Child Care, etc.
Council and Schools workers’ pay has fallen so low over the last 13 years that everyone is now working at least ONE day a week for free.
At the same time energy companies are announcing massive levels of profits whilst many of our members are afraid to turn on the heating.
UNISON Council and School workers now have the opportunity to add their voice to the hundreds of thousands of other trade union members who have already taken strike action over the issue of low pay such as: Transport workers, Royal Mail workers, BT workers, Teachers, Junior Doctors, Train drivers, Cleaners, Teachers, College workers, Border Control workers, Civil Servants, Barristers.
All these trade union members managed to deliver a BIG YES vote in their strike ballot.
In London we need to send a message about the hardship of living on low pay in London. To do that we need to organise across London councils in order for our members’ voices to be heard loud and clear in Parliament.
When is the Strike Ballot to start?
The strike ballot papers will start being sent out to members home addresses from 23 May to 4 July.
What can members do?
It is important that all UNISON members’ email Lambeth UNISON branch at jablake@lambeth.gov.uk with their correct postal address and contact details including their telephone/ mobile number and email address.
It is critical to the success of the strike ballot that Lambeth UNISON has the correct details and has your permission to contact you about the strike ballot.
Phone banking.
We know from other trade unions the importance of speaking to members about voting and sending back the ballot papers. We are looking for help to be on the Lambeth UNISON phone bank. If you would like to volunteer, please email us at shannah@lambeth.gov.uk
Lambeth UNISON AGM Booklets and motions booklet
The Lambeth UNISON AGM will be held in three parts as a rolling AGM
Tuesday 21 March 4pm until 5:30pm – Schools and private sector members
Wednesday 22 March 12noon until 2pm – Main AGM for Lambeth Council members
Wednesday 3:30pm until 5pm Lambeth College AGM